The Forum > Article Comments > Curbing the political abuse of development approvals > Comments
Curbing the political abuse of development approvals : Comments
By Alan Moran, published 1/2/2006Alan Moran unravels the links between property development, politicians, planning approvals and regulation.
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As a developer, you can get anything you want passed if you know and fund the right people. All the big boys do it.
The barrier to entry for the smaller player is then created, and council seems to love excercising muscle on the smaller guys who dont have the cashflow of legal backing to go through the appeal and court processes. The big boys simply ask for what they want, if they dont for some strange reason get it they bend the council over in court and get their solution, and as council know this often they come to the party to aviod it. Disgusting.
The day that council members are elected without party affiliations and by making it illegal for developers to donate to campaigns, charities and the like, is the day that we will have more of the right people pulling the strings, not the developers.
This costs us plenty. We have created transit based cities with under utilised or poor infrastrucutre, environmental degradation and often mini ghettos of cheap investment properties.
Planning is the single most important legacy we can leave as a generation. The problems we have created dont need a bandaid approach, we dont need new tunnels or new ways to encourage the problem, we need people not motivated by money, not motivated by particular beliefs such as greenies etc, we need people who can integrate new urbanism with enviromental sympathy and bustling commerce. Simple, pay those in there more money so as to attract better candidates, keep a solid council vision and do not alter due to outside pressures, make donations illegal and with hefty penealties (including prison), and reduce developer contributions.