Housing select committee chief increases pressure on housing secretary over unlawful appeal decision
An influential cross-party committee of MPs has demanded that housing secretary Robert Jenrick hand over all documents relating to his unlawful decision to approve a 1,500-home scheme being promoted by a Tory party donor.
Clive Betts, chair of the housing, communities and local government select committee, wrote to Jenrick today requesting that he provide details of all correspondence, notes and advice from officials relating to the Westferry Printworks scheme in east London.
Jenrick鈥檚 January decision to approve the controversial scheme against the advice of a planning inspector, and just a day before a new planning charge would have been applied to it costing the developer as much as 拢50m, has already been quashed after he admitted 鈥渁pparent bias鈥 in the decision.
But Labour MP Betts said in his letter that he was nevertheless concerned that without publication of the documents 鈥渢his matter could lead to an erosion of trust in the integrity of the planning system and in our wider democratic process鈥. Betts asked for relevant documents to be either sent to the committee or put in the public domain.
On Monday, Jenrick admitted he had passed all documents relevant to the decision to the Cabinet Secretary Mark Sedwill, which the Labour Party said was a tacit admission of an enquiry by Sedwill into Jenrick鈥檚 conduct.
Jenrick continues to deny he displayed any actual bias in making the decision, which he told the House of Commons on Monday he took 鈥渋n good faith and will an open mind鈥.
His comments came after it was revealed that the owner of the developer behind the 拢1bn Westferry Printworks scheme, former Express Newspapers proprietor Richard Desmond, had attempted to lobby Jenrick about the scheme in November last year at a Tory fundraising dinner which he paid 拢12,000 to attend. Jenrick says he refused to discuss the matter with him and had informed officials of this contact prior to making the decision.
Last week the housing minister, Chris Pincher, told Betts in the House of Commons that he would 鈥渢ake seriously and consider weightily鈥 any request for documents relating to the case.
The request for documents follows similar requests for information from the Labour Party and from Tower Hamlets, the borough in which the development is sited, and which took the legal action which led to Jenrick鈥檚 decision being quashed.
Jenrick鈥檚 decision to concede 鈥渁pparent bias鈥 and not contest Tower Hamlets case meant Jenrick was able to avoid the risk that the judge in the case would order the disclosure of the documents sought by Tower Hamlets.
Designed by PLP, the scheme is set to be project managed by Mace.
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