Baroness Sharples
Main Page: Baroness Sharples (Conservative - Life peer) Baroness Sharples
    
        
    
    
    
    
    
        
        
        
            Baroness Sharples 
        
    
        
    
        
To ask Her Majesty’s Government what plans they have for the future of allotments.
 The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Communities and Local Government (Baroness Hanham)
    
        
    
    
    
    
    
        
        
        
            The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Communities and Local Government (Baroness Hanham) 
        
    
        
    
        My Lord, it is local authorities that have a duty to provide statutory allotments. The Government are keen to support local communities that want to use local spaces for community food growing, and to protect existing land for this purpose. New neighbourhood planning provisions in the Localism Bill will provide a new right for communities to shape their local areas, including the means to boost allotment provision.
 Baroness Sharples
    
        
    
    
    
    
    
        
        
        
            Baroness Sharples 
        
    
        
    
        I thank my noble friend for that reply. I realise that the Localism Bill will help, but are local councils playing by the rules in providing alternative sites when those present sites are needed for development or whatever? An enormous number of people who write to one now are looking for allotments and cannot get them. They have to wait years.
 Baroness Hanham
    
        
    
    
    
    
    
        
        
        
            Baroness Hanham 
        
    
        
    
        My Lords, we already know that there is a 50 per cent extra requirement for allotments. Local authorities can, of course, make land available if they have it for allotments. The neighbourhood planning provisions in the Localism Bill, to which my noble friend refers, will enable neighbourhoods to identify land where they think allotments could be provided within their neighbourhood plan and have that agreed by the local authority. There are, therefore, methods by which new allotments can be provided, but I recognise immediately that there are far too few for those who want them.