Rochdale Council to have their say on ‘Places for Everyone’ joint development strategy plan

Date published: 08 February 2021


Nine councils in Greater Manchester - including Rochdale - will have their say on plans for a joint development strategy for the city-region: Places for Everyone.

The councils - Rochdale, Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Salford, Tameside, Trafford, and Wigan - will discuss proposals to work together on the joint development plan.

They will consider a report on Friday (12 February) on whether to form a joint committee to develop a long-term plan for jobs, new homes, and sustainable growth across their boroughs.

Places for Everyone would underpin an ambitious vision for Greater Manchester, setting out the steps that can be taken to strengthen our society, economy, and environment, and build resilience in our communities against future challenges.

The plan would map out where inclusive development can take place in areas connected by sustainable transport links, creating new homes and jobs for people across the city-region and laying the foundations for new investment and innovation. It would be also be a key tool in meeting Greater Manchester’s ambition to become carbon neutral by 2038.

The proposal follows the decision of Stockport Council last year to withdraw from the Greater Manchester Spatial Framework.
 


The nine councils will continue to work closely with Stockport Council, which will now prepare its own local plan, to deliver on shared objectives and strategies including the Local Industrial Strategy, the Five-Year Environment Plan, and the 2040 Transport Strategy.

Mayor Paul Dennett, City Mayor of Salford and GMCA lead for Housing, Planning and Homelessness, said: “This is a positive step forward, and I hope that next week we will be able to give people further confidence and clarity on our plans.

“The need to map out sustainable growth and protect against unplanned development hasn’t gone away. In the midst of a public health crisis that has struck hardest in the most disadvantaged places, having a positive and ambitious vision for our city-region is more important than it’s ever been. The best way to do that is with a plan that sets out clearly where good homes and jobs will be created, secures our most important natural assets, and supports our goal of a carbon neutral future.

“We know that we have to deliver genuinely affordable and good-quality housing across Greater Manchester, bring in new investment, and ensure that people here have access to good jobs in well- connected villages, towns and cities. The extensive work already carried out means that we won’t be starting from scratch, and together our nine councils can get on with bringing forward a new plan that maximises brownfield development and protects green belt as much as is possible.”

Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham said: “We want our councils to produce a credible plan that accommodates growth in the most sustainable way possible.

“While this is a plan that nine of our councils would be developing, every borough in Greater Manchester will continue working together to meet the big challenges we all face - building back better and fairer, tackling inequalities, and decarbonising our economy.”

Do you have a story for us?

Let us know by emailing news@rochdaleonline.co.uk
All contact will be treated in confidence.


To contact the Rochdale Online news desk, email news@rochdaleonline.co.uk or visit our news submission page.

To get the latest news on your desktop or mobile, follow Rochdale Online on Twitter and Facebook.


While you are here...

...we have a small favour to ask; would you support Rochdale Online and join other residents making a contribution, from just £3 per month?

Rochdale Online offers completely independent local journalism with free access. If you enjoy the independent news and other free services we offer (event listings and free community websites for example), please consider supporting us financially and help Rochdale Online to continue to provide local engaging content for years to come. Thank you.

Support Rochdale Online