Official Statistics

Planning Inspectorate Ministerial Measures - Experimental Statistics 23rd November 2023

Published 23 November 2023

Applies to England

1. Introduction

This report provides information on how the Planning Inspectorate has performed against new measures by which Ministers agreed to assess the organisation’s casework performance for appeals.

These measures are:

A. Appeals valid on first submission

B. How long appeals take

  • There is also an ambition for more consistent, timely decisions

C. Customer satisfaction

D. Number of cases quality assured

Full details of these are available.

For measure A this report covers the period April 2022 to June 2023. Information on how long appeal decisions take from valid receipt to decision (measure B) covers the 12 months from November 2022 to October 2023, with additional quarterly statistics up to September 2023. For measure C, survey fieldwork was carried out in April and early May 2023. Measure D covers the three months July to September 2023.

This is the sixth time such information has been produced, and work is still in development. Following a review, this series continues with the status of “Experimental”, with updates provided every three months. The next publication will be in February 2023.

These statistics are designated as Experimental Statistics and any feedback would be welcome. Please send comments to statistics@planninginspectorate.gov.uk

2. Appeals Valid on First Submission

Ambition: Proportion rising annually and ambition to reach 100%. Rising to at least 85% in 2023/24.

For appeals received during April to June 2023, 55.5% were valid first time. Table 1 shows the proportion valid on first submission over the year.

The figures in this time series are revised at each publication as some cases take many months to be validated.

The Inspectorate is developing new digital public services. As more appeals are submitted through those services the proportion of cases submitted validly first time is expected to rise.

Table 1 - Proportion of Appeals Valid on First Submission, By Quarter, for Appeals Received April 2022 to March 2023 (Provisional)

Appeals Received Apr – Jun 2022 Jul - Sep 2022 Oct – Dec 2022 Jan – Mar 2023 Apr – Jun 2023
% Valid First Time 63.2% 61.2% 62.1% 56.2% 55.5%

Source: Horizon

Figure 1 – Proportion of Appeals Valid on First Submission for Selected Appeal Types, Cases Received July 2022 to June 2023 (Provisional)

Source: Horizon

Robust data on the reasons for appeals not being valid are not currently available. The Inspectorate are developing new digital public services and as more cases are submitted using those services the data we hold will improve.

3. How Long Appeals Take

Ambition: As an initial milestone in making more consistent, timely decisions - The Planning Inspectorate should be working towards consistently achieving decisions in these ranges:

Appeals decided entirely using writing evidence in 16 – 20 weeks.

Appeals decided including at least some evidence through hearing or inquiry in 24 - 26 weeks (30 weeks to recommendation for called in or recovered cases)

This section provides information on how long it has taken to make decisions in the last 12 months (in this case, November 2022 to October 2023). Complementary statistics for the same period can be found in our monthly Official Statistics publication .

Figure 2 below shows the proportion of cases decided:

  • within 20 weeks;
  • within 26 weeks (but more than 20 weeks);
  • within 52 weeks (but more than 26 weeks); and
  • more than 52 weeks.

The data applies to all cases decided in the year to the end of October 2023, with additional quarterly data up to September 2023; and is broken down by the procedure used to arrive at the decision. The data for this Figure is available at Annex B.

Figure 2 shows how many cases are decided within a year, and how many take longer than a year. It shows that a much smaller proportion (16%) of cases decided by written representations take more than a year than those decided by Hearings (43%) or Inquiries (53%).

It also shows that a greater proportion of cases decided by written representations are decided within 20 weeks (24%) than those decided by Hearings (12%) or Inquiries (2%).

Figure 2: Time for Valid to Decision, for Decisions November 2022 to October 2023

Source: Horizon

Measures set by the Minister that apply to cases decided wholly by written representations are shown in Annex C.

Consultation

If you would like to make a suggestion on which information you would like to see; or would like to have the chance to comment on any proposals on what is published, please contact us via statistics@planninginspectorate.gov.uk

Figure 2 shows the proportion of cases decided in time bands. Figure 3 below shows more detail. It gives the full spread of time taken to decide cases, providing visibility of those cases far outside the accepted range. It shows all cases decided in the 12 months to the end of September 2023; and a breakdown by the decision procedure. Larger pictures are available at Annex D.

Figure 3 shows:

  • The spread of time taken to decide for all cases, is similar to the spread for those decided wholly by written representations. This is because the large majority (16,795/18,221) of cases are decided this way.
  • For hearings and inquiries, there were a 31 cases that took over four years (200 weeks and more).
  • Three quarters of cases decided wholly by written representations are decided within 43 weeks. The corresponding time for three quarters of cases decided wholly or partly by Hearings is 75 weeks and for those wholly or partly by Inquiries is 92 weeks – in each case, more than twice as long.
  • Nine in ten cases decided wholly by written representations are decided within 59 weeks. The corresponding time for nine out ten cases decided wholly or partly by Hearings (102 weeks) and Inquiries (193 weeks), is more than twice as long.

Figure 3 – Spread of time taken to decide cases (in weeks), for cases decided November 22 – October 23

Note: The figure for “Half the decisions are made within” is the 50th percentile; this is the same as the median time to decide these cases, which is how this is presented in the Official Statistics

All

Written Representations

Hearing

Inquiry

Source: Horizon

The Ministerial measure requires information on how long appeal decisions take from valid receipt to decision, with information on various percentiles

Ambition: Decision time for 50th percentile falling. Decision time for 90th percentile falling faster than 50th percentile.

The ambition is that cases are decided more quickly, and the time taken for longest cases is reduced. If the ambition is met, the gap between the 50th percentile and 90th percentile needs to reduce.

What is a percentile?

A percentile is a measure that shows the value below which a given percentage of the values in a group of numbers fall.

For example, if we tell you the 25th percentile for decision times, then you know that 25% of decisions are issued in less time (or the same time) as that.

Table 2 below shows the 25th, 50th, 75th and 90th percentiles for valid to decision, in weeks, for the decisions made from November 2022 to October 2023. Note that these match the timings given in text on the shapes in Figure 3 above.

Table 2 - Percentiles for Valid to Decision (in weeks) for decisions made November 2022 to October 2023 – and number of decisions in that time

Procedure 25th percentile 50th percentile 75th percentile 90th percentile 100th percentile Number of decisions
Written reps 21 weeks 30 weeks 43 weeks 60 weeks 194 weeks 16,969
Hearing 24 weeks 44 weeks 74 weeks 103 weeks 252 weeks 916
Inquiry 30 weeks 50 weeks 84 weeks 154 weeks 254 weeks 518
All 21 weeks 31 weeks 45 weeks 64 weeks 254 weeks 18,403

Source: Horizon

If performance changes, it will be more quickly apparent by looking at quarterly data than 12 monthly data. Annex E shows the same percentiles, for decisions in the three months April to June 2023. There are relatively few hearings and inquiries in each quarter, which means quarterly percentiles for these appeals are susceptible to extreme values - so they should be viewed with caution.

Figure 4: All Appeal Decisions, 50th and 90th Percentile for Valid to Decision, By Quarter, Oct 21 – Sept 23

Table 3 - All appeal Decisions, 50th and 90th percentiles of Valid to Decision (weeks), October 2021 to Sept 2023

Decision made: 50th percentile 90th percentile Gap
Oct - Dec 21 25 Weeks 48 Weeks 23 Weeks
Jan - Mar 22 25 Weeks 50 Weeks 25 Weeks
Apr - Jun 22 27 Weeks 58 Weeks 31 Weeks
Jul - Sep 22 27 Weeks 60 Weeks 33 Weeks
Oct - Dec 22 30 Weeks 60 Weeks 30 Weeks
Jan - Mar 23 30 Weeks 65 Weeks 35 Weeks
Apr – Jun 23 31 Weeks 65 Weeks 34 Weeks
Jul – Sep 23 32 Weeks 63 Weeks 31 Weeks

Source: Horizon

The table above covers all appeal decisions. Annex F gives figures for appeals decided wholly by written representations; wholly or partially through hearings; and wholly or partially through inquiries.

4. Customer Satisfaction

Ambition: Proportion of customers reporting satisfaction with the Planning Inspectorate’s services rising annually

No new analysis relevant to this measure is presented this quarter. The Planning Inspectorate have worked with the Institute for Customer Service to conduct a satisfaction survey. The data capture phase was carried out in April and early May 2023. The results of this survey show that Planning Inspectorate was given an overall satisfaction score of 56.8.

It is not simple to compare these customer service results against other organisations, given the nature of the services the Planning Inspectorate provides. For instance, based on customer complaint data, almost a half of the complaints that the Inspectorate received were complaints about an Inspector’s decision, rather than a complaint about how the process was run.

The results suggested that the organisation is underperforming in these key areas:

  • Experience
  • Complaint handling
  • Customer Ethos
  • Emotional Connection
  • Ethics

Action plans will be put in place to address these areas of concern to optimise, evolve and ultimately improve our performance.

5. Number of Cases Quality Assured

Ambition: There is no minimum number or percentage ambition on this measure.

During the three months July to September, 990 appeal cases were quality assured. These are shown in Table 4 below.

Table 4 - Number of appeal decisions quality assured, July to September 2023

Number Category Explanation
119 Inspector Manager team reading Inspector Managers are expected to review a proportion of their Inspectors’ decisions post-decision. This is to ensure quality standards and to identify learning opportunities and to check for consistency with the relevant quality framework.
64 APOs Recommendations made by Appeals Planning Officers (APOs) are all reviewed as part of routine quality assurance before a decision is issued by an Inspector.
807 Inspector in Training – pre-decision The majority of decisions made by Inspectors in Training (IITs) are reviewed for teaching purposes. Each review is by an experienced Inspector.
990 Total Appeal decisions  

Source: MiPINS

To put these totals in context, the 990 appeal decisions quality assured constitutes approximately a fifth (21%) of all decisions (4,635) issued over that period.

Table 5 shows the number of cases quality assured, beyond appeal cases, for the same quarter. These are much larger more complex cases than the average appeal case.

Table 5 - Number of Other Cases Quality Assured, July to September 2023

Number Category Explanation
7 Local Plans All Local Plans are quality assured as part of the examination process. One Local Plan Report was issued in this quarter; quality assurance also took place for plans yet to be published.
3 Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects (NSIP) All NSIP decisions are quality assured as part of the examination process. Three recommendation reports were submitted to the Secretary of State this quarter.

Source: Local Plan and NSIP case records

Annex A - Proportion of Appeals Valid First Time for Selected Appeal Types, Appeals Received Jul 2022 to Jun 2023 (Provisional)

Appeal Type Proportion valid on first submission Number of Appeals Received
Planning Appeal 54.5% 11,039
Householder (HAS) 75.5% 6,196
Enforcement Notice 32.6% 3,104
Lawful Development Certificate 62.0% 830
Commercial Appeal Service (CAS) 76.4% 539
Environmental 40.2% 82
Appeal against Enforcement Listed Building Notice/Enforcement Conservation Area Notice 54.8% 73
Rights of Way 50.0% 58
Advert Discontinuance 83.3% 6

Source: Horizon

Note: Appeals not yet validated are included in the number of appeals received but excluded from the calculation on proportion valid on first submission

Annex B: Proportion of Appeals decided within 20, 26 and 52 weeks - Decisions October 2022 to September 2023

Within 20 weeks Within 26 weeks Within 52 weeks More than 52 weeks
Wholly Written Reps 23.5% 15.4% 45.6% 15.5%
Wholly or partly Hearings 11.8% 19.4% 25.3% 43.4%
Wholly or partly Inquiries 1.9% 14.5% 35.9% 47.7%

Annex C: Decisions made wholly through written representations – Decisions November 2022 to October 2023 - Weeks from valid to Decision

Performance against Ministerial measures – note this takes different groupings (16 weeks and 20 weeks)

Annex D – Variation in Valid to Decisions (weeks) for appeal decisions made October 2022 to September 2023, by procedure

All

Written Representations

Hearing

Inquiry

Source: Horizon

Annex E - Percentiles for Valid to Decision (in weeks) for decisions made July 2023 to September 2023 and number of decisions in that time

Procedure 25th percentile 50th percentile 75th percentile 90th percentile 100th percentile Number of decisions
Written reps 22.4 31.9 45.4 60.9 180.4 22.4
Hearing 23.4 31.6 67.7 105.9 198.6 23.4
Inquiry 27.6 54.0 73.0 118.7 188.0 27.6
All 22.9 32.0 46.1 63.3 198.6 22.9

Source: Horizon

Annex F - Appeal Decisions, 50th and 90th percentiles of Valid to Decision (weeks), October 2022 to September 2023 - by procedure

Note: all measurements are in weeks

Wholly by written representations

Decision made: 50th percentile 90th percentile Gap
Oct - Dec 21 25 42 18
Jan - Mar 22 24 45 20
Apr - Jun 22 26 49 23
Jul - Aug 22 26 53 27
Oct - Dec 22 29 56 26
Jan - Mar 23 29 59 30
Apr - Jun 23 34 65 31
Jul – Sep 23 43 70 27

Wholly or partially through Hearings

Decision made: 50th percentile 90th percentile Gap
Oct - Dec 21 51 106 55
Jan - Mar 22 53 106 53
Apr - Jun 22 91 184 93
Jul - Aug 22 50 146 95
Oct - Dec 22 47 100 53
Jan - Mar 23 48 100 53
Apr - Jun 23 47 119 72
Jul – Sep 23 60 125 65

Wholly or partially through Inquiries

Decision made: 50th percentile 90th percentile Gap
Oct - Dec 21 54 122 68
Jan - Mar 22 58 105 47
Apr - Jun 22 43 117 74
Jul - Aug 22 69 128 59
Oct - Dec 22 39 100 62
Jan - Mar 23 76 224 149
Apr - Jun 23 62 148 86
Jul – Sep 23 62 135 74