Email sent to members of planning committee:
DC/25/71072 – Friar Park: Approval Despite Red Flags, Missing Information and Weak Scrutiny
1. Purpose of this briefing
This note records serious concerns arising from the Planning Committee’s decision to approve DC/25/71072 on 1 April 2026.
This was not a routine or well-resolved application. It was a proposal to add 18 more dwellings onto land previously reserved for open space / play provision within the wider Friar Park development context, despite:
- policy conflict,
- unresolved technical matters,
- heavy dependence on conditions,
- weak treatment of cumulative impact,
- live resident concerns about site works,
- and a wider pattern of missing information and unanswered Freedom of Information requests.
The application was nevertheless approved by 7 votes to 1.
This briefing is intended to make clear that:
- the committee did not receive, test or expose enough hard information to justify real confidence in the decision;
- the concerns raised by residents were not meaningfully addressed;
- and the meeting itself displayed troubling signs of weak grasp, deflection and over-reliance on stock planning phrases.
2. Executive summary
The Planning Committee approved DC/25/71072 in circumstances where:
- key matters remained unresolved and were pushed into conditions;
- the application was wrongly minimised as “only 18 houses”;
- cumulative effect was not properly understood or engaged with;
- officer responses to direct questions were sketchy, hesitant and often evasive;
- members appeared content to rely on generic planning language rather than tested facts;
- and live concerns from residents about mud, dust, habitat loss, communication failures and weak enforcement were brushed aside with superficial assurances.
The result is a decision that looks less like robust development management and more like:
approve now, patch later, explain little.
3. The committee’s central failure: treating this as “just 18 houses”
One of the most revealing moments of the meeting was the repeated reduction of the issue to “it’s only 18 houses.”
That line is not merely simplistic. It is planning nonsense.
This is not 18 houses in isolation.
It is:
- 18 more dwellings
- on land previously reserved for open space / play provision
- within the same wider site context as DC/23/68742
- following the boundary / phasing changes under DC/25/71065
- in the same Friar Park area where other applications have already raised serious concerns:
- DC/25/70154
- DC/24/69650
- DC/23/68742
To describe this as “only 18 houses” is to erase the very thing members were supposed to be considering: cumulative effect.
That phrase was plainly not understood by some councillors and was not seriously grappled with by the committee as a whole.
4. Poor understanding of cumulative effect
The committee’s handling of cumulative effect was one of its clearest failures.
There was no serious attempt to assess this application in the context of:
- the already approved 105 dwellings nearby,
- the relocation and effective loss of previously planned open/play land,
- the wider Friar Park growth pattern,
- the traffic and parking pressures already visible,
- the broader strain on schools, SEND provision, GP services and local amenity,
- and the pattern of repeated condition-heavy approvals in the same area.
Instead, the matter was reduced to whether this single application, viewed artificially on its own, could be tolerated.
That is not how cumulative planning impact works.
If members cannot or will not engage with cumulative effect, they are not properly assessing real-world planning consequences.
5. Housing need used as a lazy override
The committee repeatedly fell back on housing need.
Nobody disputes that housing is needed.
But housing need does not:
- cancel out the need for evidence,
- remove the need for proper scrutiny,
- erase policy conflict,
- justify vague and incomplete answers,
- or allow members to ignore unresolved technical matters.
The local plan also identifies shortages and strategic pressures in other areas too — including employment land, schools and open spaces.
So the idea that “we need more houses” is, on its own, a sufficient answer to every objection is profoundly weak.
Housing need is one material consideration.
It is not a universal planning solvent.
6. Far too many conditions — and far too much faith in them
A major reason this approval is so concerning is the extraordinary dependence on planning conditions.
The recommendation was approval subject to conditions relating to, among other things:
- finished floor levels,
- boundary treatment,
- landscaping,
- drainage and SuDS,
- waste storage,
- renewable energy,
- external lighting,
- parking,
- construction management,
- ecological management,
- contaminated land,
- external materials,
- BNG.
That is an enormous amount of unresolved or partly unresolved material being carried forward.
At committee, there was far too much reliance on the stock response that: “this can be conditioned” and that this is “common place in planning.”
That misses the point.
The problem is not that conditions exist.
The problem is that there are too many of them doing too much of the real work.
This committee was effectively asked to vote without full and settled knowledge of:
- drainage performance,
- detailed flood response,
- contaminated land investigation outcomes,
- long-term ecological management,
- construction dust and dirt control,
- and other matters central to whether the scheme is genuinely acceptable.
A committee cannot claim to be fully informed if its answer to repeated uncertainty is simply that it will all be sorted out later.
7. Sketchy, hesitant and evasive officer responses
Another serious concern from the meeting was the quality of the officer responses when matters were raised from the floor.
The officers asked to comment on concerns appeared:
- nervous,
- hesitant,
- sketchy,
- and in some cases plainly deflective.
The answers often did not actually answer the questions being asked.
Instead, there was a repeated tendency to:
- drift into generic reassurance,
- fall back on process language,
- mention conditions,
- or move sideways into irrelevant comfort points.
In one especially telling example, an officer effectively waffled on about electric vehicle charging points when air quality and wider environmental concerns were raised.
That was not a serious answer. It was a distraction.
When officers cannot provide clear, direct and coherent answers under questioning, committee members should be pausing — not waving the application through.
8. Residents’ concerns were minimised, not tested
Residents’ live concerns include:
- mud and dirt being dragged onto roads and pavements,
- dirt entering homes,
- considerable dust,
- ongoing habitat, shrub and tree loss,
- concern about the nature of disturbed soils and dust,
- weak communication with officers,
- weak confidence in developer / contractor control,
- poor confidence in enforcement.
These are not speculative anxieties. They are grounded concerns arising from what residents say they are already experiencing in the area.
Yet the response at committee was little more than:
- vague references to monitoring,
- road cleaning,
- and generic condition-based management.
There was no serious scrutiny of:
- what is in the dust,
- whether disturbed soils have been properly characterised,
- how quickly complaints are actioned,
- what enforcement has actually occurred,
- or whether current site management gives any real confidence for further works.
This was a major failure of the meeting.
9. The policy conflict was admitted — then waved away
The report itself accepts:
- the site falls outside the current residential allocation,
- it affects the Manor High School SLINC,
- and therefore there is conflict with policy, particularly around nature conservation.
Yet this was effectively neutralised at committee by:
- housing need,
- the tilted balance,
- and the claim that harm is “mitigated.”
That is not a convincing rebuttal.
Mitigation is not the same as absence of harm.
Nor is policy conflict made trivial simply because a shortfall exists elsewhere.
This was a weak and overly convenient treatment of a serious policy issue.
10. The open space issue was not seriously confronted
This application only exists in its present form because land previously reserved for open space / play has been repurposed for housing.
The report says the LAP has been moved and the remaining provision is “arguably better situated.”
That is a strikingly weak phrase for such an important planning shift.
“Arguably better situated” is not a rigorous evidence base.
It does not answer:
- whether it is equivalent in size,
- whether it is equivalent in play value,
- whether it is equivalent in accessibility,
- whether residents are losing the landscape and amenity value of what was previously promised,
- or whether this is simply a net loss dressed up as redesign.
11. Councillor conduct and deflection
There was also troubling conduct in the meeting itself.
Rather than staying focused on the planning substance, councillors Chidley and Piper chose to question where I live.
That was irrelevant to the application and plainly deflective.
I was there speaking on behalf of the Wednesbury Action Group.
The issues raised concerned:
- the application,
- the wider Friar Park context,
- cumulative impacts,
- resident concerns,
- and governance failings.
The speaker’s postcode does not answer any of those points.
That line of questioning appeared more political than planning-based, and the Chair should not have allowed the discussion to drift into that territory.
12. The Chair’s remarks and the issue of scrutiny
The Chair referred to the many pages in the report pack and asked whether I had read them.
Yes — I had.
The more relevant question is: how many members had read and understood them properly?
Because the quality of the debate strongly suggested that some members had not fully grasped:
- cumulative effect,
- the scale of condition reliance,
- the significance of unresolved matters,
- or the wider Friar Park pattern.
The committee cannot claim strong scrutiny if:
- hard questions are not answered,
- cumulative issues are not engaged with,
- and members fall back on slogans like “only 18 houses.”
13. Timing and unanswered FOIs
At the time of the meeting, many relevant FOIs remained:
- unanswered,
- overdue,
- or inadequately answered.
This includes FOIs relating to:
- DC/25/70154
- DC/24/69650
- DC/23/68742
- the wider Friar Park Urban Village
- and parallel requests to the WMCA and Environment Agency
This is not a side issue. It goes directly to confidence in the evidential basis and internal decision-making surrounding Friar Park.
The public still does not have clear disclosure on:
- internal concerns,
- risk reasoning,
- cumulative treatment,
- remediation oversight,
- and environmental transparency.
Members therefore voted in a context where important background information remained missing or unresolved.
That matters.
14. The vote itself
The committee voted:
- 7 in favour
- 1 against
That means all but one councillor were content for the application to proceed despite:
- unresolved matters,
- very heavy condition reliance,
- policy conflict,
- open space loss,
- weak treatment of cumulative effect,
- resident concerns about current works,
- poor quality answers in the meeting,
- and outstanding FOI opacity.
That should be stated plainly.
The approval was not a cautious, evidence-rich endorsement.
It was a vote to proceed in the face of substantial uncertainty.
15. What this decision says about Friar Park planning culture
This decision reinforces an increasingly obvious pattern in the Friar Park area:
- more housing can always be found room for,
- open space can be moved if needed,
- policy conflict can be softened by the tilted balance,
- technical detail can be pushed into conditions,
- resident concerns can be minimised,
- and transparency can wait.
This is not robust planning.
It is a culture of: incremental intensification, condition-heavy approval and thin accountability.
16. Key conclusions
A. The committee did not meaningfully engage with cumulative effect
The phrase was raised, but the substance was not understood or addressed.
B. The application was wrongly minimised
“Only 18 houses” was used to avoid the wider picture.
C. Housing need was overused as a rebuttal
Housing need became a substitute for planning judgment.
D. Conditions were relied on far too heavily
The committee approved without full and settled knowledge of critical matters.
E. Officer answers were weak
Responses were hesitant, generic and often evasive.
F. Residents were not taken seriously enough
Dust, mud, habitat loss, enforcement confidence and communication failures were all minimised.
G. The meeting allowed political deflection
Questioning where the speaker lives was improper and irrelevant.
H. The decision was made despite missing information and unanswered FOIs
That significantly undermines confidence in the scrutiny process.
17. Questions councillors should now reflect on
- Did members really understand the cumulative context of this application?
- Were members genuinely satisfied with the volume and significance of matters left to condition?
- Did officer answers fully and coherently address the questions asked?
- Was enough weight given to current resident experience of dust, dirt, habitat loss and poor enforcement confidence?
- Should members have been asked to defer until more information and FOI transparency were available?
- Are committees in Friar Park now becoming too comfortable approving on incomplete knowledge?
18. Final position
This decision should concern anyone who cares about planning standards in Sandwell.
It shows a committee willing to:
- minimise the scale of concern,
- accept incomplete answers,
- defer key matters to conditions,
- ignore cumulative context,
- and approve despite significant uncertainty.
The message sent to residents was unmistakable:
your concerns can be heard, but they do not have to be seriously tested.
That is not good planning.
That is not good governance.
And it is not good enough.
DC/25/71072 was not approved because the hard questions were convincingly answered. It was approved because the committee was willing to proceed without them.
Further info not included in email:
Don’t take my word for it. Watch Sandwell’s own webcast of Planning Committee. Agenda item 6 covers DC/25/71072 and starts at around 15:28 in the recording. Judge for yourself how well the questions were answered.
Planning Committee VideobStream
#SandwellCouncil #PlanningCommittee #Wednesbury #FriarParkRoad #HighPointAcademy #Planning #LocalGovernment #Governance #Accountability #Transparency #OpenSpace #PlayProvision #SLINC #AirQuality #Dust #Mud #ContaminatedLand #FloodRisk #SuDS #Housing #CumulativeImpact #ResidentConcerns #Enforcement #BlackCountry
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