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General Practice: Large Housing Developments

29 March 2022

Lead MP

Andrew Selous
South West Bedfordshire
Con

Responding Minister

Stuart Andrew

Tags

NHSEmploymentForeign AffairsLocal Government
Word Count: 13633
Other Contributors: 14

At a Glance

Andrew Selous raised concerns about general practice: large housing developments in Westminster Hall. A government minister responded.

Key Requests to Government:

I propose guaranteed primary care health funding for each 1,000 new homes allocated at the time planning permission is granted and delivered as the new residents arrive. I urge the Government to convene a Cabinet Sub-Committee involving the Treasury, Department of Health and Social Care, and Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities to address this issue once and for all.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Lead Contributor

South West Bedfordshire
Opened the debate
I am concerned about the strain on GP services due to large-scale housing developments. Despite a third more GP appointments being delivered between September and November 2021 compared to the same period in 2019, many constituents still struggle to get timely appointments at their local surgeries. My constituency has fewer GPs, practice nurses, and direct patient care staff per 10,000 patients than the averages for England and the east of England. The projected increases in primary care staff will not be enough to bring my constituency up to average levels, and no figures for future GP recruitment are available from the Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG). I have received complaints that access to healthcare is inadequate despite massive expansion in Leighton Buzzard over the past 20 years. In Norwich North, wave 4b CCG funding will provide an extension for one local surgery but not enough to accommodate the population increase.

Government Response

Stuart Andrew
Government Response
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Dowd. I offer my hon. Friend the Member for South West Bedfordshire (Andrew Selous) my congratulations and thanks for securing this important debate. As the hon. Member for Greenwich and Woolwich (Matthew Pennycook) said, it has been useful and wide ranging. My hon. Friend the Member for Loughborough (Jane Hunt) mentioned being kind to the staff at GP practices, which is an important message to relay. Local plans are a way for areas to develop the communities they need, providing certainty for communities, businesses and developers. An effective and up-to-date plan is essential not only to meet an area's housing requirements but to create well-designed and attractive places to live with the services that people need on their doorstep. The national planning policy framework states that local plans should aim for sustainable development, factoring in new schools, hospitals and GP practices from the outset. The community infrastructure levy and section 106 agreements help create funding for housing and local infrastructure needs. I recognise there is an issue about which we need to do more. We are exploring the introduction of a new infrastructure levy to replace the existing system of developer contributions, maximising land value and bringing greater certainty on costs. Local authorities would be allowed to borrow against infrastructure levy revenues so that they could bring forward vital improvements to services before the first spade of development even hits the ground. We need a faster, more responsive planning system fit for the modern age, embracing digital technology to encourage residents to voice their views on what is being built in their community. Communities and neighbourhoods should shape the places in which they live so that we have beautiful places with the necessary infrastructure and democratic systems considering environmental improvements. I have heard loud and clear the concerns of hon. Members about the frustration of constituents when large-scale new developments are greenlit and local services become increasingly congested. I intend to go much further by creating a more streamlined, smoother planning system that levels up infrastructure and local services in every part of the country.
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

About Westminster Hall Debates

Westminster Hall debates are a chance for MPs to raise important issues affecting their constituents and get a response from a government minister. Unlike Prime Minister's Questions, these debates are more in-depth and collaborative. The MP who secured the debate speaks first, other MPs can contribute, and a minister responds with the government's position.