Reform of the planning system is one of the key priorities for the Government. In a speech on her vision for economic growth, Chancellor Rachel Reeves reiterated the Government’s priorities for the Planning and Infrastructure Bill. These include a commitment to “rapidly streamline the process for determining applications” and “to make the consultation process far less burdensome”.
While many Britons have little day-to-day interaction with the planning system, there is a common understanding that it is slow, bureaucratic, and ultimately holding back innovation and growth.
The finger is often pointed at policy as the solution—framing the issue as a matter of “tackling red tape.” However, the tools and processes that planners rely on to do their jobs are outdated, and improving them is just as crucial. While this may not be as headline-grabbing, modernising these systems is essential for creating better communities, supporting businesses, and ensuring that developments are fair, legal, and environmentally responsible.
Planners - highly skilled public servants - are best placed to drive the changes that the Chancellor is calling for. While policy levers are important, they must be paired with modern, efficient digital tools to deliver the reforms that the Government seeks.
Improving the tools and processes used in planning also enables better policymaking. Currently, data about what is and isn’t being approved is locked away in PDFs, collected expensively after the fact, or entirely absent. To build smarter, use land more effectively, and find mutually beneficial outcomes for developers and communities, we need to leverage data more efficiently. Automating data collection and reporting through better tools is the only way to achieve this.
Work to deliver this future is already underway. Over the last few years, we’ve been collaborating with planning officers, councils, and the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) to redesign back-office planning systems—the technology that planning officers use to assess and determine applications.
The aims of this programme are to:
Despite the clear benefits, achieving this future has required significant effort. One of the challenges is the landscape of local government, where software is often repurposed across different domains with little user input in its design or improvement.
Through this programme, trailblazing councils are now piloting live services using their new back-office systems. MHCLG’s progressive approach to the Open Digital Planning transformation programme has been essential to accelerating the delivery of a modern planning system for three reasons:
Council services are stretched, and funding has been needed to free up planners’ time to contribute to the development of the tools they’ll be using in the future. Yet, long-term sustainability remains a challenge, and central government has helped by bringing in commercial and legal expertise to guide the programme.
What can we learn from this experience for broader government transformation?
There is a huge resource of expertise and problem-solving ability within local government, and it must be enabled through the right funding and support.
Ultimately, if you want to transform a service, you need to transform the organisations delivering it - and if you want to transform organisations, you need to empower the people within them.
This experience has shown that with careful investment and collaboration, large-scale government transformation is not just possible - it is essential for driving growth and innovation.