Sandwell Planning Committee: When “Approve Subject to Conditions” Becomes a Governance Warning Sign
There is a phrase that appears again and again in Sandwell planning reports.
“Grant permission subject to conditions.”
It sounds sensible. It sounds procedural. It sounds like everything is under control.
But after reading through the Planning Committee papers and minutes from January, February and April 2026, a rather different picture starts to emerge.
Because behind those soothing words sits a planning system increasingly being asked to tidy up after the event, excuse departures from the adopted plan, rely on future paperwork, and tell residents that their concerns can all be managed later.
In other words: don’t worry, the condition fairy will sort it.
Retrospective planning: build first, explain later?
One of the most worrying themes is the number of applications involving work that has already happened, land-use complications, demolition, unauthorised building, or retrospective regularisation.
At 7 Limes Avenue, Rowley Regis, the applicant had previously obtained separate permissions for a single-storey and two-storey rear extension, but implemented them together. Officers explained that this made the combined development unauthorised and required a fresh assessment of the cumulative impact.
At 76 Hales Crescent, Smethwick, the property was Council-owned and the works had been carried out without planning consent. That is not a small footnote. That is the Council’s own housing stock ending up before the Council’s own Planning Committee because the correct planning route was not followed.
At 33 Newton Road, Great Barr, the previous scheme was for conversion, extensions and flats. Then during works, the existing building was demolished, so the applicant had to seek approval for demolition and a new building on the same footprint.
And at 110 Ashtree Road, Oldbury, a proposed HMO expansion had to be deferred because there was an anomaly over whether the applicant owned part of the land and whether the correct ownership declaration had been made.
This is not isolated tidying-up. It is a pattern.
Planning should be about public confidence, lawful process and proper assessment before development happens — not a municipal version of “oops, never mind, can we regularise it afterwards?”
The adopted plan says one thing. The emerging plan is used to say another.
Then we come to another favourite trick: the site conflicts with the adopted development plan, but officers say the emerging Local Plan points in a different direction.
At Kings Hill Business Park, Wednesbury, the site is allocated for residential use in the adopted development plan. Yet officers recommended industrial and warehouse use because the site was historically employment land, is said to be unlikely to come forward for housing, and is allocated as strategic employment land in the emerging Local Plan.
Now, emerging policy can carry weight. Nobody serious pretends otherwise.
But let us be honest: an emerging Local Plan is not the adopted Local Plan.
It should not be treated like a rubber stamp from the future.
The same broad issue appears at Newcomen Drive Open Space, Tipton, where the April agenda lists a variation of conditions for a previously approved industrial/warehousing development on Newcomen Drive Open Space.
Residents are entitled to ask a very simple question:
When did the principle really get decided — and was the public properly awake when it happened?
Friar Park: green space, play space, SLINC — and here come 18 more houses
The most politically sensitive item is clearly the land to the rear of High Point Academy, Friar Park Road, Wednesbury.
The proposal is for 18 dwellings, public open space and infrastructure. But the report makes clear that the site was originally set aside for play provision within the wider 105-home scheme. It is now being moved around to accommodate additional housing.
Even more important, this triangular piece of land falls outside the current residential allocation and is designated as part of the Manor High School Site of Local Importance for Nature Conservation — SLINC.
So let us strip away the planning language.
Land previously earmarked for recreation is now proposed for housing.
A local nature conservation designation is affected.
The play/open space arrangement changes.
Trees and biodiversity are part of the argument.
And the justification leans heavily on Sandwell’s weak housing land supply and the famous “tilted balance”.
The officer report says the development would provide:
Six one-bedroom maisonettes, seven two-bedroom homes and five three-bedroom homes.
It also says the proposal includes four affordable homes and would require a Section 106 agreement.
Fine. Housing is needed. Affordable housing is needed. Nobody sensible denies that.
But housing need should not become a magic password that opens every gate, flattens every green edge, and converts every awkward ecological concern into a spreadsheet entry.
The Council’s ecologist says the baseline biodiversity value of the site was 4.65 habitat units, with around 60% delivered on site and 40% purchased off site.
That raises the obvious question:
Is Sandwell protecting nature — or pricing up its loss?
Because residents do not live inside biodiversity calculations. They live beside actual trees, actual green space, actual play space, actual drainage problems and actual traffic.
Conditions, conditions, conditions
Across these reports, conditions are doing an enormous amount of heavy lifting.
Drainage? Condition.
Noise? Condition.
Contamination? Condition.
Biodiversity Net Gain? Condition.
Lighting? Condition.
Boundary treatment? Condition.
Construction management? Condition.
Parking? Condition.
Waste storage? Condition.
Cycle storage? Condition.
Management plans? Condition.
Conditions are a normal part of planning. But when key details are repeatedly pushed beyond the decision point, the public starts to wonder whether the Committee is approving a complete development or approving a promise to sort the difficult bits later.
At Friar Park, the Lead Local Flood Authority wanted additional information on hydraulic calculations, infiltration systems, permeable materials, finished floor levels, and SuDS management and maintenance. The report says these matters can be controlled by condition.
At Kings Hill, the application was deferred in February because further noise clarification was needed. It then returned in April with amended details and conditions including a noise management plan and limits on external plant.
That may be technically acceptable.
But politically and publicly, it starts to look like this:
Residents raise real-world problems. Officers reply with future paperwork.
Members did push back — and that matters
To be fair, the Planning Committee did not simply rubber-stamp everything.
At 7 Limes Avenue, officers recommended approval, but after a site visit members refused the application on the grounds that it was overbearing and out of character.
At 76 Hales Crescent, members also refused the Council-owned property extension on grounds including overbearing nature, being out of character and overlooking neighbouring properties.
That is important. It shows members can look beyond the officer recommendation and make their own judgement.
But here is the problem: the public needs to see consistency.
If one overbearing development is refused, residents will quite reasonably ask why other schemes with noise, traffic, ecological, drainage, character or infrastructure concerns are waved through subject to a neat little bundle of conditions.
Children’s homes and HMOs: treated as one-offs, but are they?
Another pattern worth watching is the steady flow of applications involving children’s homes, residential care homes and HMO-style intensification.
The January minutes record approval for The Roundhouse, Reservoir Passage, Wednesbury, changing from a dwellinghouse to a residential home for up to four children, plus use of the lodge for one child as a transition unit. Conditions included a site management scheme, use restrictions, lighting, cycle storage, parking and a security plan.
The same January meeting approved 84 Gorsty Hill Road, Rowley Regis as a residential care home for up to four young people, again with conditions including a management plan, parking and use restrictions.
The April agenda then included 40 Longleat, Great Barr, for conversion of a house into a residential home for up to three children.
The issue is not whether vulnerable children need safe homes. They absolutely do.
The issue is whether Sandwell is looking at these applications as isolated planning cases when they may actually form part of a wider borough-wide trend.
Where is the map?
Where is the cumulative assessment?
Where is the analysis of clustering?
Where is the review of parking, staffing, neighbour impact, safeguarding interface and management-plan compliance across these sites?
Planning cannot do Ofsted’s job. But planning can and should deal properly with use, intensity, location, parking, amenity and management.
The real question: who checks afterwards?
The biggest weakness in condition-heavy planning is not the wording on the decision notice.
It is enforcement.
Who checks the noise management plan is followed?
Who checks the biodiversity commitments happen for 30 years?
Who checks drainage works are built and maintained?
Who checks parking areas remain available?
Who checks landscaping is not planted once, neglected and quietly forgotten?
Who checks construction management plans are actually followed when residents are living with dust, noise and mud?
Because if the answer is “the Council will monitor it”, residents may be forgiven for asking:
Which bit of the Council? With what staff? On what timetable? Reported where?
Conditions without visible enforcement are not protection. They are planning theatre.
The conclusion
These Planning Committee papers show a borough under pressure.
Housing pressure.
Employment land pressure.
Care provision pressure.
Infrastructure pressure.
Open space pressure.
Ecology pressure.
And, most of all, public trust pressure.
Sandwell Council keeps telling residents that matters can be dealt with by conditions, management plans, Section 106 agreements, biodiversity credits, construction plans, drainage details and future monitoring.
But residents have heard enough warm words.
They need evidence.
They need enforcement.
They need transparency.
They need proper public explanation.
And they need a planning system that does not look like it bends over backwards for applicants while asking residents to accept the consequences later.
The blunt truth?
Sandwell planning is starting to look less like plan-led development and more like damage control with a committee report attached.
And when green space, play space, residential amenity, traffic, drainage, biodiversity and local character are all being traded off behind phrases like “tilted balance” and “subject to conditions”, residents should be watching very closely indeed.
Because in Sandwell, “approved subject to conditions” too often sounds like:
Approved now. Questions later.
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