| Description | 1999 Awards Ceremony |
|---|
| ISBN | n/a |
|---|
| Official Print Publication Date | |
|---|
| Website Publication Date | February 17, 2000 |
|---|
Contents |
Listen
1999 Awards News
17 February 2000
BOYACK REWARDS SCOTLAND'S TOP PLANNERS

Sarah Boyack today rewarded Scotland's planners for the
quality of their work when she announced the winners of the
1999 Scottish Awards for Quality in Planning.
The Minister for Transport and the Environment presented
the awards and commendations to the winners during a
ceremony at the City Chambers in Edinburgh. Seventeen
certificates were presented across three categories:
Development Control; Development Planning; and Development
on the Ground.
Sarah Boyack said:
"Planning affects
everyone in one way or another and it is important that
planners and others strive to produce high quality
decisions and outcomes. What we recognise as "quality"
today should become the norm tomorrow.
"Quality goes hand in hand with speed of decisions. We
aim to make Scotland's planning system more effective and
efficient and I can announce today a reduction in the
target for the Scottish Executive in approving structure
plans and in the full range of targets for appeals and
other cases handled by the Inquiry Reporters Unit. In the
interests of openness and accountability the performance of
the Scottish Executive on planning matters will be
published regularly."
In light of growing interest in the Quality Awards, the
Minister confirmed that there will be a 2000 Award scheme
which will be run along similar lines to the 1999 Scottish
Awards for Quality in Planning.
Those receiving Awards and Commendations today were:
Development Control
Award to The Highland Council for "
Highland Archaeology Week"
Commendation to Angus Council for "
Emphasis on Customer Care"
Commendation to Orkney Islands Council for
"
Orkney's Approach to Rural Housing"
Commendation to Argyll & Bute Council
for
Argyll & Bute's local Planning Design Award schemeDevelopment Planning
Award to The Highland Council for "
Highland Structure Plan Youth Forum"
Award to Dumfries & Galloway
Biodiversity Partnership for "
Dumfries & Galloway Local Biodiversity Action
Plan"
Commendation to Ayrshire Joint Structure
Plan Committee for "
Ayrshire Joint Structure Plan"
Commendation to South Lanarkshire Council
for "
Best Value Initiative for Local Planning"
Commendation to Aberdeen City Council for
"
Aberdeen Transportation Strategy"
Commendation to Dundee City Partnership
and Ironside Farrar Ltd for "
Dundee Ambassador Routes Design Guide"
Commendation to Scottish Natural Heritage
and participants for "
National Programme of Landscape Character
Assessment"
Development on the Ground
Special Award to South Lanarkshire Council
and New Lanark Conservation Trust for "
New Lanark Mill Hotel"
Award to The Dunbar Initiative for "
The Dunbar Initiative Project"
Award to Lerwick Town Centre Management
Group for "
Lerwick Town Centre Environmental Improvements"
Award to South Lanarkshire Council for "
Hamilton Town Square"
Commendation to The River Almond Forum for
"
River Almond Catchment Management Plan"
Commendation to South Lanarkshire Council
for "
Biggar Town Centre Project"








NOTES
1 Local authorities have the main responsibility for
operating the planning system in Scotland. They deal with
applications for development under the Town and Country
Planning (Scotland) Act 1997, and prepare development plans
that provide the policy context for their decisions.
2 The Scottish Awards scheme for Quality in Planning was
first launched in August 1997. In 1997 17 nominations were
received and there were 7 winners. The 1998 Awards scheme
was launched in August 1998 and attracted 37 entries from
across Scotland; there were fourteen winners. The 1999
Awards scheme was launched on 7 September 1999 and it
attracted 47 entries. Today, 17 winners are to be rewarded.
The scheme has attracted over 100 entries in the 3 years
that it has been running. On all three occasions the scheme
has been managed by, and run in association with, the Royal
Town Planning Institute.
3 The three judges of the 1999 Awards scheme were:
Gordon L Mann, Managing Director of
Crichton Development Company Ltd and formerly Director of
Planning at Dumfries & Galloway Regional Council;
Andrew Raven of the Scottish Consumer
Council, Chairman of the Deer Commission for Scotland and
formerly of the John Muir Trust; and
Claire Woodward-Nutt of the Strathclyde
Passenger Transport Executive, formerly a planner at North
Lanarkshire Council.
4. The judges' report can be viewed on the
Scottish Executive website
5. The Scottish Executive works to a target of 12 months
for approving structure plans and this is being reduced to
40 weeks. The Scottish Executive Inquiry Reporter's Unit
works to a range of targets from 20 weeks for advertisement
appeals, up to 48 weeks for planning permission and
planning enforcement appeals dealt with by public inquiry.
All targets are to be reduced as shown.
Results of planning permission by written submission
will be reduced from a 25 week time-scale to 23 weeks,
planning permission from public inquiry reduced by six
weeks to 42 weeks, planning enforcement written submissions
reduced by four weeks to 28 weeks, planning enforcement by
public inquiry from 48 to 42 weeks, and advertisement
appeals by written submission should be reduced by one-week
to 19 weeks.
Awards
Home Page ;
1999 Judges' Report 1997-99 nominations:
listed by council area
Contents |