To receive a briefing on Section 106 Agreements and Funds from the Section 106 Officer.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Committee received a report on the current position of Section 106 agreements (S106) from the dedicated Section 106 Officer. The report updated Members on the balances of S106 and the work being undertaken to ensure service areas spent the outstanding balances where appropriate.
The Council currently held a total of £4,900,989.90 in the S106 account, £3,277,582.25 of the total figure was identified as non-time limited funds and £1,623,407.64 was identified as funds time limited for expenditure.
The report showed expenditure of S106 funds since 2009, examples of expenditure and delivery of benefits to the community, and the future programme to expend S106 monies.
Some of the S106 monies were close to their time limited deadline and the S106 Officer was working with service managers to ensure that they spend the money that was allocated to them before the time expired. The report stated that S106 would be replaced on the adoption of the new Local Plan (2014) by a Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL). However it was contended that this was not accurate and that CIL would become an addition to S106 agreements which would remain the main mechanism for securing funds from developments for communities.
The Committee asked questions and the following points arose:
·
S106 monies were used to mitigate the effect of developments on a
community. Negative impacts were identified at the planning stage
of developments. Each S106 defined the community affected and where
the monies could be spent by the Council.
·
Each S106 specified how accrued interest was dealt with; in many
cases interest was applied to the sum of the S106. The Council did
not have a financial benefit in holding S106 money as long as
possible to accrue interest.
·
The £250,000 returned by the Council to a developer as shown
in paragraph 7.1 of the report was returned because “The
Greenways” did not come to fruition and the S106 agreement
specifically stated that money would be returned to the Council if
the development didn’t take place.
·
Councillors worked hard to secure S106 monies for their community
and wanted to ensure that there is a plan for spending S106
monies.
·
Some of the S106 required match funding by the Council. These cases
needed to be clearly identified to ensure that the Council had the
funding to match the S106 agreements before being agreed.
·
Appendix 1 showed some agreements that consisted of very small
amounts of money. S106 agreements required a lot of legal input
which could be expensive and in some cases more costly than the
S106 was worth. It was suggested that it would be prudent to allow
these amounts to expire and default to avoid the legal costs that
out stripe the benefits of the S106 money.
· It would be useful for Ward Councillors to maintain knowledge of S106 that affect their ward by arranging Appendix 1 to link S106 monies to the respective ward. It was also considered important that Councillors were informed about S106 agreements that preceded their election to the Council. ... view the full minutes text for item 150