HC Deb 03 December 2001 vol 376 cc33-6W
Malcolm Bruce

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, pursuant to the answer to the hon. Member for Stroud (Mr. Drew) of 27 November 2001,Official Report, columns 859–60W, on the rural White Paper, if the £239 million allocated for rural bus service improvements includes the £15 million in the parish transport fund. [20139]

Ms Keeble

The £239 million allocated for rural transport over the next three years includes the Countryside Agency's £15 million parish transport fund.

Malcolm Bruce

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, pursuant to the answer to the hon. Member for Stroud (Mr. Drew) of 27 November 2001,Official Report, columns 859–60W, on the rural White Paper, which changes ensure the revised PPG13 will develop the role of market towns as hubs for jobs and services. [20144]

Ms Keeble

Our new planning policy guidance for transport (PPG13) sets out how local authorities in rural areas should plan for new development to be primarily sited at the most accessible locations in the local area. In remote locations, well away from large urban areas most development, including for jobs and services, should be located at local service centres. These centres will include market towns and are expected to be the focal points for services in the countryside. Local service centres should be designated in the development plans prepared by local authorities. These plans form the framework within which decisions on proposals for development are taken.

Malcolm Bruce

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, pursuant to the answer to the hon. Member for Stroud (Mr. Drew) of 27 November 2001,Official Report, columns 859–60W, on the rural White Paper, if he will list (a) the organisations which received funds and (b) the amount that they received to fund improvements for rural bus services in 2001–02; and what proportion of the fund has been allocated to improve rural bus services in 2002–03. [20027]

Ms Keeble

Local authorities have received the following amounts in rural bus grant to date in 2001–02 through the rural bus subsidy grant and rural bus challenge schemes.

Local Authority Payments to date (£)
Bath & NE Somerset 71,492
Bedfordshire 512,742
Blackburn with Darwen 19,933
Bracknell Forest 20,450
Bristol 5,410
Buckinghamshire 286,599
Cambridgeshire 706,378
Cheshire 313,006
Cornwall 623,684
Cumbria 1,196,144
Darlington 43,219
Derbyshire 364,752
Devon 990,684
Dorset 717,498
Durham 540,339
East Riding 619,349
East Sussex 966,752
Essex 1,440,828
Gloucestershire 698,377
Greater Manchester 67,585
Halton 6,479
Hampshire 1,320,239
Hartlepool 15,081
Herefordshire 508,519
Hertfordshire 484,304
Isle of Wight 81,351
Kent 851,887
Lancashire 780,725
Leicestershire 776,664
Lincolnshire 1,067,597
Medway 78,189
Merseyside 42,636
Middlesbrough 5,895
Milton Keynes 166,120
NE Lincolnshire 38,124
Norfolk 1,500,147
North Lincolnshire 344,434
North Somerset 67,858
North Yorkshire 1,213,987

Local Authority Payments to date (£)
Northamptonshire 701,499
Northumberland 779.618
Nottinghamshire 652,363
Oxfordshire 828,512
Peterborough 73,518
Plymouth 4,983
Redcar & Cleveland 48,857
Rutland 54,657
Shropshire 801,616
Somerset 519,856
South Gloucestershire 171,095
South Yorkshire 608,689
Staffordshire 807,230
Stockton-on-Tees 29,280
Stoke-on-Trent 4,836
Suffolk 1,253,255
Surrey 949,883
Swindon 49,848
Telford and The Wrekin 67,518
Thurrock 116,499
Torbay 117,725
Tyne and Wear 693,737
Warrington 53,313
Warwickshire 668,483
West Berkshire 118,806
West Midlands 44,335
West Sussex 517,826
West Yorkshire 705,668
Wiltshire 1,160,774
Windsor & Maidenhead 45,214
Wokingham 69,216
Worcestershire 1,102,672
York 65,444
Total 33,442,284

A total of £68 million will be available for rural bus grants in 2002–03. Allocations of rural bus subsidy grant to local authorities for 2002–03 and the decisions on the 2001 rural bus challenge competition will be announced shortly.

Malcolm Bruce

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, pursuant to the answer to the hon. Member for Stroud (Mr. Drew), of 27 November 2001,Official Report, columns 859–60W, on the rural White Paper, what the criteria are for mandatory 50 per cent. rate relief for non-agricultural enterprises on farms; and if he will make a statement. [20142]

Dr. Whitehead

Under the Rating (Former Agricultural Premises and Rural Shops) Act 2001, 50 per cent. mandatory rate relief is available to any rateable non-domestic property with a rateable value of no more than £6,000. This is provided that it consists wholly or mainly of land or buildings which were subject to the agricultural exemption from rates for at least 183 days during the one year period immediately preceding the date on which the rate relief scheme came into effect. The scheme came into effect in England on 15 August 2001. It has yet to be commenced in Wales, which is a matter for the National Assembly for Wales. The scheme will run for five years from commencement, when it will be reviewed and can be extended by Order. If the scheme is extended, each property will be eligible for relief up to five years from when it first received the relief.

Malcolm Bruce

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, pursuant to the answer to the hon. Member for Stroud (Mr. Drew), of 27 November 2001,Official Report, columns 859–60W, on the rural White Paper, what changes have been made to ensure the revised PPG7 will develop farm diversification. [20148]

Ms Keeble

We revised our planning policies for the countryside (PPG7) to reflect the importance this Government attach to effective planning for sustainable farm diversification projects. Local planning authorities are expected to be supportive of well-conceived farm diversification schemes for business purposes that are consistent in their scale with their rural location.

PPG7 should be taken into account by local authorities in preparing their development plans which form the framework within which decisions on proposals for development are taken. The guidance may also be material to decisions on individual planning applications and appeals.

Malcolm Bruce

To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, Local Government and the Regions, pursuant to the answer to the hon. Member for Stroud (Mr. Drew), of 27 November 2001,Official Report, columns 859–60W, on the rural White Paper, how many new affordable homes in rural settlements were occupied in 2001–02. [20033]

Ms Keeble

Information is not available in the form requested.

New affordable homes in rural settlements in England with a population of 3,000 or less are funded by the Housing Corporation and local authorities or through the planning system without public subsidy.

From 1 April to 31 October 2001, 379 affordable homes in rural settlements were approved, and 270 were completed, under the Housing Corporation's Approved Development Programme. Local authorities approved 142 units and completed 82 units in the same period.