Call centre to deal with planning queries as council brings in paperless system
People wanting information about new developments in the Bath area will no longer be able to view hard copy paper plans at council offices.
The move is part of a council efficiency drive which will also bring the curtain down on a system where a trained planning officer was always on call to deal with face-to-face enquiries over planning applications for everything from house extensions to superstores.
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The changes - which Bath and North East Somerset Council will bring into force on Monday - have concerned conservation groups.
The first point of contact for people with a query about the planning system will now be the authority’s Council Connect system - the call centre which deals with issues from potholes to refuse collection.
B&NES hopes most general questions about the planning process will be answered at that stage, with those needing what it describes as further technical advice and guidance being put through to an information officer in the planning department.
The council says that, in the case of more complex queries, a planning officer will call back within 24 hours.
A spokesman said: “Planning applications and pre-application submissions require a high level of technical skills. Under existing arrangements, staff with these technical skills are staffing a duty planner system at Trimbridge House and Keynsham, when some of the queries the public wish to discuss could be answered by non-specialist staff.
“From Monday, professional staff will concentrate on planning and other applications and pre-application submissions and this will support work being completed more quickly.”
The shake-up comes as B&NES is about to move out of the offices occupied by the planning department at Trimbridge House in Trim Street.
It says that, because the majority of planning applications are now submitted online, paper copies will no longer be automatically provided at council offices. Computer access will be available from self-service computers at Trimbridge House until it closes next month, and at the Council Connect area at the Guildhall in Bath, the Riverside offices in Keynsham, and The Hollies in Midsomer Norton, with assistance available if required.
The spokesman added: “More than half of planning applications are submitted via the web as it is the most efficient means of submission. “In order to contain costs and meet the council’s environmental targets, we will no longer automatically provide paper copies of current applications.
“These changes support the council’s need to focus our resources in the most effective way.”
To contact Council Connect, email councilconnect@bathnes.gov.uk; ring 01225 394041, or text 07797806545.
The council says that once an application has entered the system and is being dealt with by the department, the applicant will have a named officer to deal with directly as is currently the case.
All planning application forms and plans are available online at http://planning.bathnes.gov.uk/PublicAccess/
Submissions about applications, can be done either in writing to Planning Services, Trimbridge House, Trim Street, Bath, BA1 2DP, by email to development_control@bathnes.gov.uk or using that website.
Full details about the changes can be found at www.bathnes.gov.uk/planningchanges







7 Comments
by Janus, Bath
Sunday, September 12 2010, 1:40PM
“Perhaps it should be called Council Dis-Connect ???”
by Chris, Hinton Charterhouse
Saturday, September 11 2010, 1:41PM
“Council Connect used to be called the "Action Line'. I heard BANES had to change the name to avoid trouble with the trade descriptions act.”
by David, Bath
Friday, September 10 2010, 5:38PM
“"Your call is important to us...."”
by Pearl Hardingham, Keynsham
Friday, September 10 2010, 3:53PM
“So much for customer service. I agree with C of Bath, but I believe the decline started a while ago.”
by jeff, Radstock
Friday, September 10 2010, 3:44PM
“C. this is not the beginning of the decline, that started a long time ago. This is the end of true Public Service.
Paperless systems and now faceless bureaucrats.”
by rogerh, Bath
Friday, September 10 2010, 2:34PM
“Did they test the system by downloading and comparing two A0 size architectural drawings on their computer screen?”
by C, Bath
Friday, September 10 2010, 1:01PM
“And so the slow decline of service standards for the residents of Bath begins¿¿¿.”