Examples of CIL Regulations in a sentence
You may wish to seek professional planning advice to ensure that you comply fully with the requirements of CIL Regulations.
The Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) Regulations 2010 have introduced the requirement for all local authorities to make an assessment of any planning obligation in relation to three tests.
In line with the CIL Regulations, councils can pool no more than five S106 contributions towards the same project.
Planning obligations can only lawfully constitute a reason for granting planning permission where the three statutory tests of Regulation 122 of the CIL Regulations 2010 are met.
Other forms of necessary infrastructure (as defined in the CIL Regulations) and any mitigation of the development that is necessary will be secured through A S106 agreement.
This development may be CIL liable and correspondence on this matter will be sent separately, we strongly advise you not to commence on site until you have fulfilled your obligations under the CIL Regulations 2010 (as Amended).
The S106 recommendation is compliant with the CIL Regulations 2010.
Regulation 122(2) of the CIL Regulations 2010 (continued in the CIL Regulations 2011) introduced three tests for planning obligations into law, stating that obligations must be: • necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms; • directly related to the development; • fairly and reasonably related in scale and kind to the development.
The Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) Regulations 2010, part 11 introduced the requirement that planning obligations under section 106 must meet three statutory tests, i.e. that they (i) necessary to make the development acceptable in planning terms, (ii) directly related to the development, and (iii) fairly and reasonably related in scale and kind to the development.
The CIL Regulations provide no specific guidance on how local authorities should test the viability of their proposed charges.