If a person carries out a development without the required planning permission or does not comply with a condition attached to their planning permission (known as a ‘breach of planning control’), the local planning authority (LPA) may take enforcement action against them.
There are various options available to LPAs in tackling breaches of planning control. Sometimes a satisfactory outcome can be achieved by informal negotiations, for example the LPA can request the submission of a retrospective planning application to rectify an unauthorised development. However, if this is not possible then formal action may be taken, which must be appropriate to the scale of the breach. Enforcement is a discretionary power, meaning that it is up to the LPA how it responds to breaches of planning control. They must consider whether it is in the public interest to take enforcement action and in certain situations they may decide that no action is necessary.
If formal action is required, an enforcement officer may issue an enforcement notice. This sets out what has to be done to remedy the situation and outlines the right to appeal against the notice. A stop notice can also be issued with an enforcement notice, to stop unauthorised works from continuing during the time it takes for the enforcement notice to take effect. This can be an important tool in protecting areas from unauthorised development which could be harmful to nature if it continued. It is an offence to not comply with an enforcement notice or a stop notice.