News

Mary Portas review of the High Street. Read more here.

Mary Portas has today handed her report to Government on the future of the hight street. If you don't have a chance to look at the full report please have a look at a summery of the recommendations below. If you are interested in reading the full report please download it here.

The following list is a summary of Mary Portas's 28 recommendations:

1. Put in place a “Town Team”: a visionary, strategic and strong operational management team for high streets

2. Empower successful Business Improvement Districts to take on more responsibilities and powers and become “Super-BIDs”

3. Legislate to allow landlords to become high street investors by contributing to their Business Improvement District

4. Establish a new “National Market Day” where budding shopkeepers can try their hand at operating a low-cost retail business

5. Make it easier for people to become market traders by removing unnecessary regulations so that anyone can trade on the high street unless there is a valid reason why not

6. Government should consider whether business rates can better support small businesses and independent retailers

7. Local authorities should use their new discretionary powers to give business rate concessions to new local businesses

8. Make business rates work for business by reviewing the use of the RPI with a view to changing the calculation to CPI

9. Local areas should implement free controlled parking schemes that work for their town centres and we should have a new parking league table

10. Town Teams should focus on making high streets accessible, attractive and safe

11. Government should include high street deregulation as part of their ongoing work on freeing up red tape

12. Address the restrictive aspects of the ‘Use Class’ system to make it easier to change the uses of key properties on the high street

13. Put betting shops into a separate ‘Use Class’ of their own

14. Make explicit a presumption in favour of town centre development in the wording of the National Planning Policy Framework

15. Introduce Secretary of State “exceptional sign off ” for all new out-of-town developments and require all large new developments to have an “affordable shops” quota

16. Large retailers should support and mentor local businesses and independent retailers

17. Retailers should report on their support of local high streets in their annual report

18. Encourage a contract of care between landlords and their commercial tenants by promoting the leasing code and supporting the use of lease structures other than upward only rent reviews, especially for small businesses

19. Explore further disincentives to prevent landlords from leaving units vacant

20. Banks who own empty property on the high street should either administer these assets well or be required to sell them

21. Local authorities should make more proactive use of Compulsory Purchase Order powers to encourage the redevelopment of key high street retail space

22. Empower local authorities to step in when landlords are negligent with new “Empty Shop Management Orders”

23. Introduce a public register of high street landlords

24. Run a high profile campaign to get people involved in Neighbourhood Plans

25. Promote the inclusion of the High Street in Neighbourhood Plans

26. Developers should make a financial contribution to ensure that the local community has a strong voice in the planning system

27. Support imaginative community use of empty properties through Community Right to Buy, Meanwhile Use and a new “Community Right to Try”

28. Run a number of High Street Pilots to test proof of concept

The Meanwhile Space CIC response, some initial points:

1. Welcome the 'right to try' and focus on meanwhile use along the high street. This chimes with our belief that the high street is a place of opportunity, for new ideas and activities beyond shopping and eating. Empty space is the resource that can be used to achieve this. We have pioneered meanwhile use, and whilst delivering the Meanwhile Project (mentioned in the report)

2. Meanwhile uses are an ideal way to incubate new use and pilot new ideas, while animating vacant space.

3. The register of ownership is excellent tool, access to who owns what is often the first barrier to meanwhile activity

4. Welcome the overarching principle that people are at the heart of a new and vibrant high street and reducing the bureaucracy for them being the catalyst to re-imagining it.

Sections

features

Meanwhile Connect: Property Search

Search our Connect Service of properties available for meanwhile use more

Properties

Properties

Meanwhile Connect is coming... more