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Government introduced the Boiler Upgrade Scheme in 2022 to support the decarbonisation of heat in buildings. Under the Boiler Upgrade Scheme, capital grants are available to support the installation of heat pumps and biomass boilers in homes and non-domestic buildings in England and Wales.
During this period, they engaged Ofgem as the Scheme Administrator and a range of stakeholders to identify where changes may be needed to support a continued increase in deployment and ensure the target of 600,000 heat pump installs a year is reached by 2028.
In this consultation, they set out proposed amendments to the Boiler Upgrade Scheme and are seeking views on:
This consultation closes on 12 October 2023.
Proposed amendments to the Boiler Upgrade Scheme Regulations - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
This consultation contains proposed changes to the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015, as amended. It covers the following areas:
This consultation also contains a call for evidence led by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs seeking views on nature-based solutions, farm efficiency projects and diversification.
This consultation closes on 25 September 2023.
Permitted development rights - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Government state:
“Our vision is for local plans (and minerals and waste plans) to be simpler to understand and use, and positively shaped by the views of communities about how their area should evolve.
“We want them to clearly show what is planned in a local area – so that communities and other users of the plan can engage with them more easily, especially while they are being drawn up. We want them to be prepared more quickly and updated more frequently to ensure more authorities have up-to-date plans that reflect local needs. And we want them to make the best use of new digital technology, so that people can get involved without having to go through hundreds of pages of documents at council offices and to drive improved productivity and efficiency in the plan-making process.
“Through this consultation we are asking for your views on our proposals to implement the parts of the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill which relate to plan-making, to make plans simpler, faster to prepare and more accessible.”
This consultation closes on 18 October 2023.
Plan-making reforms: consultation on implementation - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Following the publication of the Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects Action Plan in February 2023, the government has committed to bringing forward reforms to ensure the existing system can support future infrastructure needs by making the Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects consenting process better, faster, greener, fairer and more resilient by 2025.
The key operational changes they are consulting on will “make the system work more effectively for applicants, local authorities and communities.” The proposals fall broadly into 3 reform areas:
This consultation closes on 19 September 2023.
Flexible working is a change to an employee’s working hours, location or pattern. For many people, after pay, access to flexible working is the key thing that they look for from an employer.
Flexible working is a broad term. It can relate to working hours or pattern: part-time, term-time, flexi-time, compressed hours, or adjusting start and finish times. It can also include flexibility over where someone works.
Arrangements for flexible working can be agreed between employers and employees on a contractual or non-contractual basis. Employees may ask for flexible working through the statutory right to request, or an informal non-statutory route – for example a discussion with their manager.
Informal flexible working can benefit individuals and businesses alike. Government wants to explore this further through this call for evidence. They are seeking views from individuals and businesses on their experiences of non-statutory flexible working and how it operates in practice.
This consultation closes on 7 November 2023.
Call for evidence: non-statutory flexible working - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
This call for evidence aims to increase government understanding of domestic consumers who receive their energy via a non-domestic contract - defined as contracts which are typically used to serve non-residential properties, such as businesses or charities:
The information provided will help government determine if these consumers need any longer-term protections.
Government welcome responses from a wide range of people who have a non-domestic energy contract including:
This consultation closes on 18 September 2023.
Government want to know how they can best protect hedgerows through effective, proportionate regulation as we phase out farm subsidies and cross compliance rules.
For the good of the hedgerow and the wildlife it supports, farmers currently must:
Government is seeking views on the best way to maintain and improve existing protections, as well as how they enforce them.
This consultation closes on 20 September 2023.
Protecting hedgerows in England - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
Prepared by Andy Dean, Consultant for the Rural Services NetworkEmail: [email protected] |
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