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(1)This Act forms part of a code of law relating to the historic environment of Wales.
(2)It consolidates enactments contained in or made under—
(a)the Historic Buildings and Ancient Monuments Act 1953 (c. 49);
(b)Parts 1 and 3 of the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 (c. 46);
(c)Parts 14 and 15 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8);
(d)the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 (c. 9);
(e)Part 5 of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004 (c. 5);
(f)the Historic Environment (Wales) Act 2016 (anaw 4).
(3)Part 2 of this Act makes provision about the conservation of monuments of special historic interest, including provision for—
(a)a schedule of monuments of national importance, maintained by the Welsh Ministers,
(b)the control of works affecting scheduled monuments, and
(c)the acquisition, guardianship and preservation of monuments.
(4)Part 3 makes provision about the conservation of buildings of architectural or historic interest, including provision for—
(a)a list of buildings of special architectural or historic interest, maintained by the Welsh Ministers,
(b)the control of works affecting listed buildings, and
(c)the acquisition and preservation of buildings.
(5)Part 4 makes provision about conservation areas, including provision for—
(a)areas of special architectural or historic interest to be designated as conservation areas by planning authorities,
(b)the control of works for the demolition of buildings in conservation areas, and
(c)the preservation and repair of buildings in conservation areas.
(6)Part 5 makes supplementary provision relating to Parts 3 and 4, including—
(a)provision about proceedings before the Welsh Ministers under those Parts, including hearings and inquiries;
(b)provision about the validity and correction of decisions made under those Parts.
(7)Part 6 provides for—
(a)a register of historic parks and gardens;
(b)a list of historic place names;
(c)historic environment records for every area of Wales.
(8)Part 7 contains general provisions, including amendments and repeals of other enactments.
(1)In this Act “monument” means—
(a)any building, structure or work (whether above or below the surface of the land) and any cave or excavation;
(b)the site of the remains of any building, structure or work or of the remains of any cave or excavation;
(c)the site of any vehicle, vessel, aircraft or other moveable structure, or part of such an object, which neither constitutes nor forms part of any work which is a monument within paragraph (a);
(d)the site of the remains of any object or part of an object mentioned in paragraph (c);
(e)the site of any thing, or group of things, that evidences previous human activity (other than a site falling within paragraph (b), (c) or (d)).
(2)For the purposes of subsection (1) any machinery attached to a monument is to be treated as part of the monument if it could not be detached without being dismantled.
(3)Subsection (1)(a) does not apply to any religious building for the time being used for religious purposes; but this is subject to any exceptions specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(4)Subsections (1)(c) and (d) do not apply to—
(a)the site of any object or its remains unless the position of that object or its remains in that particular site is a matter of public interest;
(b)the site of any vessel or its remains which is protected by an order under section 1 of the Protection of Wrecks Act 1973 (c. 33) designating an area around the site as a restricted area.
(5)For the purposes of this Act the site of a monument includes not only the land in, on or under which it is situated but also any land comprising or adjoining that land which appears to the Welsh Ministers or a local authority, in the exercise in relation to that monument of any of their or its functions under this Part, to be essential for the monument’s support and preservation.
(6)References in this Act to a monument include—
(a)the site of the monument in question,
(b)a group of monuments, and
(c)any part of a monument or group of monuments.
(7)References in this Act to the site of a monument—
(a)are to the monument itself where it consists of a site, and
(b)in any other case include the monument itself.
(8)In this section “remains” includes any trace or sign of the previous existence of the thing in question.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must maintain a schedule of monuments in Wales which they consider to be of national importance, and must publish the up-to-date schedule.
(2)An entry in the schedule for a monument must include a map maintained by the Welsh Ministers that identifies the area of the monument.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may amend the schedule by—
(a)adding a monument;
(b)removing a monument;
(c)amending the entry for a monument (whether by removing anything previously included as part of the monument or adding anything not previously included, or otherwise).
(4)The Welsh Ministers may not add to the schedule any building or structure occupied as a dwelling by any person other than the caretaker of the building or structure or a member of the caretaker’s family.
(5)An entry in the schedule recording the inclusion of a monument is a local land charge.
(6)In this Part “the schedule” means the schedule maintained under this section.
(7)In this Act “scheduled monument” means a monument included in the schedule.
(1)Subsection (2) applies where the Welsh Ministers amend the schedule by—
(a)adding a monument,
(b)removing a monument, or
(c)amending the entry for a monument.
(2)As soon as possible after amending the schedule the Welsh Ministers must serve notice that they have done so on—
(a)every owner and occupier of the monument, and
(b)every local authority in whose area the monument is situated.
(3)Where the Welsh Ministers have added a monument to the schedule or amended the entry in the schedule for a monument—
(a)the notice must specify the date on which they did so, and
(b)they must include with the notice a copy of the entry or amended entry for the monument in the schedule.
(1)Subsection (2) applies where the Welsh Ministers are proposing to amend the schedule by—
(a)adding a monument,
(b)removing a monument, or
(c)amending the entry for a monument to remove anything previously included as part of the monument or add anything not previously included.
(2)The Welsh Ministers must serve a notice on the persons mentioned in subsection (3) which—
(a)sets out the proposed amendment, and
(b)invites those persons to make written representations about the proposal.
(3)The persons are—
(a)every owner and occupier of the monument,
(b)every local authority in whose area the monument is situated, and
(c)any other persons the Welsh Ministers consider appropriate as having special knowledge of, or special interest in, the monument or in monuments of historic or archaeological interest more generally.
(4)A notice under subsection (2) must—
(a)specify the period within which representations may be made, and
(b)in the case of a proposal to add a monument or to add anything as part of a monument—
(i)include a statement of the effect of section 6 (interim protection), and
(ii)specify the date on which interim protection takes effect under that section.
(5)The period specified under subsection (4)(a) must be at least 28 days beginning with the day the notice is served.
(1)This section applies where the Welsh Ministers serve notice under section 5(2) of a proposal to amend the schedule by—
(a)adding a monument, or
(b)amending the entry for a monument by adding anything as part of the monument.
(2)From the beginning of the day specified under section 5(4)(b)(ii) this Act has effect—
(a)in the case of a proposal to add a monument to the schedule, as if the monument were a scheduled monument;
(b)in the case of a proposal to amend the entry for a monument, as if the amendment were made.
(3)The protection conferred by virtue of subsection (2) is referred to in this Part as “interim protection”.
(4)The Welsh Ministers must—
(a)publish a list of the monuments subject to interim protection, and
(b)provide a copy of the notice served under section 5(2) in respect of such a monument to any person who requests one.
(1)Interim protection conferred by section 6(2)(a) (proposed addition of monument to the schedule) ends in relation to a monument—
(a)where the Welsh Ministers add the monument to the schedule, at the beginning of the day specified in the notice under section 4(2), or
(b)where the Welsh Ministers decide not to add the monument to the schedule, at the beginning of the day specified in a notice served by them on the persons mentioned in subsection (3).
(2)Interim protection conferred by section 6(2)(b) (proposed amendment of entry in the schedule relating to a monument) ends in relation to a monument—
(a)where the Welsh Ministers amend the entry in the schedule, at the beginning of the day specified in the notice under section 4(2), or
(b)where the Welsh Ministers decide not to amend the entry in the schedule, at the beginning of the day specified in a notice served by them on the persons mentioned in subsection (3).
(3)The persons referred to in subsections (1)(b) and (2)(b) are—
(a)every owner and occupier of the monument, and
(b)every local authority in whose area the monument is situated.
(4)Schedule 1 makes provision about the effect of interim protection coming to an end under subsections (1)(b) and (2)(b).
(1)This section applies where interim protection ends in relation to a monument because of a notice under section 7(1)(b) or (2)(b).
(2)Any person who had an interest in the monument when the interim protection took effect is entitled, on making a claim to the Welsh Ministers, to be paid compensation by them for any loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the interim protection.
(3)The loss or damage for which compensation is payable includes any amount payable by the claimant in respect of a breach of contract caused by the need to stop or cancel works to the monument because of the interim protection.
(4)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning when the interim protection ends.
(1)Where the Welsh Ministers—
(a)add a monument to the schedule, or
(b)amend the entry in the schedule for a monument to add anything as part of the monument,
the notice under section 4(2) must state that any owner or occupier of the monument may make an application to the Welsh Ministers requesting a review of the decision.
(2)An application may be made only on the ground that the monument or part (as the case may be) is not of national importance.
(3)Where an owner or occupier makes an application for a review, the Welsh Ministers must appoint a person to—
(a)carry out the review, and
(b)make a decision on the review.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify descriptions of cases in which they, instead of a person appointed by them, must carry out and make a decision on a review.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must make any amendment to the schedule they consider appropriate to give effect to the decision on a review.
(6)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend subsection (2) to—
(a)add a ground of review;
(b)modify a ground of review;
(c)remove a ground of review.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must by regulations make provision about—
(a)the form and way in which an application under section 9 must be made;
(b)the information that must be provided to, or may be required by, the Welsh Ministers in connection with an application;
(c)the period within which an application must be made.
(2)A review under section 9 must be carried out in one or more of the following ways (as determined by the person carrying out the review)—
(a)by means of a local inquiry;
(b)by means of a hearing;
(c)on the basis of written representations.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make further provision in connection with reviews under section 9.
(4)Regulations under subsection (1) or (3) may authorise the Welsh Ministers or persons appointed under section 9(3)—
(a)to determine matters of a description specified in the regulations, and
(b)to give directions in relation to those matters.
(5)Schedules 2 and 6 make further provision about reviews under section 9.
(1)A person must not carry out works to which this section applies, or cause or permit such works to be carried out, unless the works are authorised under this Chapter.
(2)This section applies to—
(a)works resulting in the demolition or destruction of, or any damage to, a scheduled monument;
(b)works for the purpose of removing or repairing a scheduled monument or any part of it, or of making any alterations or additions to the monument or any part of it;
(c)flooding or tipping operations on land in, on or under which a scheduled monument is situated.
(1)Works to which section 11 applies are authorised if the works are within a class of works described in the table in Schedule 3.
(2)An authorisation under subsection (1) is subject to any exceptions or conditions specified in the table in relation to works of a particular class.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may direct that subsection (1) does not apply to any scheduled monument specified in the direction.
(4)A direction under subsection (3) does not take effect until notice of it has been served on every owner and occupier of the monument in question.
(5)Subsection (1) does not authorise works contrary to any exception or condition attached to a scheduled monument consent.
(6)An authorisation under subsection (1) has effect for the benefit of the monument and of all persons for the time being interested in the monument; but this is subject to any provision to the contrary in Schedule 3.
(1)Works to which section 11 applies are authorised if—
(a)written consent to carry them out has been granted by the Welsh Ministers, and
(b)the works are carried out in accordance with the terms of the consent (including any conditions attached to it).
(2)Where—
(a)works to which section 11 applies have been carried out without being authorised under this Chapter, and
(b)the Welsh Ministers grant written consent for the works,
the works are authorised from the grant of the consent.
(3)Consent under subsection (1) or (2) is referred to in this Part as scheduled monument consent.
(1)An application for scheduled monument consent must be made to the Welsh Ministers.
(2)An application must—
(a)identify the area of land to which it relates,
(b)describe the works to which it relates and the likely impact of the works on the monument, and
(c)contain any other information required by the Welsh Ministers.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision about—
(a)the form and content of an application (which may include provision for using a form to be published or provided by the Welsh Ministers);
(b)how an application must be made;
(c)documents or other materials that must be included with an application.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may agree with an applicant that an application may be made otherwise than in accordance with subsection (2) or any provision made under subsection (3), if the application relates to works to which subsection (5) applies.
(5)This subsection applies to minor works carried out for the purpose of—
(a)removing or repairing a scheduled monument or any part of it, or
(b)making any alterations or additions to the monument.
(6)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify additional cases in which an application for scheduled monument consent may be made otherwise than in accordance with subsection (2) or any provision made under subsection (3); and the regulations may confer a discretion on the Welsh Ministers.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may refuse to consider an application for scheduled monument consent unless one of the following declarations signed by or on behalf of the applicant is included with the application—
(a)a declaration that, at the beginning of the 21 days ending with the day of the application, no person other than the applicant was the owner of the monument,
(b)a declaration that the applicant has given notice to all the persons (other than the applicant) who, at the beginning of that period, were owners of the monument, of the things required by subsection (2) and any regulations under subsection (3),
(c)a declaration that the applicant—
(i)is unable to make a declaration under paragraph (a) or (b),
(ii)has given notice to such of the persons mentioned in paragraph (b) as are named in the declaration, of the things required by subsection (2) and any regulations under subsection (3), but
(iii)has been unable to find out the names and addresses of the rest of those persons, despite taking all reasonable steps to do so, or
(d)a declaration that the applicant—
(i)is unable to make a declaration under paragraph (a), and
(ii)has, despite taking all reasonable steps to do so, been unable to find out the names and addresses of any of the persons mentioned in paragraph (b).
(2)A notice for the purposes of subsection (1)(b) or (c)(ii) must—
(a)identify the monument to which it relates (including the address or location of the monument, and its name (if any)),
(b)state that an application for scheduled monument consent is to be made in relation to the monument,
(c)identify the person making the application (and, where the applicant is making an application on someone’s behalf, identify the other person), and
(d)describe the works to which the application relates.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify additional things which must be included in a notice.
(4)It is an offence for a person in purported compliance with this section—
(a)to make a declaration which the person knows to be false or misleading in a material respect, or
(b)to recklessly make a declaration which is false or misleading in a material respect.
(5)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (4) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(6)In this section “owner” means—
(a)an owner of the freehold estate, or
(b)a tenant under a lease granted or extended for a fixed term that has at least 7 years left to run.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may refuse to consider an application for scheduled monument consent if—
(a)in the 2 years ending with the day the application is received, the Welsh Ministers have refused a similar application, and
(b)they consider that there has been no significant change in any relevant considerations since the similar application was refused.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may refuse to consider an application for scheduled monument consent if the application is made at a time when a similar application is under consideration.
(3)For the purposes of this section an application is similar to another application if (and only if) the Welsh Ministers consider that the works to which the applications relate are the same or substantially the same.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may grant scheduled monument consent in respect of all or any part of the works to which an application relates.
(2)Before determining whether to grant scheduled monument consent on an application, the Welsh Ministers may do one or more of the following—
(a)cause a local inquiry to be held,
(b)give the applicant, and any other person, an opportunity to appear before and be heard by a person appointed by the Welsh Ministers, or
(c)give the applicant, and any other person, an opportunity to make written representations to a person appointed by the Welsh Ministers.
(3)Before determining whether to grant scheduled monument consent on an application, the Welsh Ministers must—
(a)in every case, consider any representations made by any person with respect to that application, and
(b)if an inquiry or hearing has been held or representations have been made in accordance with subsection (2)(c), consider the report of the person who held the inquiry or hearing or to whom the representations were made.
(4)The Welsh Ministers must serve notice of their decision with respect to the application on the applicant and on every person who has made representations with respect to the application.
(5)Scheduled monument consent has effect for the benefit of the monument and of all persons for the time being interested in the monument; but this is subject to the terms of the consent.
(6)Schedule 6 applies in relation to proceedings held under subsection (2).
(1)Scheduled monument consent may be granted subject to conditions.
(2)A condition may, for example—
(a)impose requirements with respect to the way in which or the persons by whom the works or any of the works are to be carried out;
(b)require that a person authorised by the Welsh Ministers be given an opportunity, before any works start, to examine the monument and its site and to carry out such excavations as the Welsh Ministers consider to be desirable for the purpose of archaeological investigation.
(1)Scheduled monument consent must be granted subject to the condition that the works to which it relates must start before the end of a period which is specified in the condition and begins with the day the consent is granted.
(2)If consent is granted without the condition required by subsection (1), it is to be treated as having been granted subject to the condition that the works to which it relates must start within 5 years beginning with the day it was granted.
(3)This section does not apply to—
(a)scheduled monument consent which provides that it ceases to have effect at the end of a period specified in the consent (irrespective of whether any works have started),
(b)consent granted under section 13(2) (consent for works already carried out), or
(c)consent granted by a scheduled monument partnership agreement or a management agreement (see sections 25 and 51).
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by order modify or revoke a scheduled monument consent to any extent.
(2)An order under this section may not be made in relation to—
(a)scheduled monument consent granted under section 13(2) (consent for works already carried out), or
(b)consent granted by a scheduled monument partnership agreement (see Chapter 4).
(3)Schedules 4 and 6 make provision in connection with orders under this section.
(1)This section applies where—
(a)an application for scheduled monument consent for works of a description mentioned in subsection (3) is refused, or
(b)an application for scheduled monument consent for works of such a description is granted subject to conditions.
(2)Any person who has an interest in the monument in question is entitled, on making a claim to the Welsh Ministers, to be paid compensation by them for any expenditure incurred or other loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the effect of the decision on the application; but this is subject to the following provisions of this section.
(3)The works in respect of which compensation is payable under this section are—
(a)works which are reasonably necessary for carrying out any development for which planning permission—
(i)had been granted (otherwise than by a general development order) before the monument in question became a scheduled monument, and
(ii)was still effective when the application for scheduled monument consent was made,
(b)works constituting development for which planning permission is granted by a general development order,
(c)works which do not constitute development, and
(d)works which are reasonably necessary for the continuation of a use of the monument for a purpose for which it was in use immediately before the date of the application for scheduled monument consent (but ignoring any use in breach of any legal restrictions applying to the use of the monument).
(4)The compensation payable under this section in respect of works within subsection (3)(a) is limited to compensation for expenditure incurred or other loss or damage suffered by virtue of the fact that, in consequence of the Welsh Ministers’ decision, development for which the planning permission in question was granted could not be carried out without breaching section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised).
(5)A person is not entitled to compensation under this section in respect of any works within subsection (3)(b) or (c) if the works in question or any of them would or might result in the total or partial demolition or destruction of the monument.
(6)Where scheduled monument consent is granted subject to conditions, a person is not entitled to compensation under this section in respect of any works within subsection (3)(d) unless compliance with those conditions would in effect make it impossible to use the monument for the purpose for which it was in use before the date of the application.
(7)In assessing any compensation payable under this section for loss or damage consisting of depreciation of the value of an interest in land—
(a)it is to be assumed that any subsequent application for scheduled monument consent for works of a similar description would be determined in the same way, but
(b)in the case of a refusal of scheduled monument consent, if the Welsh Ministers, on refusing that consent, undertook to grant consent for other works affecting the monument in the event of an application being made, regard must be had to that undertaking.
(8)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning with the day of—
(a)the notice of refusal of scheduled monument consent, or
(b)the grant of scheduled monument consent.
(9)In this section “general development order” means a development order under section 59 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8) that applies to all land in Wales (subject to any exceptions specified in the order).
(1)This section applies where—
(a)in a case where compensation under section 21 was paid in consequence of the refusal of scheduled monument consent, the Welsh Ministers subsequently grant scheduled monument consent for all or any of the works in respect of which the compensation was paid, and
(b)in a case where compensation under that section was paid in consequence of the grant of scheduled monument consent subject to conditions, the Welsh Ministers subsequently—
(i)modify the consent so that the conditions, or any of them, no longer apply to all or any of the works in respect of which the compensation was paid, or
(ii)grant a new consent for all or any of those works free from those conditions, or any of them.
(2)This section does not apply in any case unless the Welsh Ministers have served notice of the payment of compensation on the council of every county or county borough in which the monument is situated.
(3)In granting or modifying a scheduled monument consent in a case to which this section applies, the Welsh Ministers may do so on terms that no works in respect of which the compensation was paid are to be carried out under the consent until the recoverable amount has been repaid to the Welsh Ministers or secured to their satisfaction.
(4)In subsection (3) “recoverable amount” has the meaning given by section 23.
(5)A notice under subsection (2) must specify—
(a)the decision which gave rise to the entitlement to compensation,
(b)the monument affected by the decision, and
(c)the amount of the compensation.
(6)A notice under subsection (2) is a local land charge, and for the purposes of the Local Land Charges Act 1975 (c. 76) the council served with a notice under that subsection is to be treated as the originating authority as respects the charge.
(1)The “recoverable amount” for the purposes of section 22 means an amount specified by the Welsh Ministers in giving notice of their decision on the application for scheduled monument consent or in the order modifying the consent (as the case may be); but this is subject to subsection (3).
(2)Where a person who has an interest in a monument objects to the amount specified by the Welsh Ministers, the person may require the determination of the amount to be referred to the Upper Tribunal.
(3)Where a reference is made to the Upper Tribunal under subsection (2) the recoverable amount is the amount the Tribunal determines.
(4)The amount specified or determined as the recoverable amount under this section may be an amount representing all or any part of the compensation paid under section 21.
(1)This section applies where works affecting a scheduled monument which were previously authorised under this Chapter cease to be authorised—
(a)because an authorisation under section 12 ceases to apply (whether because of an amendment to the table in Schedule 3 or a direction given under subsection (3) of that section),
(b)because of the modification or revocation of a scheduled monument consent by an order made under section 20, or
(c)in accordance with paragraph 2 of Schedule 4, because of the service of a notice of proposed modification or revocation of a scheduled monument consent under paragraph 1 of that Schedule.
(2)Any person who has an interest in the monument is entitled, on making a claim to the Welsh Ministers, to be paid compensation by them for—
(a)any expenditure incurred by the person in carrying out works which become abortive because further works cease to be authorised, or
(b)any other loss or damage suffered by the person which is directly attributable to that fact.
(3)A person is not entitled to compensation under this section in a case within subsection (1)(a) unless, on an application for scheduled monument consent for the works in question, consent is refused, or is granted subject to conditions other than those which previously applied by virtue of section 12.
(4)For the purposes of this section expenditure incurred in the preparation of plans for the purposes of any works, or on other similar matters preparatory to any works, is to be treated as expenditure incurred in carrying out the works.
(5)Subject to that, no compensation is payable under this section in respect of—
(a)works carried out before an authorisation under section 12 applied in relation to the works or before the scheduled monument consent in question was granted (as the case may be), or
(b)other loss or damage (other than loss or damage consisting of depreciation of the value of an interest in land) arising out of anything done or omitted to be done before that authorisation applied or that consent was granted.
(6)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning with the day the works cease to be authorised.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may make an agreement under this section (a “scheduled monument partnership agreement”) with—
(a)any owner of a scheduled monument, or
(b)any owner of land adjoining or in the vicinity of such a monument (“associated land”).
(2)Any of the following persons may also be a party to the agreement (in addition to the owner and the Welsh Ministers)—
(a)any occupier of the monument or its associated land;
(b)any other person who has an interest in the monument or its associated land;
(c)any person involved in the management of the monument or its associated land;
(d)any local authority in whose area the monument or its associated land is situated;
(e)any local authority which, by virtue of Chapter 6, is a guardian of the monument or its associated land;
(f)any other person the Welsh Ministers consider appropriate as having special knowledge of, or special interest in, the monument or in monuments of historic or archaeological interest more generally.
(3)A scheduled monument partnership agreement may grant scheduled monument consent under section 13(1) for specified works for the purpose of—
(a)removing or repairing the monument to which the agreement relates, or
(b)making any alterations or additions to the monument.
(4)Where a scheduled monument partnership agreement grants scheduled monument consent subject to conditions, the agreement must specify those conditions.
(5)A scheduled monument partnership agreement may also—
(a)specify works that would, or would not, in the view of the parties, be works to which section 11 applies;
(b)make provision about the maintenance and preservation of the monument or its associated land;
(c)make provision about the carrying out of specified works, or the doing of any specified thing, in relation to the monument or its associated land;
(d)provide for public access to the monument or its associated land and the provision of associated facilities, information or services to the public;
(e)restrict access to, or use of, the monument or its associated land;
(f)prohibit the doing of any specified thing in relation to the monument or its associated land;
(g)provide for the Welsh Ministers, or any local authority in whose area the monument or its associated land is situated, to make payments of specified amounts and on specified terms—
(i)for or towards the cost of any works provided for under the agreement, or
(ii)in consideration of any restriction, prohibition or obligation accepted by any other party to the agreement.
(6)A scheduled monument partnership agreement may relate to more than one monument or more than one piece of associated land.
(7)In this section “specified” means specified or described in a scheduled monument partnership agreement.
(1)A scheduled monument partnership agreement must be in writing.
(2)A scheduled monument partnership agreement must—
(a)identify the monument or associated land to which it relates;
(b)describe any works to which it relates;
(c)specify the date on which it takes effect and its duration;
(d)make provision for the parties to review the terms of the agreement at intervals specified in it;
(e)make provision for its variation (but this is subject to regulations made under subsection (5));
(f)make provision for its termination (but this is subject to section 27).
(3)A scheduled monument partnership agreement may contain incidental and consequential provision.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify other terms that must be included in a scheduled monument partnership agreement.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must by regulations make provision about—
(a)the consultation that must take place before a scheduled monument partnership agreement is made or varied;
(b)the publicity that must be given to a scheduled monument partnership agreement before or after it is made or varied.
(6)Regulations under subsection (5)(a) must require the Welsh Ministers to consult the following persons before making a scheduled monument partnership agreement—
(a)every owner and occupier of the monument or associated land to which the proposed agreement relates;
(b)every local authority in whose area the monument or associated land is situated;
(c)any local authority which by virtue of Chapter 6 is a guardian of the monument or associated land.
(7)A scheduled monument partnership agreement may not impose any obligation or liability, or confer any right, on a person who is not a party to the agreement; and scheduled monument consent granted by such an agreement has effect only for the benefit of the parties to it.
(8)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations disapply, apply or reproduce with or without modifications, any provision of this Part for the purposes of scheduled monument partnership agreements.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by order terminate a scheduled monument partnership agreement or any provision of such an agreement.
(2)An order under subsection (1) may contain supplementary, incidental, transitory, transitional or saving provision.
(3)An order under this section terminating a provision which grants scheduled monument consent for any works may be made at any time before the works are completed, but does not affect scheduled monument consent for works carried out before the order takes effect.
(4)Schedule 5 and paragraph 1 of Schedule 6 make further provision in connection with making orders under this section (including provision for notices of proposed termination).
(5)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend Schedule 5 or 6, and the regulations may make consequential amendments to any other provision of this Act.
(1)This section applies where the Welsh Ministers—
(a)serve a notice of proposed termination, or
(b)make an order under section 27,
in relation to a scheduled monument partnership agreement.
(2)Any party to the agreement who has an interest in the monument or land to which the agreement applies is entitled, on making a claim to the Welsh Ministers, to be paid compensation by them for—
(a)any expenditure incurred by the party in carrying out works which become abortive because of the notice or order;
(b)any other loss or damage suffered by the party which is directly attributable to the notice or order.
(3)For the purposes of this section expenditure incurred in the preparation of plans for the purposes of any works, or on other similar matters preparatory to any works, is to be treated as expenditure incurred in carrying out the works.
(4)Subject to that, no compensation is payable under this section in respect of—
(a)works carried out before the scheduled monument partnership agreement, or the relevant provision of the agreement, took effect, or
(b)other loss or damage (other than loss or damage consisting of depreciation of the value of an interest in land) arising out of anything done or omitted to be done before the agreement or provision took effect.
(5)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning with the day the notice of proposed termination or order takes effect (as the case may be).
In this Chapter—
“associated land” (“tir cysylltiedig”), in relation to a monument, has the meaning given by section 25(1)(b);
“notice of proposed termination” (“hysbysiad o derfyniad arfaethedig”) has the meaning given by paragraph 1 of Schedule 5;
“owner” (“perchennog”) means—
an owner of the freehold estate, or
a tenant under a lease granted or extended for a fixed term that has at least 7 years left to run;
“scheduled monument partnership agreement” (“cytundeb partneriaeth heneb gofrestredig”) has the meaning given by section 25(1).
(1)A person commits an offence if the person carries out, or causes or permits to be carried out, works in relation to a scheduled monument in breach of section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised).
(2)A person also commits an offence if the person—
(a)carries out, or causes or permits to be carried out, works in relation to a scheduled monument, and
(b)fails to comply with a condition subject to which scheduled monument consent has been granted for the works.
(3)Subsection (2) does not limit what may be an offence under subsection (1).
(4)In proceedings against a person for an offence under subsection (1) in relation to a monument on which interim protection is conferred—
(a)it is a defence for the person to prove that the person did not know, and could not reasonably have been expected to know, that the interim protection had been conferred, and
(b)where the defence is raised by a person on whom a notice should have been served under section 5(2), it is for the prosecution to prove that the notice was served on the person.
(5)In proceedings against a person for an offence under subsection (2), it is a defence for the person to prove that the person took all reasonable precautions and exercised all due diligence to avoid breaching the condition.
(6)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section in relation to works within section 11(2)(a), it is a defence for the person to prove that the person took all reasonable precautions and exercised all due diligence to avoid or prevent damage to the monument.
(7)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section in relation to works within section 11(2)(a) or (c), it is a defence for the person to prove that—
(a)before carrying out the works or before causing or permitting the works to be carried out, the person had taken all reasonable steps to find out whether there was a scheduled monument in the area affected by the works, and
(b)the person did not know, and had no reason to believe, that the monument was within the area affected by the works or (as the case may be) that it was a scheduled monument.
(8)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section it is a defence for the person to prove that—
(a)the works were urgently necessary in the interests of safety or health,
(b)the works carried out were limited to the minimum measures immediately necessary, and
(c)notice in writing justifying in detail the carrying out of the works was given to the Welsh Ministers as soon as reasonably practicable.
(9)A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on summary conviction, or on conviction on indictment, to a fine.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may issue a temporary stop notice if they consider—
(a)that works have been or are being carried out in relation to a scheduled monument which involve a breach of section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which scheduled monument consent has been granted, and
(b)that the works (or any of them) ought to be stopped immediately, having regard to the effect of the works on the monument as one of national importance.
(2)A temporary stop notice must—
(a)specify the works to which it relates,
(b)prohibit the carrying out of the works (or any of them specified in the notice),
(c)set out the Welsh Ministers’ reasons for issuing the notice, and
(d)state the effect of section 33 (offence of breaching temporary stop notice).
(3)The Welsh Ministers must display a copy of a temporary stop notice on the monument or land to which it relates, and the copy must specify the date on which it is first displayed.
(4)But if—
(a)it is not reasonably practicable to display a copy of the notice on the monument or land, or
(b)the Welsh Ministers consider that displaying a copy of the notice on the monument or land might damage the monument,
the Welsh Ministers may instead display a copy in a prominent place as near to the monument or land as is reasonably practicable.
(5)The Welsh Ministers may serve a copy of the notice on any person they consider—
(a)to be carrying out the works that the notice prohibits or causing or permitting them to be carried out,
(b)to be an occupier of the monument or land to which the notice relates, or
(c)to have an interest in the monument or land.
(1)A temporary stop notice takes effect when a copy of it is first displayed in accordance with section 31.
(2)A temporary stop notice ceases to have effect—
(a)at the end of 28 days beginning with the day the copy of it is first displayed in accordance with section 31, or
(b)if it specifies a shorter period beginning with that day, at the end of that period.
(3)But if the Welsh Ministers withdraw the notice before the end of the period for which it would otherwise have effect, the notice ceases to have effect when it is withdrawn.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may not issue a second or subsequent temporary stop notice in relation to the same works unless they have, since issuing the previous notice, taken other enforcement action in relation to the breach referred to in section 31(1)(a).
(5)In subsection (4) the reference to taking other enforcement action is a reference to—
(a)issuing an enforcement notice under section 35, or
(b)obtaining an injunction under section 42.
(1)A person commits an offence if, at any time when a temporary stop notice has effect, the person carries out works prohibited by the notice or causes or permits such works to be carried out.
(2)A person may be charged with an offence under this section by reference to a day or a longer period, and may be convicted of more than one offence in relation to the same temporary stop notice by reference to different periods.
(3)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section, it is a defence for the person to prove that the person did not know, and could not reasonably have been expected to know, of the existence of the temporary stop notice.
(4)In proceedings for an offence under this section, it is a defence to prove that—
(a)the works were urgently necessary in the interests of safety or health,
(b)the works carried out were limited to the minimum measures immediately necessary, and
(c)notice in writing justifying in detail the carrying out of the works was given to the Welsh Ministers as soon as reasonably practicable.
(5)A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on summary conviction, or on conviction on indictment, to a fine.
(6)In determining the amount of the fine, the court must in particular have regard to any financial benefit which has accrued or appears likely to accrue to the person in consequence of the offence.
(1)This section applies where—
(a)the works specified in a temporary stop notice do not, at the time the notice takes effect, involve a breach of section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which scheduled monument consent has been granted, or
(b)the Welsh Ministers withdraw a temporary stop notice after it has taken effect.
(2)This section does not apply by virtue of subsection (1)(b) where—
(a)scheduled monument consent is granted for the works specified in the temporary stop notice after the notice has taken effect, and
(b)the Welsh Ministers withdraw the notice after the grant of that consent.
(3)Any person who has an interest in the monument or land to which the notice relates at the time the notice takes effect is entitled, on making a claim to the Welsh Ministers, to be paid compensation by them for any loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the effect of the notice.
(4)The loss or damage for which compensation is payable includes any amount payable by the claimant in respect of a breach of contract caused by taking action necessary to comply with the notice.
(5)No compensation is payable under this section for loss or damage that the claimant could have avoided by—
(a)providing information that the claimant was required to provide by an information notice served by the Welsh Ministers under section 197, or
(b)co-operating with the Welsh Ministers in any other way when responding to such a notice.
(6)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning—
(a)in a case falling within subsection (1)(a) but not within subsection (1)(b), with the day the temporary stop notice takes effect;
(b)in a case falling within subsection (1)(b), with the day the notice is withdrawn.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may issue an enforcement notice if they consider—
(a)that works which involve a breach of section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which scheduled monument consent was granted have been or are being carried out in relation to a scheduled monument or land in, on or under which the monument is situated, and
(b)that it is appropriate to issue the notice, having regard to the effect of the works on the monument as one of national importance.
(2)An enforcement notice must—
(a)specify the alleged breach, and
(b)require works specified in the notice to be stopped, or require steps specified in the notice to be taken for one or more of the purposes set out in subsection (3).
(3)The purposes are—
(a)restoring the monument or land to its condition before the breach took place,
(b)if the Welsh Ministers consider that restoration would not be reasonably practicable or would be undesirable, carrying out further works to alleviate the effect of the breach, or
(c)putting the monument or land in the condition it would have been in if the terms of any scheduled monument consent for the works to which the notice relates (including any conditions attached to the consent) had been complied with.
(4)Where an enforcement notice imposes a requirement under subsection (3)(b), scheduled monument consent is to be treated as having been granted for any works carried out in compliance with the requirement.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must—
(a)maintain a list of every monument in respect of which an enforcement notice is in effect and publish the up-to-date list, and
(b)provide a copy of the enforcement notice relating to a monument in the list to any person who requests one.
(1)An enforcement notice must specify—
(a)the date on which it is to take effect, and
(b)the period within which the works specified in the notice must be stopped or the steps specified in it must be taken.
(2)The notice takes effect at the beginning of the day specified under subsection (1)(a); but where an appeal is made against the notice under section 39, this is subject to subsection (4) of that section.
(3)An enforcement notice may specify different periods for stopping different works or taking different steps.
(4)Where the Welsh Ministers issue an enforcement notice, they must serve a copy of the notice on—
(a)every owner and occupier of the monument or land to which the notice relates,
(b)if the monument or land is let but the lessee is not the occupier, the lessee, and
(c)any other person who has an interest in the monument or land which the Welsh Ministers consider to be materially affected by the notice.
(5)Each copy of the notice must be served—
(a)before the end of 28 days after the day the notice is issued, and
(b)at least 28 days before the date specified in the notice as the date on which it is to take effect.
(1)Where the Welsh Ministers have issued an enforcement notice, they may—
(a)withdraw the notice;
(b)waive or relax any requirement of the notice, and in particular extend the period within which the notice requires any works to be stopped or any step to be taken.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may exercise the powers in subsection (1) whether or not the notice has taken effect.
(3)The withdrawal of an enforcement notice does not prevent the Welsh Ministers from issuing another enforcement notice.
(4)Subsection (5) applies where the Welsh Ministers had served copies of the enforcement notice under section 36(4) before exercising the powers in subsection (1).
(5)Immediately after exercising any of those powers, the Welsh Ministers must give notice that they have done so to every person who was served with a copy of the enforcement notice (or who would be served with a copy of the notice if it were reissued).
(1)This section applies if, after an enforcement notice has been issued, scheduled monument consent is granted under section 13(2)—
(a)authorising any works to which the notice relates that have been carried out in breach of section 11, or
(b)authorising works which involve a breach of a condition subject to which a previous consent was granted.
(2)The notice ceases to have effect (or does not take effect) so far as it—
(a)requires steps to be taken that are inconsistent with the authorisation of the works, or
(b)requires steps to be taken for complying with the condition.
(3)The fact that an enforcement notice has wholly or partly ceased to have effect by virtue of this section does not affect the liability of any person for an offence in respect of a previous failure to comply with the notice (see section 41).
(1)A person on whom a copy of an enforcement notice is served, or any other person with an interest in the monument or land to which the notice relates, may appeal to a magistrates’ court against the notice.
(2)An appeal may be made on one or more of the following grounds—
(a)that the matters alleged to constitute a breach of section 11 or of a condition of scheduled monument consent have not occurred;
(b)that those matters (if they occurred) do not constitute such a breach;
(c)that the following conditions are met—
(i)works to the monument or land were urgently necessary in the interests of safety or health,
(ii)the works carried out were limited to the minimum measures immediately necessary, and
(iii)written notice justifying in detail the need for the works was given to the Welsh Ministers as soon as reasonably practicable;
(d)that a copy of the enforcement notice was not served on a person as required by section 36;
(e)that the period within which the notice requires any works to be stopped or any steps to be taken is unreasonably short.
(3)An appeal must be made before the date specified in the notice as the date on which it is to take effect.
(4)Where an appeal is made, the notice has no effect until the appeal is finally determined or withdrawn.
(5)On an appeal under this section, a magistrates’ court may uphold the notice or quash it.
(6)The court may uphold a notice even if a copy of it was not served on a person who was required by section 36 to be served, if the court is satisfied that the person has not been substantially prejudiced by the failure.
(1)If the period within which an enforcement notice requires any step to be taken has ended and the step has not been taken, a person authorised in writing by the Welsh Ministers may—
(a)enter the land in, on or under which the monument is situated and take the step, and
(b)recover from a person who is then an owner or lessee of the monument or land the costs incurred in doing so.
(2)The liability under subsection (1) of a person who is the owner of a monument or land merely by virtue of being entitled to receive the rack rent as trustee for another person is limited to the total amount of money the person has or has had by virtue of that entitlement.
(3)Where, on an application by way of complaint made by an owner of a scheduled monument or land, a magistrates’ court is satisfied that an occupier of the monument or land is preventing the owner from taking steps required by an enforcement notice, the court may by warrant authorise the owner to enter the land and take the steps.
(1)Where, at any time after the end of the period within which an enforcement notice requires any works to be stopped or any step to be taken, the works are being carried out or the step has not been taken, a person who is at that time an owner of the scheduled monument or land to which the notice relates is guilty of an offence.
(2)A person may be charged with an offence under this section by reference to a day or a longer period, and a person may be convicted of more than one offence in relation to the same enforcement notice by reference to different periods.
(3)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section, it is a defence for the person to prove—
(a)that the person did everything the person could be expected to do to secure that the works specified in the notice were stopped or the steps required by the notice were taken, or
(b)that the person did not know, and could not reasonably have been expected to know, of the existence of the enforcement notice.
(4)A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on summary conviction, or on conviction for indictment, to a fine.
(5)In determining the amount of the fine, the court must in particular have regard to any financial benefit which has accrued or appears likely to accrue to the person in consequence of the offence.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may apply to the High Court or the county court for an injunction restraining—
(a)an actual or expected breach of section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised) in relation to a scheduled monument or land in, on or under which there is a scheduled monument, or
(b)an actual or expected failure to comply with a condition of scheduled monument consent for works to a scheduled monument.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may make an application whether or not they have exercised or are proposing to exercise any of their other powers under this Part.
(3)The court may grant an injunction on any terms it considers appropriate for the purpose of restraining the breach.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may acquire compulsorily any monument of special historic interest for the purpose of securing its preservation.
(2)The Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67) applies to an acquisition under this section.
(3)Subsection (4) applies for the purpose of assessing compensation for any acquisition under this section of a monument which is a scheduled monument immediately before the day the compulsory purchase order is made.
(4)Where this subsection applies, it is to be assumed that scheduled monument consent would not be granted for any works which would or might result in the demolition, destruction or removal of the monument or any part of it.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may acquire by agreement any monument of special historic interest.
(2)A local authority may acquire by agreement any monument of special historic interest in or in the vicinity of its area.
(3)The Welsh Ministers or any local authority may accept a gift (whether by deed or will) of any monument of special historic interest.
(4)Part 1 of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965 (c. 56) applies (so far as relevant) to an acquisition under this section, other than sections 4 to 8, section 10 and section 31 of that Act.
(1)A person with a qualifying interest in a monument of special historic interest may, with the agreement of the Welsh Ministers, appoint them by deed as guardians of the monument.
(2)A person with a qualifying interest in a monument of special historic interest may, with the agreement of any local authority in or in the vicinity of whose area the monument is situated, appoint the authority by deed as guardian of the monument.
(3)A person who is not the occupier of a monument may not establish guardianship of the monument under this section unless the occupier is also a party to the deed.
(4)Any other person who has an interest in the monument may be a party to the deed in addition to the person establishing the guardianship of the monument and (where the latter is not the occupier) the occupier.
(5)The following interests in a monument are qualifying interests for the purposes of this section—
(a)a freehold estate;
(b)a leasehold estate, or interest in possession, which—
(i)has at least 45 years left to run, or
(ii)is renewable for at least 45 years;
(c)an interest in possession for the person’s own life or the life of another person, or for lives (whether or not including the person’s own life), under any existing or future trust of land where the estate or interest subject to the trust falls within paragraph (a) or (b).
(6)In subsection (5)(c) “trust of land” has the same meaning as in the Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996 (c. 47).
(7)In this Chapter “guardianship deed” means a deed executed under subsection (1) or (2).
(1)A guardianship deed is a local land charge.
(2)Every person deriving title to a monument of special historic interest from, through or under any person who has executed a guardianship deed is bound by the deed unless the person derives title by virtue of any disposal made by the person who executed the deed before the date of the deed.
(3)The Welsh Ministers or a local authority may not become guardians of a building or structure occupied as a dwelling by any person other than the caretaker of the building or structure or a member of the caretaker’s family.
(4)Any person who has any estate or interest in a monument under guardianship has the same right and title to, and estate or interest in, the monument in all respects as if the monument were not under guardianship; but this is subject to any provision to the contrary in this Part.
(1)The guardian of a monument must maintain it, and may do anything the guardian considers necessary for its maintenance.
(2)The guardian of a monument has full control and management of it, and may do anything the guardian considers necessary for its proper control and management.
(3)The powers in subsections (1) and (2) include power to—
(a)make any examination of the monument;
(b)open up the monument or make excavations of it for the purpose of examination or otherwise;
(c)remove the whole or any part of the monument to another place for the purposes of preserving it.
(4)The power in subsection (2) includes power to require the payment of a charge in connection with any use of the monument.
(5)The guardian of a monument may enter the site of the monument for the purpose of exercising any of the guardian’s powers under this section in relation to it (and may authorise any other person to enter the site and exercise those powers on the guardian’s behalf).
(6)Subsections (2) to (4) are subject to any provision to the contrary in the guardianship deed.
(1)The guardian of a monument may agree with the persons who are for the time being immediately affected by the operation of the guardianship deed—
(a)to exclude any part of the monument from the guardianship, or
(b)to renounce guardianship of the monument.
(2)In the absence of such an agreement, a monument remains under guardianship (unless it is acquired by its guardian) until an occupier of the monument who is entitled to terminate the guardianship gives notice in writing to that effect to the guardian of the monument.
(3)An occupier of a monument is entitled to terminate the guardianship of the monument if the occupier—
(a)has a qualifying interest (within the meaning of section 45(5)) in the monument, and
(b)is not bound by the guardianship deed.
(4)A local authority must consult the Welsh Ministers before making an agreement under subsection (1).
(5)The guardian of a monument may not make an agreement under subsection (1) unless the guardian is satisfied, with respect to the part or whole of the monument (as the case may be)—
(a)that satisfactory arrangements have been made for ensuring its preservation after termination of the guardianship, or
(b)that it is no longer practicable to preserve it (whether because of the cost of preserving it or otherwise).
(6)An agreement under subsection (1) must be made under seal.
(7)For the purposes of subsection (1) a person is immediately affected by the operation of a guardianship deed relating to a monument if the person is bound by that deed and is in possession or occupation of the monument.
(1)References in sections 43 to 46 to a monument of special historic interest include any land adjoining or in the vicinity of the monument which the Welsh Ministers consider, or (as the case may be) a local authority considers, to be reasonably required for any of the purposes mentioned in subsection (2).
(2)The purposes are—
(a)the maintenance of the monument or its amenities;
(b)the storage of equipment or materials for the maintenance of the monument or its amenities;
(c)providing or facilitating access to the monument;
(d)the proper control or management of the monument;
(e)the provision of facilities and services for the public for or in connection with providing public access to the monument.
(3)The power of compulsory acquisition in section 43(1), as it applies by virtue of subsection (1) of this section, is to be read as if for “the purpose of securing its preservation” there were substituted “any of the purposes mentioned in section 49(2)”.
(4)Land may be acquired or taken into guardianship by virtue of this section either at the same time as the monument or later.
(5)A person who is the guardian of any land by virtue of this section has full control and management of the land, and may do anything the guardian considers necessary—
(a)for its proper control and management (including requiring the payment of a charge in connection with any use of the land), and
(b)for the use of the land for any of the purposes relating to the monument mentioned in subsection (2).
(6)A person who is the guardian of any land by virtue of this section may enter the land for the purpose of exercising the guardian’s powers under subsection (5) (and may authorise any other person to enter the site and to exercise those powers on the guardian’s behalf).
(7)Section 48(1) to (4) and (7) apply in relation to any land taken into guardianship by virtue of this section as they apply in relation to a monument.
(8)Apart from any termination of guardianship by virtue of section 48, guardianship of any such land also ends if the monument in question—
(a)ceases to be under guardianship otherwise than by virtue of being acquired by its guardians, or
(b)ceases to exist.
(9)Where a monument is owned by, or under the guardianship of, the Welsh Ministers or a local authority by virtue of this Chapter, references in this Chapter to land associated with that monument (or to associated land) are references to—
(a)any land acquired or taken into guardianship by virtue of this section for a purpose mentioned in subsection (2), or
(b)any land appropriated for any such purpose under a power conferred by any other enactment.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may acquire an easement over land adjoining or in the vicinity of any monument which is under their ownership by virtue of this Chapter, if they consider the easement to be necessary—
(a)for any of the purposes mentioned in section 49(2) relating to that monument, or
(b)for the use of any land associated with that monument for any of those purposes.
(2)An acquisition under subsection (1) may be made by agreement or compulsorily.
(3)A local authority may acquire an easement over land adjoining or in the vicinity of any monument which is under its ownership by virtue of this Chapter, if the easement appears to it to be necessary—
(a)for any of the purposes mentioned in section 49(2) relating to that monument, or
(b)for the use of any land associated with that monument for any of those purposes.
(4)An acquisition under subsection (3) may only be made by agreement.
(5)The guardian of a monument or of any land may acquire, for the benefit of the monument or land, a relevant right over land adjoining or in the vicinity of the monument or land, if the guardian considers the right to be necessary—
(a)for any of the purposes mentioned in section 49(2) relating to that monument or land, or
(b)for the use of any land associated with that monument or land for any of those purposes.
(6)For the purposes of subsection (5) “relevant right” means a right (of any description) which would, if acquired by an owner of the monument or land in question, be an easement.
(7)The acquisition of a right under subsection (5)—
(a)in the case of the Welsh Ministers, may be made by agreement or compulsorily;
(b)in the case of a local authority, may be made only by agreement.
(8)A right acquired under subsection (5)—
(a)is to be treated for the purposes of its acquisition under this section and in all other respects as if it were a legal easement, and
(b)may be enforced by the guardians for the time being of the monument or land for whose benefit it was acquired as if they were the freehold owner in possession of that monument or land.
(9)If the condition in subsection (10) is met in relation to a monument, a right which under subsection (5) is acquired by agreement —
(a)may be revoked by the grantor, subject to any provision to the contrary in the agreement under which it was acquired, and
(b)may be revoked by any successor in title of the grantor as respects any of the land over which it is exercisable in which the the successor has an interest.
(10)The condition mentioned in subsection (9) is that the monument—
(a)ceases to be under guardianship otherwise than by virtue of being acquired by its guardians, or
(b)ceases to exist.
(11)A right acquired under subsection (5) is a local land charge.
(12)The powers of acquisition in this section include power to acquire an easement or right by the grant of a new right.
(13)The Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67) applies to any compulsory acquisition under this section.
(14)Part 1 of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965 (c. 56) applies (so far as relevant) to an acquisition by agreement under this section, other than sections 4 to 8, section 10 and section 31 of that Act.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may make an agreement under this section with—
(a)any occupier of a monument of special historic interest, or
(b)any occupier of land adjoining or in the vicinity of such a monument.
(2)A local authority may make an agreement under this section with—
(a)any occupier of a monument of special historic interest in or in the vicinity of its area, or
(b)any occupier of land adjoining or in the vicinity of any such monument.
(3)An agreement under this section is referred to in this Part as a “management agreement”.
(4)Any person who has an interest in a monument of special historic interest or in any land adjoining or in the vicinity of such a monument may be a party to a management agreement (in addition to the occupier).
(5)A management agreement may—
(a)make provision about the maintenance and preservation of the monument and its amenities (including, where an agreement is made by the Welsh Ministers, provision granting scheduled monument consent under section 13(1) for specified works of maintenance or preservation);
(b)make provision about the carrying out of specified works, or the doing of any specified thing, in relation to the monument or land;
(c)provide for public access to the monument or land and the provision of associated facilities, information or services to the public;
(d)restrict access to, or use of, the monument or land;
(e)prohibit the doing of any specified thing in relation to the monument or land;
(f)provide for the Welsh Ministers or the local authority (as the case may be) to make payments of specified amounts and on specified terms—
(i)for or towards the cost of any work provided for under the agreement, or
(ii)in consideration of any restriction, prohibition or obligation accepted by any other party to the agreement.
(6)A management agreement may also contain incidental and consequential provision.
(7)Where a management agreement made by the Welsh Ministers grants scheduled monument consent subject to conditions, the agreement must specify those conditions.
(8)Subsection (9) applies where a management agreement expressly provides that the agreement as a whole or any restriction, prohibition or obligation arising under it is to be binding on the successors of any party to the agreement.
(9)Every person deriving title to the monument or land in question from, through or under that party is bound by the agreement, or by that restriction, prohibition or obligation, unless the title is derived by virtue of any disposal made by that party before the date of the agreement.
(10)Section 84 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (c. 20) (power of Upper Tribunal to discharge or modify restrictive covenants) does not apply to a management agreement.
(11)In this section “specified” means specified or described in a management agreement.
(1)A person may establish guardianship of a monument or land under section 45 or join in executing a guardianship deed under that section, despite being a limited owner of the monument or land.
(2)A person may grant an easement or other right over land which the Welsh Ministers are or any local authority is authorised to acquire under section 50, despite being a limited owner of the land.
(3)A person may make a management agreement under section 51 with respect to a monument or land, despite being a limited owner of the monument or land.
(4)For the purposes of this section—
(a)a body corporate or corporation sole is a limited owner of any land in which it has an interest, and
(b)any other persons are limited owners of land in which they have an interest if they hold that interest in any of the ways mentioned in subsection (5).
(5)The ways of holding an interest in land referred to in subsection (4)(b) are—
(a)as tenant for life or statutory owner (within the meaning of the Settled Land Act 1925 (c. 18));
(b)as trustees of land (within the meaning of the Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996 (c. 47));
(c)as trustees for charities or commissioners or trustees for ecclesiastical, collegiate or other public purposes.
(6)Where a person who is a limited owner of any land by virtue of holding an interest in the land in any of the ways mentioned in subsection (5) executes a guardianship deed in relation to the land, the guardianship deed binds every successive owner of any estate or interest in the land.
(7)But where the land is, at the date of the deed, subject to any incumbrance not capable of being overreached by the limited owner in exercise of any powers of sale or management conferred on the limited owner by law or under any settlement or other instrument, the deed does not bind the incumbrancer.
(8)Where a management agreement under section 51 to which a limited owner is a party expressly provides that the agreement as a whole or any restriction, prohibition or obligation arising under the agreement binds the limited owner’s successors, subsections (9) and (10) apply to the agreement or (as the case may be) to the restriction, prohibition or obligation in question.
(9)Where a person is a limited owner by virtue of holding an interest in any of the ways mentioned in subsection (5), the agreement or restriction, prohibition or obligation binds every successive owner of any estate or interest in the land.
(10)But where the land is, at the date of the agreement, subject to any incumbrance not capable of being overreached by the limited owner in exercise of powers of sale or management conferred on the limited owner by law or under any settlement or other instrument, the agreement or restriction, prohibition or obligation does not bind the incumbrancer.
(1)Where the Welsh Ministers are the owners or guardians of a monument or associated land, they may transfer the ownership or guardianship of that monument or land to any local authority.
(2)Where a local authority is the owner or guardian of a monument or associated land, it may transfer the ownership or guardianship of that monument or land—
(a)to the Welsh Ministers, or
(b)to another local authority.
(3)But the Welsh Ministers or a local authority may not transfer the guardianship of a monument or associated land under this section without the agreement of the persons who are for the time being immediately affected by the operation of the guardianship deed.
(4)For the purposes of subsection (3) a person is immediately affected by the operation of a guardianship deed relating to a monument or land if the person is bound by that deed and is in possession or occupation of the monument or land.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may dispose of any land acquired by them under section 43, 44 or 53.
(2)A local authority may dispose of any land acquired by it under section 44 or 53, but must consult the Welsh Ministers before doing so.
(3)Where the land disposed of under this section is or includes a monument, the disposal must be made on terms the person disposing of the land considers will ensure the preservation of the monument.
(4)But subsection (3) does not apply if the person disposing of the land considers that it is no longer practicable to preserve the monument (whether because of the cost of preserving it or otherwise).
(1)The Welsh Ministers and any local authority must ensure the public has access to any monument which is under their or its ownership or guardianship by virtue of this Chapter; but this is subject to—
(a)the following provisions of this section,
(b)any regulations or byelaws made under section 56, and
(c)any provision to the contrary included in any agreement relating to the monument made under section 25 or 51 (scheduled monument partnership agreements and management agreements).
(2)In relation to any monument under guardianship, the duty imposed by subsection (1) is also subject to any provision to the contrary in the guardianship deed.
(3)References in the following subsections to a monument are—
(a)in relation to the Welsh Ministers, to a monument which—
(i)is under their ownership or guardianship by virtue of this Chapter;
(ii)is under their control or management otherwise than by virtue of this Chapter;
(b)in relation to a local authority, to a monument which is under its ownership or guardianship by virtue of this Chapter.
(4)The Welsh Ministers or a local authority may control the times of normal public access to a monument.
(5)The Welsh Ministers or a local authority may exclude the public from access to a monument, or to any part of it, for any period they consider or it considers necessary—
(a)in the interests of safety;
(b)for its maintenance or preservation;
(c)in connection with events held or other organised activities carried out in or on it.
(6)The Welsh Ministers or a local authority may also impose other restrictions or controls on public access to a monument, or to any part of it, for a purpose mentioned in subsection (5).
(7)The Welsh Ministers or a local authority may charge the public for admission to a monument.
(8)The Welsh Ministers or a local authority may refuse a person admission to a monument if they have or it has reason to believe that the person is likely to do anything likely to damage the monument or its amenities or to disturb the public in their enjoyment of it.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may regulate public access to any monument under their ownership or guardianship by virtue of this Chapter by making regulations that prohibit or regulate any act or thing likely to damage the monument or its amenities or disturb the public in their enjoyment of it.
(2)Regulations under subsection (1) may also make provision in relation to any monument under the control or management of the Welsh Ministers otherwise than by virtue of this Chapter.
(3)A local authority may regulate public access to any monument under its ownership or guardianship by virtue of this Chapter by making byelaws that prohibit or regulate any act or thing likely to damage the monument or its amenities or disturb the public in their enjoyment of it.
(4)A person who fails to comply with provision made by regulations or byelaws under this section commits an offence.
(5)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (4) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 2 on the standard scale.
(6)Byelaws made under this section may make different provision in relation to different monuments or different descriptions of monument.
(7)Byelaws under this section do not take effect unless they are confirmed by the Welsh Ministers.
(8)The Welsh Ministers may confirm the byelaws with or without modifications.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may provide facilities, information and other services to the public for or in connection with providing public access—
(a)to any monument under their ownership or guardianship by virtue of this Chapter, or
(b)to any monument otherwise under their control or management.
(2)A local authority may provide facilities, information and other services to the public for or in connection with providing public access to any monument under its ownership or guardianship by virtue of this Chapter.
(3)Facilities and information or other services for the public may be provided under this section in or on the monument itself or on any land associated with the monument.
(4)The Welsh Ministers or a local authority may charge for the use of any facility or service provided by them or it under this section.
(1)A person who without lawful excuse destroys or damages a protected monument is guilty of an offence if the person—
(a)knew or ought reasonably to have known that it was a protected monument, and
(b)intended to destroy or damage the monument or was reckless as to whether the monument would be damaged or destroyed.
(2)In subsection (1) “protected monument” means—
(a)a scheduled monument, or
(b)a monument under the ownership or guardianship of the Welsh Ministers or a local authority by virtue of this Chapter.
(3)This section applies to anything done by or under the authority of the owner of the monument, other than an act for the carrying out of excepted works, as it applies to anything done by any other person.
(4)In subsection (3) “excepted works” means—
(a)works authorised under Chapter 3;
(b)works for which development consent has been granted under the Planning Act 2008 (c. 29).
(5)A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable—
(a)on summary conviction, to a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding the applicable limit under section 224(1A)(b) of the Sentencing Code, or both;
(b)on conviction on indictment, to a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years, or both.
(1)Subsection (2) applies where an owner or any other person is convicted of an offence involving damage to a monument which was at the time of the offence under the guardianship of the Welsh Ministers or any local authority by virtue of Chapter 6.
(2)Any compensation order made under Chapter 2 of Part 7 of the Sentencing Code (compensation orders against convicted persons) in respect of that damage is to be made in favour of the Welsh Ministers or the local authority in question (as the case may require).
(1)In this section—
“consent” (“cydsyniad”) means the written consent of the Welsh Ministers;
“metal detector” (“datgelydd metel”) means any device designed or adapted for detecting or locating any metal or mineral in the ground;
“protected place” (“man gwarchodedig”) means—
the site of any scheduled monument, or
the site of any monument under the ownership or guardianship of the Welsh Ministers or a local authority by virtue of Chapter 6.
(2)A person commits an offence if the person uses a metal detector in a protected place without consent to do so.
(3)A person given consent to use a metal detector in a protected place commits an offence if the person, in using the metal detector in that place, fails to comply with any condition attached to the consent.
(4)A person commits an offence if the person, without consent to do so, removes any object of archaeological or historical interest which the person has discovered by the use of a metal detector in a protected place.
(5)A person given consent to remove or otherwise deal with any object which the person discovers by the use of a metal detector in a protected place commits an offence if, in removing or otherwise dealing with the object, the person fails to comply with any condition attached to the consent.
(6)In any proceedings for an offence under subsection (2) it is a defence for a person to prove that the person used the metal detector for a purpose other than detecting or locating objects of archaeological or historical interest.
(7)In any proceedings for an offence under subsection (2) or (4) it is a defence for a person to prove that the person—
(a)had taken all reasonable steps to find out whether the place in which the metal detector was used was a protected place, and
(b)did not know, and had no reason to believe, that the place was a protected place.
(8)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (2) or (3) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(9)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (4) or (5) is liable on summary conviction, or on conviction on indictment, to a fine.
(1)If it appears to the Welsh Ministers that any works to which section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised) applies are urgently necessary for the preservation of a scheduled monument, they may enter the site of the monument and carry out those works.
(2)Before exercising the power in subsection (1) the Welsh Ministers must give at least 7 clear days’ written notice to every owner and occupier of the monument.
(3)Where the Welsh Ministers carry out works under this section for repairing any damage to a scheduled monument—
(a)any compensation order previously made in respect of that damage under Chapter 2 of Part 7 of the Sentencing Code in favour of any other person is enforceable (so far as not already complied with) as if it had been made in favour of the Welsh Ministers, and
(b)any such order subsequently made in respect of that damage must be made in favour of the Welsh Ministers.
(4)Where works are carried out under this section, the works are to be treated as authorised works for the purposes of Chapter 3 (control of works affecting scheduled monuments).
(1)The Welsh Ministers may meet or contribute towards the cost of the acquisition by any person of any monument of special historic interest.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may—
(a)remove or assist in the removal of any monument of special historic interest or any part of any such monument to another place for the purpose of preserving it;
(b)meet or contribute towards the cost of the removal of any such monument or any part of any such monument to another place for the purpose of preserving it.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may at the request of an owner of any monument of special historic interest—
(a)undertake or assist in the preservation, maintenance and management of the monument;
(b)meet or contribute towards the cost of the preservation, maintenance and management of the monument.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may contribute towards the cost of the provision of facilities or services for the public by a local authority under section 57.
(5)A local authority may at the request of an owner of any monument of special historic interest in or in the vicinity of its area—
(a)undertake or assist in the preservation, maintenance and management of the monument;
(b)meet or contribute towards the cost of the preservation, maintenance and management of the monument.
(6)Neither the Welsh Ministers nor a local authority may incur expenditure under this section in connection with any building or structure which is occupied as a dwelling by any person other than the caretaker of the building or structure or a member of the caretaker’s family.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may give advice about the treatment of any monument of special historic interest.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may also supervise any work in connection with any monument of special historic interest if invited to do so by an owner of the monument.
(3)The Welsh Ministers must supervise work in connection with any scheduled monument, if they consider it advisable (whether asked to do so by an owner or not).
(4)The Welsh Ministers may charge for giving advice or supervising work under this section.
(1)If a local authority considers that any land in or in the vicinity of its area may contain a monument of special historic interest, or anything else of archaeological or historical interest, the authority may—
(a)carry out or assist in an archaeological investigation of the land, or
(b)meet or contribute towards the cost of an archaeological investigation of the land.
(2)A local authority may publish the results of any archaeological investigation carried out, assisted or wholly or partly funded by it under this section.
(3)The powers in subsection (1) may be exercised in relation to any land forming part of the sea bed within the seaward limits of the territorial sea adjacent to Wales.
(1)An authorised person may enter any land to inspect a scheduled monument in, on or under the land to assess its condition and assess—
(a)whether any works affecting the monument are being carried out in breach of section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised), or
(b)whether it has been or is likely to be damaged (by such works or otherwise).
(2)An authorised person may enter any land to inspect a scheduled monument in, on or under the land in connection with—
(a)an application for scheduled monument consent for works affecting that monument,
(b)a proposal to modify or revoke a scheduled monument consent for any such works, or
(c)a proposal to make an order under section 27 (termination of scheduled monument partnership agreement or provision of agreement).
(3)An authorised person may enter any land to assess whether any works to which a scheduled monument consent or an authorisation under section 12 relates are or have been carried out in accordance with the terms of the consent or authorisation (including any conditions).
(4)An authorised person may enter any land on which any works to which a scheduled monument consent or an authorisation under section 12 relates are being carried out to—
(a)inspect the land (including any buildings or other structures on the land) to record any matters of archaeological or historical interest, or
(b)observe the carrying out of those works with a view to—
(i)examining and recording any objects or other material of archaeological or historical interest discovered during the course of those works, and
(ii)recording any matters of archaeological or historical interest discovered during the course of those works.
(5)An authorised person may enter any land in, on or under which a scheduled monument is situated to erect and maintain on or near the site of the monument any notice boards and marker posts the Welsh Ministers consider to be desirable to protect the monument from accidental or deliberate damage.
(6)The power in subsection (5) may not be exercised without the agreement of every owner and occupier of the land.
(7)In this section “authorised person” means a person authorised in writing by the Welsh Ministers.
(1)An authorised person may enter any land to—
(a)determine whether a temporary stop notice should be issued;
(b)display a copy of a temporary stop notice in accordance with section 31 or attach it for the purpose of service in accordance with section 206(5)(c);
(c)assess whether a temporary stop notice has been complied with.
(2)An authorised person may enter any land to—
(a)determine whether an enforcement notice should be issued;
(b)attach an enforcement notice for the purpose of service in accordance with section 206(5)(c);
(c)assess whether an enforcement notice has been complied with.
(3)In this section “authorised person” means a person authorised in writing by the Welsh Ministers.
(1)An authorised person may enter any land in, on or under which the Welsh Ministers know or have reason to believe there is a monument of special historic interest to inspect the land (including any building or other structure on it) with a view to recording any matters of archaeological or historical interest.
(2)An authorised person entering any land in exercise of the power in subsection (1) may carry out excavations in the land for the purposes of archaeological investigation.
(3)An excavation under subsection (2) requires the agreement of every person whose agreement to the making of the excavation would be required apart from this section.
(4)But subsection (3) does not apply if the Welsh Ministers know or have reason to believe that a monument of special historic interest they know or believe to be in, on or under the land is or may be at risk of imminent damage or destruction.
(5)In this section “authorised person” means a person authorised in writing by the Welsh Ministers.
(1)An authorised person may enter any land to survey it, or estimate its value, in connection with a claim for compensation under this Part for any damage to that land or any other land.
(2)In this section “authorised person” means—
(a)an officer of the Valuation Office of His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, or
(b)a person authorised in writing by the Welsh Ministers.
(3)The power to survey land under this section includes power to search and bore to determine the nature of the subsoil or the presence of minerals.
(1)A power to enter land under this Part may be exercised at any reasonable time; but this subsection does not apply to section 65(5).
(2)A person authorised to enter land under this Part may not demand admission as of right to any land which is occupied unless notice of the intended entry has been given to every occupier—
(a)where the purpose of the entry is to carry out any works on the land (other than excavations in exercise of the power under section 67), at least 14 days before the day of the intended entry, or
(b)in any other case (including excavations in exercise of the power under section 67), at least 24 hours before the day of the intended entry.
(3)Subsection (2) does not apply to entry under—
(a)section 61 (but see subsection (2) of that section), or
(b)section 66(1).
(4)A person authorised to enter land under this Part may not enter any building or structure or part of a building or structure occupied as a dwelling without the agreement of every occupier; but this subsection does not apply to the power in section 68.
(5)A person authorised to enter land under this Part must—
(a)if required to do so by or on behalf of an owner or occupier of the land, produce evidence of the person’s authorisation and state the purpose of the entry before entering the land;
(b)if leaving the land at a time when no owner or occupier is present, leave it as effectively secured against trespassers as the person found it.
(6)A person entering land in exercise of a power of entry under this Part may take assistance or equipment reasonably required for the purpose to which the entry relates.
(7)Where a person carries out any archaeological investigation or examination of land in the exercise of a power of entry under this Part, the person may take and remove any samples which appear to the person to be reasonably required for the purpose of archaeological analysis.
(8)Where—
(a)a power of entry under this Part is exercisable by a person (“P1”) in relation to any land, and
(b)works are being carried out on the land by another person (“P2”),
P1 must, in exercising the power of entry, comply with any reasonable requirements or conditions imposed by P2 for the purpose of preventing interference or delay to the works.
(9)Subsection (8) does not apply where the works in question are being carried out in breach of section 11 (requirement for works to be authorised).
(10)For the purposes of subsection (8), a requirement or condition is not reasonable if complying with it would frustrate the exercise of the power of entry or the purpose of entry.
(11)A person who intentionally obstructs a person exercising a power of entry under this Part commits an offence.
(12)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (11) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(13)Where a person—
(a)in the exercise of the power of entry under section 68, proposes to carry out works authorised by subsection (3) of that section, and
(b)is required to give notice of the intended entry under subsection (2)(a) of this section,
the person may not carry out the works unless the notice of intended entry includes notice of the person’s intention to carry them out.
(14)Where—
(a)in the exercise of the power of entry under section 68, a person proposes to carry out any works authorised by subsection (3) of that section on land that belongs to a statutory undertaker, and
(b)the undertaker objects to the proposal on the ground that carrying out of the works would be seriously detrimental to the carrying on of its undertaking,
the person may not carry out the works without the agreement of the Welsh Ministers.
(1)This section applies to any power to enter, or to do anything on, any land under section 40 or sections 65 to 68.
(2)Any person interested in land is entitled, on making a claim to the Welsh Ministers, to be paid compensation by them for any damage caused to the land or to property on it in the exercise of a power to which this section applies.
(3)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning with the day the damage was caused (or if the damage was caused over more than one day, the last day it was caused).
(1)This section applies where a person enters land in exercise of a power of entry under this Part—
(a)to carry out excavations in the land or works affecting a monument of special historic interest situated in, on or under the land,
(b)to assess or observe works on the land under section 65(3) or (4)(b), or
(c)to carry out an archaeological examination of the land.
(2)The person may—
(a)take temporary custody of any object of archaeological or historical interest discovered during the course of the excavations, works or examination, and
(b)remove the object from its site for the purpose of examining, testing, treating, recording or preserving it.
(3)The appropriate authority may not, without the agreement of every owner, retain the object for longer than is reasonably required to—
(a)examine and record it, and
(b)carry out any test or treatment which appears to the authority to be desirable—
(i)for the purpose of archaeological investigation or analysis, or
(ii)to restore or preserve the object.
(4)In subsection (3) “appropriate authority” means—
(a)in a case where the power of entry was exercised by or on behalf of the Welsh Ministers, the Welsh Ministers, and
(b)in a case where the power of entry was exercised by or on behalf of a local authority, that authority.
(5)This section does not affect any right of the Crown under the Treasure Act 1996 (c. 24).
(1)The validity of a decision or order to which this section applies may not be questioned in any legal proceedings except an application for statutory review under section 73.
(2)The decisions to which this section applies are—
(a)a decision of the Welsh Ministers on an application for scheduled monument consent, and
(b)a decision on a review under section 9.
(3)This section applies to an order under section 20 modifying or revoking a scheduled monument consent.
(4)This section does not prevent any court exercising any jurisdiction in relation to a refusal or failure to make a decision to which this section applies.
(1)A person aggrieved by a decision or order to which section 72 applies may make an application for statutory review.
(2)An application for statutory review is an application to the High Court questioning the validity of the decision or order on the grounds that—
(a)it is not within the powers conferred by this Act, or
(b)a relevant requirement has not been complied with in relation to the decision or order.
(3)An application for statutory review must be made before the end of 6 weeks beginning with the day after the day the decision or order to which the application relates is made.
(4)On any application for statutory review the High Court—
(a)may make an interim order suspending the operation of the decision or order to which the application relates, until the proceedings are finally determined;
(b)may quash that decision or order if satisfied that—
(i)it is not within the powers conferred by this Act, or
(ii)the interests of the applicant have been substantially prejudiced by a failure to comply with a relevant requirement in relation to the decision or order.
(5)In this section “relevant requirement” means any requirement of—
(a)this Act or the Tribunals and Inquiries Act 1992 (c. 53), or
(b)any subordinate legislation made under this Act or under that Act.
(1)This Part applies in relation to Crown land only to the extent set out below.
(2)A monument situated in, on or under Crown land may be included in the schedule.
(3)Any restrictions or powers imposed or conferred by this Part apply and are exercisable in relation to Crown land and in relation to anything done on Crown land otherwise than by or on behalf of the Crown, but not so as to affect any interest of the Crown in the land.
(4)This section does not permit—
(a)a power under this Part to enter, or to do anything on, any land to be exercised in relation to Crown land, or
(b)an interest in Crown land held otherwise than by or on behalf of the Crown to be acquired compulsorily under this Part,
without the agreement of the appropriate Crown authority.
(1)In this Part—
“archaeological examination” (“archwiliad archaeolegol”) has the meaning given by subsection (3);
“archaeological investigation” (“ymchwiliad archaeolegol”) has the meaning given by subsection (2);
“enforcement notice” (“hysbysiad gorfodi”) means an enforcement notice issued under section 35;
“flooding operations” (“gweithrediadau i foddi tir”) means covering land with water or another liquid or partially liquid substance;
“guardian” (“gwarcheidwad”) is to be interpreted in accordance with sections 45 and 49;
“guardianship deed” (“gweithred warcheidiaeth”) has the meaning given by section 45(7);
“interim protection” (“gwarchodaeth interim”) has the meaning given by section 6(3);
“local authority” (“awdurdod lleol”) means—
a county council or county borough council in Wales, and
a National Park authority in Wales;
“monument of special historic interest” (“heneb o ddiddordeb hanesyddol arbennig”) has the meaning given by subsection (6);
“possession” (“meddiant”) includes receipt of rents and profits or the right to receive rents and profits (if any);
“the schedule” (“y gofrestr”) has the meaning given by section 3;
“scheduled monument consent” (“cydsyniad heneb gofrestredig”) has the meaning given by section 13;
“temporary stop notice” (“hysbysiad stop dros dro”) means a temporary stop notice issued under section 31;
“tipping operations” (“gweithrediadau tipio”) means tipping soil or spoil or depositing building or other materials or matter (including waste) on any land;
“works” (“gwaith”) includes—
flooding or tipping operations,
any operations carried out for the purposes of agriculture (within the meaning of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8)) or forestry (including afforestation), and
operations of any other description.
(2)In this Part “archaeological investigation” means any investigation of land, objects or other material for the purpose of obtaining and recording any information of archaeological or historical interest and includes in the case of an archaeological investigation of land—
(a)any investigation for the purpose of discovering and revealing and (where appropriate) recovering and removing any objects or other material of archaeological or historical interest situated in, on or under the land, and
(b)examining, testing, treating, recording and preserving any such objects or material discovered during the course of any excavations or inspections carried out for the purposes of any such investigation.
(3)In this Part “archaeological examination”, in relation to land, means any examination or inspection of the land (including buildings or other structures on the land) for the purpose of obtaining and recording any information of archaeological or historical interest.
(4)In this Part (other than in Chapter 4) references to land associated with a monument (or to associated land) are to be interpreted in accordance with section 49(9).
(5)In this Part references to a monument, in relation to the acquisition or transfer of any monument (whether under this Part or otherwise), include any interest in or right over the monument.
(6)In this Part “monument of special historic interest” means—
(a)any scheduled monument, and
(b)any other monument wholly or mainly in Wales which the Welsh Ministers consider to be of public interest by reason of the historic, architectural, traditional, artistic or archaeological interest attaching to it.
(7)But the reference to a monument in subsection (6)(b) does not include a monument situated in, on or under the bed of the sea below the low water mark.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must maintain a list of buildings which must include every building in Wales they consider to be of special architectural or historic interest, and must publish the up-to-date list.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may amend the list by—
(a)adding a building,
(b)removing a building, or
(c)amending the entry for a building.
(3)In considering whether a building should be included in the list, the Welsh Ministers may take into account not only the building itself but also—
(a)any way in which the exterior of the building contributes to the architectural or historic interest of any group of buildings of which it forms part, and
(b)the desirability of preserving any artificial feature of the building on the ground of its architectural or historic interest.
(4)In subsection (3)(b) “artificial feature” means any feature of the building consisting of a structure or artificial object that—
(a)is fixed to the building, or
(b)forms part of the land and is within the curtilage of the building.
(5)In this Act “listed building” means a building included in the list maintained under this section, and includes—
(a)any structure or artificial object that is fixed to the building and ancillary to it;
(b)any other structure or artificial object that—
(i)forms part of the land and has done so since before l July 1948, and
(ii)was within the curtilage of the building, and ancillary to it, on the date on which the building was first included in the list, or on 1 January 1969, whichever was later.
(6)In this Part—
(a)“listing” a building means amending the list by adding the building;
(b)“de-listing” a building means amending the list by removing the building.
(1)As soon as possible after the Welsh Ministers list or de-list a building, they must serve notice that they have done so on—
(a)every owner and occupier of the building, and
(b)every relevant local authority in whose area the building is situated.
(2)Where the Welsh Ministers have listed a building—
(a)the notice must specify the date on which they did so, and
(b)they must include with the notice a copy of the entry for the building in the list maintained under section 76.
(3)A copy of an entry served under this section is a local land charge, and for the purposes of the Local Land Charges Act 1975 (c. 76) the county council or county borough council on which the copy is served is the originating authority as respects the charge.
(4)A relevant local authority must keep available for public inspection—
(a)copies of entries in the list that have been served on it under this section, and
(b)copies of any parts of the list that were deposited with it under section 2(1) of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 (c. 9) or a corresponding provision of any earlier Act, so far as those parts remain up-to-date.
(5)The copies must be available for inspection—
(a)free of charge,
(b)at reasonable times, and
(c)at a convenient place.
(6)In this section “relevant local authority” means—
(a)a county council or county borough council;
(b)a National Park authority;
(c)a joint planning board.
(1)Where the Welsh Ministers are proposing to list or de-list a building, they must serve a notice on the persons mentioned in subsection (2) which—
(a)sets out the proposed amendment to the list maintained under section 76, and
(b)invites those persons to make written representations about the proposal.
(2)The persons are—
(a)every owner and occupier of the building,
(b)every planning authority in whose area the building is situated, and
(c)any other persons the Welsh Ministers consider appropriate as having special knowledge of, or special interest in, buildings of architectural or historic interest.
(3)A notice under subsection (1) must—
(a)specify the period within which representations may be made, and
(b)in the case of a proposal to list a building—
(i)include a statement of the effect of section 79 (interim protection), and
(ii)specify the date on which interim protection takes effect under that section.
(4)The period specified under subsection (3)(a) must be at least 28 days beginning with the day the notice is served.
(1)This section applies where the Welsh Ministers serve notice under section 78(1) of a proposal to list a building.
(2)From the beginning of the day specified under section 78(3)(b)(ii), this Act (except sections 118 and 137 to 142) and the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8) have effect in relation to the building as if it were a listed building.
(3)The protection conferred by virtue of subsection (2) is referred to in this Part as “interim protection”.
(4)The Welsh Ministers must—
(a)publish a list of the buildings subject to interim protection, and
(b)provide a copy of the notice served under section 78(1) in respect of such a building to any person who requests one.
(5)Interim protection ends in relation to a building—
(a)where the Welsh Ministers list the building, at the beginning of the day specified in the notice under section 77(1);
(b)where the Welsh Ministers decide not to list the building, at the beginning of the day specified in a notice served on—
(i)every owner and occupier of the building, and
(ii)every planning authority in whose area the building is situated.
(6)Schedule 7 makes provision about the effect of interim protection coming to an end under subsection (5)(b).
(7)This section does not apply to a building which is a scheduled monument.
(1)This section applies where interim protection ends in relation to a building because the Welsh Ministers serve notice under section 79(5)(b) that they have decided not to list the building.
(2)Any person who had an interest in the building when the interim protection took effect is entitled, on making a claim to the Welsh Ministers, to be paid compensation by them for any loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the interim protection.
(3)The loss or damage for which compensation is payable includes any amount payable by the claimant in respect of a breach of contract caused by the need to stop or cancel works to the building because of the interim protection.
(4)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning when the interim protection ends.
(5)Where the building was previously subject to temporary listing under section 83 which ended because the interim protection took effect—
(a)the reference in subsection (2) to the time when the interim protection took effect is to be treated as a reference to the time when the temporary listing took effect;
(b)the reference in that subsection to loss or damage directly attributable to the interim protection includes loss or damage directly attributable to the temporary listing;
(c)the reference in subsection (3) to the need to stop or cancel works because of the interim protection includes the need to do so because of the temporary listing.
(1)Where the Welsh Ministers list a building, the notice under section 77(1) must state that any owner or occupier of the building may make an application to the Welsh Ministers requesting a review of the decision.
(2)An application may be made only on the ground that the building is not of special architectural or historic interest.
(3)Where an owner or occupier makes an application for a review, the Welsh Ministers must appoint a person to—
(a)carry out the review, and
(b)make a decision on the review.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify descriptions of cases in which they, instead of a person appointed by them, must carry out and make a decision on a review.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must make any amendment to the list maintained under section 76 they consider appropriate to give effect to a decision on a review.
(6)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend subsection (2) to—
(a)add a ground of review;
(b)modify a ground of review;
(c)remove a ground of review.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must by regulations make provision about—
(a)the form and way in which an application under section 81 must be made;
(b)the information that must be provided to, or may be required by, the Welsh Ministers in connection with an application;
(c)the period within which an application must be made.
(2)A review under section 81 must be carried out in one or more of the following ways (as determined by the person carrying out the review)—
(a)by means of a local inquiry;
(b)by means of a hearing;
(c)on the basis of written representations.
(3)Where a review is carried out by a person appointed by the Welsh Ministers, the appointed person has the same powers and duties in relation to the review as the Welsh Ministers have under—
(a)any regulations made under section 175 (procedural requirements), and
(b)sections 180 and 181 (costs of Welsh Ministers and parties).
(4)Where a review is carried out by means of a local inquiry, section 177 (power to require evidence) applies to the inquiry as it applies to an inquiry held under Part 5.
(5)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make further provision in connection with reviews under section 81.
(6)Schedule 2 makes further provision about the functions of persons appointed by the Welsh Ministers to carry out reviews under section 81.
(1)This section applies if a planning authority considers that a building in its area which is not a listed building (and is not treated as one by virtue of section 79(2)) is—
(a)of special architectural or historic interest, and
(b)in danger of being demolished or of being altered in a way that would affect its character as a building of special architectural or historic interest.
(2)The authority may serve a temporary listing notice on every owner and occupier of the building.
(3)A temporary listing notice is a notice which—
(a)states that the planning authority—
(i)considers the building to be of special architectural or historic interest, and
(ii)has requested the Welsh Ministers to consider listing it, and
(b)explains the effect of subsection (4), section 85 and Schedule 7.
(4)As soon as a temporary listing notice has been served on every owner and occupier of the building to which it relates, this Act (except sections 118 and 137 to 142) and the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8) have effect in relation to the building as if it were a listed building.
(5)The protection conferred by virtue of subsection (4) is referred to in this Part as “temporary listing”.
(6)This section and section 84 do not apply to—
(a)a building which is a scheduled monument, or
(b)an exempt religious building.
(1)This section applies if a planning authority considers it urgent that temporary listing should take effect in relation to a building in its area.
(2)The authority may, instead of serving a temporary listing notice on each owner and occupier of the building—
(a)attach the notice conspicuously to the building, or
(b)if it is not reasonably practicable to attach the notice to the building, or the authority considers that doing so might damage the building, display the notice in a prominent place as near to the building as is reasonably practicable.
(3)Attaching or displaying a notice in accordance with subsection (2) is to be treated for the purposes of section 83(4) as serving the notice on every owner and occupier of the building.
(4)The notice must explain that by virtue of having been attached or displayed in accordance with subsection (2) the notice is treated as having been served for those purposes.
(1)Temporary listing of a building has effect until the end of the 6 months beginning with the day it takes effect under section 83(4), unless it ends under subsection (2) or (3).
(2)If the Welsh Ministers serve notice under section 78(1) of a proposal to list the building, temporary listing ends when interim protection takes effect in relation to the building (and the building continues to be treated as if it were a listed building for certain purposes by virtue of section 79(2)).
(3)If the Welsh Ministers notify the planning authority in writing that they do not intend to consult under section 78 on a proposal to list the building, temporary listing ends at the beginning of the day specified in the notification.
(4)Schedule 7 makes provision about the effect of temporary listing coming to an end—
(a)at the end of the 6-month period mentioned in subsection (1), or
(b)because the Welsh Ministers give notification under subsection (3) that they do not intend to consult on a proposal to list the building.
(5)If temporary listing ends in relation to a building because the Welsh Ministers notify the planning authority that they do not intend to consult on a proposal to list the building—
(a)the authority must immediately give notice of that decision to every owner and occupier of the building;
(b)the authority may not serve another temporary listing notice in respect of the building during the 12 months beginning with the day the Welsh Ministers give the notification.
(1)This section applies where temporary listing ends in relation to a building—
(a)at the end of the 6-month period mentioned in section 85(1), or
(b)because the Welsh Ministers give notification under section 85(3) that they do not intend to consult on a proposal to list the building.
(2)Any person who had an interest in the building when the temporary listing took effect is entitled, on making a claim to the planning authority in whose area the building is situated, to be paid compensation by the authority for any loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the temporary listing.
(3)The loss or damage for which compensation is payable includes any amount payable by the claimant in respect of a breach of contract caused by the need to stop or cancel works to the building because of the temporary listing.
(4)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning when the temporary listing ends.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may, on the application of any person, issue a certificate stating that they do not intend to list a building.
(2)During the 5 years beginning with the day the certificate is issued—
(a)the Welsh Ministers may not list the building or serve notice under section 78(1) of a proposal to list the building;
(b)a planning authority in whose area the building is situated may not serve a temporary listing notice in relation to the building.
(3)An applicant for a certificate must give notice of the application to every planning authority in whose area the building is situated at the same time as submitting the application to the Welsh Ministers.
(1)A person must not carry out works to which this section applies, or cause such works to be carried out, unless the works are authorised under section 89.
(2)This section applies to—
(a)works for the alteration or extension of a listed building in any way that would affect its character as a building of special architectural or historic interest;
(b)works for the demolition of a listed building.
(3)But this section does not apply to—
(a)works in relation to a building which is a scheduled monument (but see section 11);
(b)works in relation to an exempt religious building;
(c)works for the demolition of a building closed for regular public worship, or a part of such a building, in accordance with provision made under Part 6 of the Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011 (No. 3) by a pastoral church buildings scheme or a pastoral (church buildings disposal) scheme;
(d)works carried out by or on behalf of the Crown in the circumstances set out in paragraphs (a) to (d) of section 117(4) (emergency works).
(1)Works to which section 88 applies are authorised if—
(a)written consent to carry them out has been granted by the planning authority in whose area the building is situated or the Welsh Ministers, and
(b)the works are carried out in accordance with the terms of the consent (including any conditions attached to it).
(2)Where—
(a)works to which section 88 applies have been carried out without being authorised under subsection (1), and
(b)the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers grant written consent for the works,
the works are authorised from the grant of that consent.
(3)Consent under subsection (1) or (2) is referred to in this Act as listed building consent.
(1)An application for listed building consent must be made to the planning authority in whose area the listed building is situated, unless it is made to the Welsh Ministers in accordance with—
(a)regulations made under section 105 (applications by planning authorities or the Crown),
(b)section 106 (applications relating to urgent works on Crown land),
(c)section 305 or 306 of the Housing Act 1985 (c. 68) (applications by local housing authorities for consent to demolish buildings in connection with acquisition of land for clearance), or
(d)any other enactment.
(2)An application for listed building consent must contain—
(a)enough information to identify the listed building to which it relates, including a plan,
(b)any other plans and drawings that are necessary to describe the works to which it relates, and
(c)any other information required by the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers (as the case may be).
(3)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision about—
(a)the form and content of an application (which may include provision for using a form to be published or provided by the Welsh Ministers or another person);
(b)how an application must be made.
(4)The Welsh Ministers must by regulations require a person who makes an application of a description specified in the regulations to include with the application a statement about—
(a)how the works will affect the character of the listed building as a building of special architectural or historic interest, and
(b)either or both of the following (as specified in the regulations)—
(i)the design principles that have been applied to the works;
(ii)how issues relating to access to the building have been dealt with.
(5)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision about—
(a)the form and content of a statement required under subsection (4);
(b)other documents or materials that must be included with an application.
(6)A planning authority must not consider an application made to it for listed building consent if the application fails to comply with a requirement imposed by or under this section.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations require an applicant for listed building consent—
(a)to give notice of the application to every person (other than the applicant) who on a date specified in the regulations is an owner of any part of the listed building to which the application relates, and
(b)to include with the application a certificate issued by the applicant stating that any requirements of the regulations have been complied with.
(2)The regulations may make provision about—
(a)the form and content of a notice or certificate (which may include provision for using a form to be published or provided by the Welsh Ministers or another person);
(b)how notice must be given (which may include provision requiring it to be published).
(3)An application for listed building consent must not be considered if any requirements imposed under subsection (1) or (2) have not been complied with.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations provide that, where notice has been given of an application in accordance with requirements imposed under those subsections—
(a)the application must not be determined during a period specified in the regulations;
(b)the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers must, in determining the application, take account of representations made during that period by any person who is an owner of any part of the listed building.
(5)It is an offence for a person in purported compliance with a requirement imposed under subsection (1) or (2)—
(a)to issue a certificate containing a statement which the person knows to be false or misleading in a material respect, or
(b)to recklessly issue a certificate containing a statement which is false or misleading in a material respect.
(6)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (5) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(7)In this section “owner” means—
(a)an owner of the freehold estate, or
(b)a tenant under a lease granted or extended for a fixed term that has at least 7 years left to run.
(1)A planning authority must deal with an application for listed building consent made to the authority unless—
(a)it is required not to consider the application under section 90(6) or 91(3), or refuses to do so under section 93 (similar applications), or
(b)it is required to refer the application to the Welsh Ministers under section 94.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations—
(a)impose requirements relating to publicity for applications for listed building consent made to planning authorities or the Welsh Ministers;
(b)impose requirements for consultation or notification in relation to applications;
(c)provide that an application must not be determined during a period specified in the regulations;
(d)require planning authorities or the Welsh Ministers, in determining applications, to take account of responses from persons consulted or notified;
(e)make provision about the time within which a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers must deal with an application.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may direct a planning authority to notify persons specified in the direction of—
(a)an application made to the authority for listed building consent, and
(b)the decision taken by the authority on the application.
(4)A direction may relate to—
(a)a particular case, or
(b)cases of a description specified in the direction.
(1)A planning authority may refuse to consider an application for listed building consent if the first and second conditions are met.
(2)The first condition is that in the 2 years ending with the day the authority receives the application any of the following has occurred—
(a)the Welsh Ministers have refused a similar application for listed building consent referred to them under section 94,
(b)the Welsh Ministers have dismissed—
(i)an appeal under section 100(2) against the refusal of a similar application for listed building consent, or
(ii)an appeal under section 100(3) relating to a similar application, or
(c)the planning authority has refused two or more similar applications for listed building consent and in each case—
(i)there has been no appeal to the Welsh Ministers, or
(ii)any appeal to the Welsh Ministers has been withdrawn.
(3)The second condition is that the planning authority considers that there has been no significant change in any relevant considerations since—
(a)the Welsh Ministers refused the similar application, in a case falling within subsection (2)(a),
(b)the Welsh Ministers dismissed the appeal, in a case falling within subsection (2)(b), or
(c)the planning authority most recently refused a similar application, in a case falling within subsection (2)(c).
(4)For the purposes of this section an application is similar to another application if (and only if) the planning authority considers that the listed building and works to which the applications relate are the same or substantially the same.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may direct a planning authority to refer an application for listed building consent to them for determination instead of dealing with the application itself.
(2)A direction may relate to a particular application, or to applications in relation to buildings specified in the direction.
(3)A planning authority must refer an application to which a direction under this section applies to the Welsh Ministers.
(4)A planning authority must refer an application for listed building consent to the Welsh Ministers for determination, without being directed to do so, if the consent is sought in consequence of proposals included in an application for an order under section 1 or 3 of the Transport and Works Act 1992 (c. 42) (orders relating to construction or operation of railways, tramways, inland waterways etc.).
(5)Chapter 2 of Part 5 makes provision about the procedure for the consideration of applications referred to the Welsh Ministers under this section.
(6)The decision of the Welsh Ministers on an application is final.
(1)A planning authority to which an application for listed building consent is made may not grant consent unless—
(a)it has notified the Welsh Ministers of the application, giving details of the works for which consent is sought, and
(b)the first or second condition is met.
(2)The first condition is that the 28 days beginning with the day the Welsh Ministers were notified have ended without the Welsh Ministers either—
(a)directing the authority to refer the application to them under section 94, or
(b)notifying the authority that they need more time to consider whether to give a direction under that section.
(3)The second condition is that the Welsh Ministers have notified the authority that they do not intend to direct it to refer the application to them.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations provide that subsection (1) does not apply to applications for listed building consent of a description specified in the regulations.
(5)The Welsh Ministers may direct a planning authority—
(a)that subsection (1) is not to apply to an application to the authority for listed building consent, or
(b)that subsection (1) is to apply to an application to the authority despite any provision made by regulations under subsection (4) or by a direction under paragraph (a).
(6)A direction may relate to—
(a)a particular application for listed building consent, or
(b)applications of a description specified in the direction,
and has effect in relation to any application that the authority has not determined.
(7)The Welsh Ministers may specify a description of applications under subsection (4) or (6)(b) by reference to the opinion of any person, the availability of specialist advice in relation to the applications, or any other circumstance.
(1)On determining an application for listed building consent, a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers may grant or refuse consent.
(2)In considering whether to grant listed building consent, a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers must have special regard to the desirability of preserving—
(a)the listed building to which the application relates,
(b)the setting of the building, and
(c)any features of special architectural or historic interest the building possesses.
(3)Listed building consent has effect for the benefit of the listed building and the land on which it is situated, and of all persons for the time being interested in the building and land; but this is subject to the terms of the consent.
(1)Listed building consent may be granted subject to conditions.
(2)A condition may, for example, require—
(a)particular features of the listed building to be preserved, either as part of it or after severance from it;
(b)any damage caused to the building by the works to be made good after the works are completed;
(c)the building or any part of it to be reconstructed after any works are carried out, using original materials so far as practicable and making any alterations to the interior of the building specified in the conditions.
(3)Consent may also be granted subject to a condition requiring specified details of the works (whether or not set out in an application for consent) to be approved later.
(4)A condition imposed under subsection (3) must—
(a)in the case of consent granted by a planning authority, require the approval of that authority;
(b)in the case of consent granted by the Welsh Ministers, specify whether the approval required is that of the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers.
(5)Consent for the demolition of a listed building must be granted subject to a condition that the works must not start until—
(a)notice of the proposal to demolish the building has been given to the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales, and
(b)after the giving of that notice, the Royal Commission—
(i)has been given reasonable access to the building for at least 1 month for the purpose of recording it, or
(ii)has stated in writing that it has completed its recording of the building or does not wish to record it.
(6)If consent for the demolition of a listed building is granted without the condition required by subsection (5), it is to be treated as having been granted subject to that condition.
(7)Consent for the demolition of a listed building may also be granted subject to a condition that the works must not start until—
(a)a contract for works to redevelop the site has been made, and
(b)planning permission has been granted for those redevelopment works.
(8)Subsections (5) and (6) do not prevent the imposition of other conditions for the purpose of enabling a listed building to be recorded.
(9)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations replace the references in subsection (5) to the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales with references to another body.
(1)Listed building consent must be granted subject to the condition that the works to which it relates must start before the end of a period which is specified in the condition and begins with the day the consent is granted.
(2)If consent is granted without the condition required by subsection (1), it is to be treated as having been granted subject to the condition that the works to which it relates must start within 5 years beginning with the day it was granted.
(3)This section does not apply to—
(a)consent under section 89(2) (consent for works already carried out);
(b)consent granted by a listed building partnership agreement (see section 113).
(1)Where listed building consent has been granted subject to conditions, any person interested in the listed building may apply for the variation or removal of the conditions.
(2)The application must indicate what variation or removal of conditions is applied for.
(3)Sections 90 to 95 (except section 90(4) and (5)(a)) apply to an application under this section as they apply to an application for listed building consent.
(4)On an application under this section the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers may, in addition to varying or removing the conditions of the consent, impose new conditions that are consequential on the variation or removal.
(5)This section does not apply to consent granted by a listed building partnership agreement.
(1)This section applies where an application has been made to a planning authority for—
(a)listed building consent,
(b)the variation or removal of conditions of listed building consent, or
(c)approval of details of works under a condition of listed building consent.
(2)The applicant may appeal to the Welsh Ministers if the planning authority—
(a)refuses the application, or
(b)grants the application subject to conditions or, in the case of an application for the variation or removal of conditions, grants it and imposes new conditions.
(3)The applicant may also appeal to the Welsh Ministers if the planning authority has done none of the following within the determination period—
(a)given notice to the applicant of its decision on the application, or
(b)in the case of an application for listed building consent or for the variation or removal of conditions, given notice to the applicant that it has—
(i)exercised its power under section 93 to refuse to consider the application, or
(ii)referred the application to the Welsh Ministers under section 94.
(4)In subsection (3) “the determination period” means—
(a)the period specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers, or
(b)a longer period agreed in writing between the applicant and the planning authority.
(1)An appeal under section 100 must be made by serving a notice of appeal on the Welsh Ministers.
(2)The grounds of appeal stated in the notice may include (alone or with other grounds)—
(a)a claim that the building to which the appeal relates is not of special architectural or historic interest and ought to be de-listed, or
(b)in the case of a building subject to interim protection or temporary listing, a claim that the building should not be listed.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision about—
(a)the form of a notice of appeal (which may include provision for using a form to be published or provided by the Welsh Ministers or another person);
(b)information that must be included with a notice of appeal;
(c)the way in which, and period within which, a notice of appeal must be served (which may include provision enabling the Welsh Ministers to extend the period).
(4)Section 91 (notice to owners of building) applies in relation to appeals under section 100 relating to applications for listed building consent or for the variation or removal of conditions, but as if references to an application and an applicant were references to an appeal and an appellant.
(5)The period specified by regulations under subsection (3)(c) must be at least 28 days beginning with the day after—
(a)in the case of an appeal under subsection (2) of section 100, the day the applicant receives notice of the decision;
(b)in the case of an appeal under subsection (3) of that section, the end of the determination period (which has the same meaning as in that subsection).
(1)Once notice of an appeal under section 100 has been served, the application to which the appeal relates may not be varied except in circumstances specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(2)Where an application is varied under this section, the Welsh Ministers may direct that further consultation must be carried out in relation to the application.
(1)This section applies if a person who has made an application for listed building consent appeals under section 100(3) (failure to give notice of decision).
(2)The Welsh Ministers must not determine the appeal before the end of the period which is specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers and begins with the day the notice of appeal is served.
(3)The planning authority may give notice of its decision on the application to which the appeal relates at any time before the end of that period.
(4)If the authority gives notice in accordance with subsection (3) that its decision is to refuse the application—
(a)the appeal must be treated as an appeal under section 100(2) against the refusal, and
(b)the Welsh Ministers must give the appellant the opportunity to revise the grounds of appeal.
(5)If the authority gives notice in accordance with subsection (3) that its decision is to grant the application subject to conditions, the Welsh Ministers must give the appellant the opportunity—
(a)to proceed with the appeal as an appeal under section 100(2) against the grant of the application subject to conditions, and
(b)to revise the grounds of the appeal.
(1)On an appeal under section 100 the Welsh Ministers may—
(a)allow or dismiss the appeal, or
(b)reverse or vary any part of the planning authority’s decision on the application to which the appeal relates (whether or not the appeal relates to that part),
and may deal with the application as if it had been made to them.
(2)Where the appeal was made under section 100(3) (failure to give notice of decision) and the planning authority has not given notice under section 103(3), it is to be assumed for the purposes of subsection (1) that the authority decided to refuse the application.
(3)On an appeal under section 100 the Welsh Ministers may also exercise their power under section 76 to de-list the building to which the appeal relates.
(4)Chapter 2 of Part 5 makes provision about the procedure for the consideration of appeals (including provision for them to be determined by persons appointed by the Welsh Ministers).
(5)The decision of the Welsh Ministers on an appeal is final.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations provide that any provision made by or under this Act is not to apply, or is to apply with modifications, to an application mentioned in subsection (2) that is made—
(a)by a planning authority, or
(b)by or on behalf of the Crown.
(2)The applications referred to in subsection (1) are applications for—
(a)listed building consent,
(b)the variation or removal of conditions of listed building consent, or
(c)approval of details of works under a condition of listed building consent.
(3)The regulations may, in particular, provide for an application to be made to the Welsh Ministers.
(1)The appropriate Crown authority may make an application for listed building consent to the Welsh Ministers (instead of to a planning authority) if—
(a)the listed building to which the application relates is on Crown land, and
(b)the appropriate Crown authority certifies—
(i)that the works for which consent is sought are of national importance, and
(ii)that it is necessary that the works are carried out as a matter of urgency.
(2)Before making the application, the appropriate Crown authority must publish in one or more newspapers circulating in the locality of the listed building a notice—
(a)describing the proposed works, and
(b)stating that it proposes to make the application to the Welsh Ministers under this section.
(3)Where the appropriate Crown authority makes an application under this section—
(a)it must give the Welsh Ministers a statement of its grounds for making the application;
(b)the Welsh Ministers may require it to give them any further information they consider necessary to enable them to determine the application.
(4)As soon as practicable after receiving a document or other material by virtue of subsection (3), the Welsh Ministers must make a copy of the document or other material available for inspection by the public in the locality of the proposed works.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must, in accordance with any requirements imposed by regulations, publish notice of the application and of the fact that documents and other material are available for inspection.
(6)The Welsh Ministers must consult the following persons about the application—
(a)the planning authority in whose area the listed building is situated, and
(b)any other person that may be specified in regulations.
(7)Chapter 2 of Part 5 makes provision about the procedure for the consideration of applications made to the Welsh Ministers under this section.
(8)Subsection (4) does not apply to the extent that a document or other material is subject to a direction under section 178 (restriction of access to evidence on national security grounds).
(9)The decision of the Welsh Ministers on an application is final.
(10)In this section references to regulations are to regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(1)Where listed building consent has been granted on an application or appeal under this Part, the planning authority in whose area the listed building is situated or the Welsh Ministers may by order modify or revoke the consent to any extent.
(2)An order modifying or revoking listed building consent for any works may be made at any time before the works are completed, but does not affect consent for works carried out before the order takes effect.
(3)In Schedule 8—
(a)Part 1 makes provision about the procedures that must be followed before an order made by a planning authority under this section takes effect (either with or without confirmation by the Welsh Ministers);
(b)Part 2 makes provision about the procedure that must be followed before the Welsh Ministers make an order under this section.
(1)This section applies where listed building consent is modified or revoked by an order under section 107 that is—
(a)made by a planning authority and confirmed by the Welsh Ministers, or
(b)made by the Welsh Ministers.
(2)Any person interested in the listed building to which the consent relates is entitled, on making a claim to the planning authority, to be paid compensation by the authority for—
(a)any expenditure incurred by the person in carrying out works that become abortive because of the modification or revocation of the consent;
(b)any other loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the modification or revocation.
(3)For the purposes of this section expenditure incurred in the preparation of plans for the purposes of any works, or on other similar matters preparatory to any works, is to be treated as expenditure incurred in carrying out the works.
(4)Subject to that, no compensation is payable under this section in respect of—
(a)works carried out before the grant of the listed building consent that is modified or revoked, or
(b)other loss or damage (other than loss or damage consisting of depreciation of the value of an interest in land) arising out of anything done or omitted to be done before the consent was granted.
(5)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning with the day the modification or revocation of the consent takes effect.
(6)In subsection (2) “the planning authority” means—
(a)the planning authority that made the order under section 107, or
(b)if the order was made by the Welsh Ministers, the planning authority in whose area the listed building to which the order relates is situated.
(1)This section applies where—
(a)on an application for listed building consent, consent is refused or is granted subject to conditions, or
(b)an order under section 107 modifies or revokes listed building consent.
(2)If an owner of the listed building to which the application or order relates claims—
(a)that the first set of conditions is met in relation to the building, and
(b)that the first and second sets of conditions are met in relation to any associated land,
the owner may serve a purchase notice on the planning authority in whose area the listed building is situated.
(3)A purchase notice is a notice requiring the planning authority to purchase the owner’s interest in the listed building and associated land.
(4)The first set of conditions is—
(a)that the listed building and associated land in respect of which the notice is served are unusable in their existing state,
(b)in a case where listed building consent has been granted subject to conditions or has been modified by the imposition of conditions, that the building and land cannot be made usable by carrying out the works to which the consent relates in accordance with the conditions, and
(c)in any case, that the building and land cannot be made usable by carrying out any other works for which listed building consent has been granted or for which the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers have undertaken to grant listed building consent.
(5)The second set of conditions is—
(a)that the use of the associated land is substantially inseparable from the use of the listed building, and
(b)that the associated land ought to be treated, together with the building, as a single holding.
(6)In this section and Schedule 9—
“associated land” (“tir cysylltiedig”), in relation to a listed building, means land which—
includes, adjoins or is adjacent to the building, and
is owned with the building;
“usable” (“defnyddiadwy”), in relation to a listed building or associated land, means capable of reasonably beneficial use.
(7)In determining whether a listed building and associated land are usable in their existing state, a prospective use of the building or land must be ignored if it would involve—
(a)carrying out works requiring listed building consent which has not been granted and which neither a planning authority nor the Welsh Ministers have undertaken to grant, or
(b)carrying out development for which planning permission has not been granted and for which neither a planning authority nor the Welsh Ministers have undertaken to grant permission.
(8)A listed building is not unusable in its existing state if—
(a)the existing state of the building was caused by a breach of section 88 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which listed building consent has been granted, and
(b)the building could be made usable by taking steps that are or could be required by an enforcement notice under section 123.
(1)The owner of a private interest in Crown land may not serve a purchase notice in respect of that interest unless—
(a)the owner has offered to dispose of the interest to the appropriate Crown authority for a price that is equal to (and if not agreed, is to be determined in the same way as) the compensation that would be payable for the interest if it were acquired in pursuance of a purchase notice, and
(b)the appropriate Crown authority has refused the offer.
(2)Only the appropriate Crown authority may serve a purchase notice in respect of a Crown interest or Duchy interest in land which—
(a)forms part of the Crown Estate,
(b)belongs to His Majesty in right of His private estates,
(c)belongs to His Majesty in right of the Duchy of Lancaster, or
(d)belongs to the Duchy of Cornwall.
(3)A purchase notice may not be served in respect of a Crown interest or Duchy interest in any other land.
(1)A purchase notice must be served within 12 months beginning with—
(a)in the case of a notice relating to a decision to refuse listed building consent or grant it subject to conditions, the day the decision is made, or
(b)in the case of a notice relating to an order under section 107 modifying or revoking listed building consent, the day the order takes effect.
(2)In a case where the Welsh Ministers determine an appeal against a decision of a planning authority to refuse listed building consent or grant it subject to conditions, the reference in subsection (1)(a) to the day the decision is made is to be read as a reference to the day the Welsh Ministers determine the appeal.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may at any time extend the period for serving a purchase notice in a particular case, if they are satisfied that there are good reasons for doing so.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision about how a purchase notice must be served.
(5)Where a repairs notice has been served on an owner of a listed building under section 138, the owner is not entitled to serve a purchase notice in respect of the building—
(a)before the end of 3 months beginning with the day the repairs notice is served, or
(b)if during that period the compulsory acquisition of the building is started under section 137, unless the compulsory acquisition is discontinued.
(6)An owner of a listed building who has served a purchase notice may not amend the notice; but that does not prevent the owner serving a further purchase notice relating to the same decision or order.
(7)If an owner serves a further purchase notice relating to the same decision or order, the earlier notice is to be treated as withdrawn unless the later notice states that the owner does not intend to withdraw it.
(8)For the purposes of subsection (5)—
(a)a compulsory acquisition is started—
(i)by a planning authority when it serves the notice required by section 12 of the Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67);
(ii)by the Welsh Ministers when they serve the notice required by paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 1 to that Act;
(b)a compulsory acquisition is discontinued—
(i)in the case of an acquisition by a planning authority, when the compulsory purchase order is withdrawn or the Welsh Ministers decide not to confirm it;
(ii)in the case of an acquisition by the Welsh Ministers, when they decide not to make the compulsory purchase order.
Schedule 9 makes provision about the action to be taken by planning authorities and the Welsh Ministers following the service of a purchase notice.
(1)A planning authority may make an agreement under this section with any owner of a listed building, or part of a listed building, situated in its area.
(2)Any of the following persons may also be a party to the agreement (in addition to the owner and the authority)—
(a)the Welsh Ministers;
(b)any occupier of the building;
(c)any other person who has an interest in the building;
(d)any person involved in the management of the building;
(e)any other person the planning authority considers appropriate as having special knowledge of, or special interest in, the building or in buildings of architectural or historic interest more generally.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may make an agreement under this section with any owner of a listed building or part of a listed building.
(4)Any of the following persons may also be a party to the agreement (in addition to the owner and the Welsh Ministers)—
(a)any planning authority in whose area the building or part is situated;
(b)any occupier of the building;
(c)any other person who has an interest in the building;
(d)any person involved in the management of the building;
(e)any other person the Welsh Ministers consider appropriate as having special knowledge of, or special interest in, the building or in buildings of architectural or historic interest more generally.
(5)An agreement under this section is referred to in this Act as a “listed building partnership agreement”.
(6)A listed building partnership agreement may grant listed building consent under section 89(1) for specified works for the alteration or extension of the listed building to which the agreement relates.
(7)Where a listed building partnership agreement grants listed building consent subject to conditions, the agreement must specify those conditions.
(8)A listed building partnership agreement may also—
(a)specify works that would or would not, in the view of the parties, affect the character of the listed building as a building of special architectural or historic interest;
(b)make provision about the maintenance and preservation of the building;
(c)make provision about the carrying out of specified works, or the doing of any specified thing, in relation to the building;
(d)provide for public access to the building and the provision of associated facilities, information or services to the public;
(e)restrict access to, or use of, the building;
(f)prohibit the doing of any specified thing in relation to the building;
(g)provide for a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers to make payments of specified amounts and on specified terms—
(i)for or towards the costs of any works provided for under the agreement, or
(ii)in consideration of any restriction, prohibition or obligation accepted by any other party to the agreement.
(9)A listed building partnership agreement may relate to more than one listed building or part of a listed building, but only if the parties to the agreement include in relation to each building or part—
(a)an owner of that building or part, and
(b)the planning authority in whose area that building or part is situated or the Welsh Ministers.
(10)In this section—
“owner” (“perchennog”), in relation to a listed building or part of a listed building, means—
an owner of the freehold estate in the building or part, or
a tenant under a lease of the building or part granted or extended for a fixed term that has at least 7 years left to run;
“specified” (“penodedig”) means specified or described in a listed building partnership agreement.
(1)A listed building partnership agreement must be in writing.
(2)A listed building partnership agreement must—
(a)contain enough information to identify the listed building to which it relates, including a plan;
(b)contain any other plans and drawings that are necessary to describe any works to which it relates;
(c)specify the date on which it takes effect and its duration;
(d)make provision for the parties to review the terms of the agreement at intervals specified in it;
(e)make provision for its variation (but this is subject to regulations under subsection (5));
(f)make provision for its termination (but this is subject to section 115).
(3)A listed building partnership agreement may contain incidental and consequential provision.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify other terms that must be included in a listed building partnership agreement.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must by regulations make provision about—
(a)the consultation that must take place before a listed building partnership agreement is made or varied;
(b)the publicity that must be given to a listed building partnership agreement before or after it is made or varied.
(6)In considering whether to make a listed building partnership agreement that grants listed building consent, or vary an agreement so that it grants consent, a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers must have special regard to the desirability of preserving—
(a)the listed building to which the agreement relates,
(b)the setting of the building, and
(c)any features of special architectural or historic interest the building possesses.
(7)A listed building partnership agreement may not impose any obligation or liability, or confer any right, on a person who is not a party to the agreement; and listed building consent granted by such an agreement has effect only for the benefit of the parties to it.
(8)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations—
(a)disapply, or apply or reproduce with or without modifications, any provision of sections 90 to 104 (granting listed building consent) or Chapter 4 (enforcement) for the purposes of listed building partnership agreements, and
(b)provide for any other provision of this Act to apply with modifications that are consequential on provision made under paragraph (a).
(1)A planning authority may by order terminate a listed building partnership agreement to which it is a party or any provision of such an agreement.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may by order terminate a listed building partnership agreement (whether or not they are a party to it) or any provision of such an agreement.
(3)An order under this section may contain supplementary, incidental, transitory, transitional or saving provision.
(4)An order under this section terminating a provision which grants listed building consent for any works may be made at any time before the works are completed, but does not affect listed building consent for works carried out before the order takes effect.
(5)In Schedule 10—
(a)Part 1 makes provision about the procedure that must be followed before an order made by a planning authority under this section takes effect;
(b)Part 2 makes provision about the procedure that must be followed before the Welsh Ministers make an order under this section.
(6)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend Schedule 10, and the regulations may make consequential amendments to any other provision of this Act.
(1)This section applies where a listed building partnership agreement, or any provision of such an agreement, is terminated by an order under section 115.
(2)Any person is entitled, on making a claim to the planning authority, to be paid compensation by the authority for—
(a)any expenditure incurred by the person in carrying out works that become abortive because of the termination of the agreement or provision;
(b)any other loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the termination.
(3)For the purposes of this section expenditure incurred in the preparation of plans for the purposes of any works, or on other similar matters preparatory to any works, is to be treated as expenditure incurred in carrying out the works.
(4)Subject to that, no compensation is payable under this section in respect of—
(a)works carried out before the listed building partnership agreement, or the relevant provision of the agreement, took effect, or
(b)other loss or damage (other than loss or damage consisting of depreciation of the value of an interest in land) arising out of anything done or omitted to be done before the agreement or provision took effect.
(5)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning with the day the termination of the agreement or provision takes effect.
(6)In subsection (2) “the planning authority” means—
(a)the planning authority that made the order under section 115, or
(b)if the order was made by the Welsh Ministers, the planning authority in whose area the listed building, or the part of a listed building, to which the order relates is situated.
(7)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend this section, and the regulations may make consequential amendments to any other provision of this Act.
(1)A person commits an offence if the person carries out, or causes to be carried out, works in relation to a listed building in breach of section 88 (requirement for works to be authorised).
(2)A person also commits an offence if the person—
(a)carries out, or causes to be carried out, works in relation to a listed building, and
(b)fails to comply with a condition subject to which listed building consent has been granted for the works.
(3)Subsection (2) does not limit what may be an offence under subsection (1).
(4)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section, it is a defence for the person to prove that—
(a)works were urgently necessary in the interests of safety or health or for the preservation of the building,
(b)it was not practicable to secure safety or health or the preservation of the building by carrying out works of repair or works to provide temporary support or shelter,
(c)the works carried out were limited to the minimum measures immediately necessary, and
(d)notice in writing justifying in detail the carrying out of the works was given to the planning authority in whose area the building is or was situated as soon as reasonably practicable.
(5)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section in relation to a building on which interim protection is conferred—
(a)it is a defence for the person to prove that the person did not know, and could not reasonably have been expected to know, that the interim protection had been conferred, and
(b)where the defence is raised by a person on whom a notice should have been served under section 78(1), it is for the prosecution to prove that the notice was served on the person.
(6)A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable—
(a)on summary conviction, to a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding the applicable limit under section 224(1A)(b) of the Sentencing Code, or both;
(b)on conviction on indictment, to a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years, or both.
(7)In determining the amount of any fine to be imposed on a person convicted of an offence under this section, the court must in particular have regard to any financial benefit which has accrued or appears likely to accrue to the person in consequence of the offence.
(1)A person commits an offence if, with the intention of causing damage to a listed building, the person does anything or permits anything to be done—
(a)which causes or is likely to result in damage to the building, and
(b)which the person would be entitled to do or permit were it not for this subsection.
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply to—
(a)works for which listed building consent has been granted;
(b)anything done in relation to a scheduled monument (but see section 58);
(c)works in relation to an exempt religious building;
(d)anything authorised by planning permission granted or treated as having been granted on an application under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8);
(e)anything for which development consent has been granted under the Planning Act 2008 (c. 29).
(3)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (1) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(4)If a person convicted of an offence under subsection (1) fails to take any reasonable steps that are necessary to prevent damage or further damage resulting from the offence, the person is guilty of a further offence.
(5)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (4) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding one tenth of level 3 on the standard scale for each day on which the failure continues.
(1)A planning authority may issue a temporary stop notice if it considers—
(a)that works have been or are being carried out in relation to a listed building in its area which involve a breach of section 88 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which listed building consent has been granted, and
(b)that the works (or any of them) ought to be stopped immediately, having regard to their effect on the character of the building as one of special architectural or historic interest.
(2)A temporary stop notice must—
(a)specify the works to which it relates,
(b)prohibit the carrying out of the works (or any of them specified in the notice),
(c)set out the authority’s reasons for issuing the notice, and
(d)state the effect of section 121 (offence of breaching temporary stop notice).
(3)The planning authority must display a copy of the temporary stop notice on the listed building to which it relates; and the copy must specify the date on which it is first displayed.
(4)But if—
(a)it is not reasonably practicable to display a copy of the notice on the building, or
(b)the authority considers that displaying a copy of the notice on the building might damage it,
the authority may instead display a copy in a prominent place as near to the building as is reasonably practicable.
(5)The authority may serve a copy of the notice on any person the authority considers—
(a)to be carrying out the works that the notice prohibits or causing or permitting them to be carried out,
(b)to be an occupier of the listed building to which the notice relates, or
(c)to have an interest in the building.
(6)A temporary stop notice may not prohibit the carrying out of works of a description, or in circumstances, specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(1)A temporary stop notice takes effect when a copy of it is first displayed in accordance with section 119.
(2)A temporary stop notice ceases to have effect—
(a)at the end of 28 days beginning with the day the copy of it is first displayed in accordance with section 119, or
(b)if it specifies a shorter period beginning with that day, at the end of that period.
(3)But if the planning authority withdraws the notice before the end of the period for which it would otherwise have effect, the notice ceases to have effect when it is withdrawn.
(4)A planning authority may not issue a second or subsequent temporary stop notice in relation to the same works unless the authority has, since issuing the previous notice, taken other enforcement action in relation to the breach referred to in section 119(1)(a).
(5)In subsection (4) the reference to taking other enforcement action is a reference to—
(a)issuing an enforcement notice under section 123, or
(b)obtaining an injunction under section 135.
(1)A person commits an offence if, at any time when a temporary stop notice has effect, the person carries out works prohibited by the notice or causes or permits such works to be carried out.
(2)A person may be charged with an offence under this section by reference to a day or a longer period, and may be convicted of more than one offence in relation to the same temporary stop notice by reference to different periods.
(3)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section, it is a defence for the person to prove that the person did not know, and could not reasonably have been expected to know, of the existence of the temporary stop notice.
(4)In proceedings for an offence under this section, it is a defence to prove that—
(a)works to the listed building were urgently necessary in the interests of safety or health or for the preservation of the building,
(b)it was not practicable to secure safety or health or the preservation of the building by carrying out works of repair or works to provide temporary support or shelter,
(c)the works carried out were limited to the minimum measures immediately necessary, and
(d)notice in writing justifying in detail the carrying out of the works was given to the planning authority in whose area the building is or was situated as soon as reasonably practicable.
(5)A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on summary conviction, or on conviction on indictment, to a fine.
(6)In determining the amount of the fine, the court must in particular have regard to any financial benefit which has accrued or appears likely to accrue to the person in consequence of the offence.
(1)This section applies where—
(a)the works specified in a temporary stop notice do not, at the time the notice takes effect, involve a breach of section 88 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which listed building consent has been granted, or
(b)a planning authority withdraws a temporary stop notice after it has taken effect.
(2)This section does not apply by virtue of subsection (1)(b) where—
(a)listed building consent is granted for the works specified in the temporary stop notice after the notice has taken effect, and
(b)the planning authority withdraws the notice after the grant of that consent.
(3)Any person who has an interest in the listed building to which the notice relates at the time the notice takes effect is entitled, on making a claim to the planning authority, to be paid compensation by the authority for any loss or damage suffered by the person that is directly attributable to the effect of the notice.
(4)The loss or damage for which compensation is payable includes any amount payable by the claimant in respect of a breach of contract caused by taking action necessary to comply with the notice.
(5)No compensation is payable under this section for loss or damage that the claimant could have avoided by—
(a)providing information that the claimant was required to provide by a notice served by the planning authority under section 197 of this Act or section 16 of the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976 (c. 57), or
(b)co-operating with the planning authority in any other way when responding to such a notice.
(6)A claim for compensation under this section must be made in writing within 6 months beginning—
(a)in a case falling within subsection (1)(a) but not within subsection (1)(b), with the day the temporary stop notice takes effect;
(b)in a case falling within subsection (1)(b), with the day the notice is withdrawn.
(1)A planning authority may issue an enforcement notice if it considers—
(a)that works which involve a breach of section 88 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which listed building consent has been granted have been or are being carried out in relation to a listed building in its area, and
(b)that it is appropriate to issue the notice, having regard to the effect of the works on the character of the building as a building of special architectural or historic interest.
(2)An enforcement notice must—
(a)specify the alleged breach, and
(b)require steps specified in the notice to be taken for one or more of the purposes set out in subsection (3).
(3)The purposes are—
(a)restoring the listed building to its condition before the breach took place,
(b)if the planning authority considers that restoration would not be reasonably practicable or would be undesirable, carrying out further works to alleviate the effect of the breach, or
(c)putting the building in the condition it would have been in if the terms of any listed building consent for the works to which the notice relates (including any conditions attached to the consent) had been complied with.
(4)Where an enforcement notice imposes a requirement under subsection (3)(b), listed building consent is to be treated as having been granted for any works carried out in compliance with the requirement.
(1)An enforcement notice must specify—
(a)the date on which it is to take effect, and
(b)the period within which the steps specified in it must be taken.
(2)The notice takes effect at the beginning of the day specified under subsection (1)(a); but where an appeal is made against the notice under section 127, this is subject to sections 127(4)(a) and 184(5).
(3)An enforcement notice may specify different periods for taking different steps.
(4)Where a planning authority issues an enforcement notice, it must serve a copy of the notice on—
(a)every owner and occupier of the listed building to which the notice relates, and
(b)any other person who has an interest in the building which the authority considers to be materially affected by the notice.
(5)Each copy of the notice must be served—
(a)before the end of 28 days after the day the notice is issued, and
(b)at least 28 days before the date specified in the notice as the date on which it is to take effect.
(1)Where a planning authority has issued an enforcement notice, it may—
(a)withdraw the notice;
(b)waive or relax any requirement of the notice, and in particular extend the period within which the notice requires any step to be taken.
(2)The authority may exercise the powers in subsection (1) whether or not the notice has taken effect.
(3)The withdrawal of an enforcement notice does not prevent the planning authority from issuing another enforcement notice.
(4)Subsection (5) applies where the planning authority had served copies of the enforcement notice under section 124(4) before exercising the powers in subsection (1).
(5)Immediately after exercising any of those powers, the authority must give notice that it has done so to every person who was served with a copy of the enforcement notice (or who would be served with a copy of the notice if it were reissued).
(1)This section applies if, after an enforcement notice has been issued, listed building consent is granted under section 89(2)—
(a)authorising any works to which the notice relates that have been carried out in breach of section 88, or
(b)authorising works which involve a breach of a condition subject to which a previous consent was granted.
(2)The notice ceases to have effect (or does not take effect) so far as it—
(a)requires steps to be taken that are inconsistent with the authorisation of the works, or
(b)requires steps to be taken for complying with the condition.
(3)The fact that an enforcement notice has wholly or partly ceased to have effect by virtue of this section does not affect the liability of any person for an offence in respect of a previous failure to comply with the notice (see section 133).
(1)The following persons may appeal to the Welsh Ministers against an enforcement notice (whether or not a copy of the notice has been served on them)—
(a)any person who has an interest in the listed building to which the notice relates;
(b)any person who by virtue of a licence—
(i)occupies the building on the day the notice is issued, and
(ii)continues to occupy it when the appeal is made.
(2)An appeal may be made on one or more of the following grounds—
(a)that the building is not of special architectural or historic interest;
(b)that the matters alleged to constitute a breach of section 88 or of a condition of listed building consent have not occurred;
(c)that those matters (if they occurred) do not constitute such a breach;
(d)that the following conditions are met—
(i)works to the building were urgently necessary in the interests of safety or health or for the preservation of the building,
(ii)it was not practicable to secure safety or health or the preservation of the building by carrying out works of repair or works to provide temporary support or shelter, and
(iii)the works carried out were limited to the minimum measures immediately necessary;
(e)that listed building consent ought to be granted for the works to which the notice relates, or that any relevant condition of listed building consent which has been granted for the works ought to be removed or replaced with different conditions;
(f)that a copy of the notice was not served on a person as required by section 124;
(g)that steps which the notice requires under section 123(3)(a) would not serve the purpose of restoring the character of the building;
(h)that steps which the notice requires for any of the purposes set out in section 123(3) exceed what is necessary for the purpose in question;
(i)that the period within which the notice requires any step to be taken is unreasonably short.
(3)An appeal must be made by—
(a)serving a notice of appeal on the Welsh Ministers before the date specified in the enforcement notice as the date on which it is to take effect,
(b)sending a notice of appeal to the Welsh Ministers in a properly addressed and pre-paid letter posted to them at a time when, in the ordinary course of post, it would be delivered to them before that date, or
(c)sending a notice of appeal to the Welsh Ministers using electronic communications at a time when, in the ordinary course of transmission, it would be delivered to them before that date.
(4)Where an appeal is made—
(a)the enforcement notice has no effect until the appeal is finally determined or withdrawn; but this is subject to any order under section 184(5);
(b)neither the appellant nor any other person is entitled, in any other proceedings started after the making of the appeal, to claim that the enforcement notice was not served on the appellant in accordance with section 124.
(5)An appellant must submit to the Welsh Ministers a statement in writing containing information required by regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(6)The appellant must submit the statement either—
(a)with the notice of appeal, or
(b)within the period specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(7)Where an appeal is made on more than one ground, if the appellant fails to give information required under subsection (5) in relation to a ground within the period specified under subsection (6)(b), the Welsh Ministers may determine the appeal without considering that ground.
(8)Chapter 2 of Part 5 makes provision about the procedure for the consideration of appeals under this section (including provision for them to be determined by persons appointed by the Welsh Ministers).
(1)On an appeal under section 127, the Welsh Ministers may—
(a)correct any defect, error or misdescription in the enforcement notice to which the appeal relates, or
(b)vary the terms of the notice,
if they are satisfied that the correction or variation will not cause injustice to the appellant or the planning authority.
(2)Where the Welsh Ministers determine an appeal—
(a)if they allow the appeal, they may quash the enforcement notice;
(b)they must give any directions necessary to give effect to their determination.
(3)On the determination of an appeal the Welsh Ministers may—
(a)grant listed building consent for any of the works to which the enforcement notice relates;
(b)remove any condition subject to which listed building consent was granted and replace it with any other condition, whether more or less onerous;
(c)exercise their power under section 76 to de-list the building to which the appeal relates.
(4)Where it would otherwise be a ground for determining to allow an appeal that a copy of the enforcement notice was not served on a person who was required to be served, the Welsh Ministers may ignore that fact if neither the appellant nor that person has been substantially prejudiced by the failure.
(5)The Welsh Ministers may—
(a)dismiss an appeal if the appellant fails to comply with section 127(6);
(b)allow an appeal and quash the enforcement notice if the planning authority fails, within the period specified in regulations made under section 175, to comply with a requirement of the regulations to—
(i)submit a statement of the representations the authority proposes to make on the appeal which includes the matters specified in the regulations, or
(ii)send the Welsh Ministers a copy of the enforcement notice and a list of the persons on whom copies of it were served.
(6)The decision of the Welsh Ministers on the appeal (including any decision relating to the exercise of the powers conferred by subsection (3)) is final.
The validity of an enforcement notice may not be questioned, on any of the grounds on which an appeal may be made under section 127, in any proceedings except an appeal under that section.
(1)An owner of land may apply by way of complaint to a magistrates’ court for an order requiring another person who has an interest in the land to permit the owner to take steps required by an enforcement notice.
(2)The court may make such an order if it is satisfied that the other person is preventing the owner from taking steps required by the enforcement notice.
(1)If the period within which an enforcement notice requires any step to be taken has ended and the step has not been taken, the planning authority that issued the notice may at any reasonable time enter the land to which the notice relates and take the step.
(2)A person who intentionally obstructs a person exercising a power under subsection (1) commits an offence.
(3)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (2) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(4)This section does not apply in relation to Crown land.
(1)Where a planning authority exercises the powers under section 131(1) to enter land and take a step required by an enforcement notice, the authority may recover from a person who is then an owner of the land the costs it reasonably incurs in doing so.
(2)If a planning authority seeks to recover costs under subsection (1) from an owner of land who—
(a)is entitled to receive the rack rent of the land merely as agent or trustee for another person (the “principal”), and
(b)does not have, and has not had at any time since the day payment of the costs was demanded, enough money on behalf of the principal to pay the costs in full,
the liability of the agent or trustee is limited to the total amount of money that the agent or trustee has had on behalf of the principal since that day.
(3)If subsection (2) prevents a planning authority recovering the whole of its costs from an agent or trustee, it may recover them from the principal, or partly from the principal and partly from the agent or trustee.
(4)Where a copy of an enforcement notice has been served in respect of a listed building—
(a)costs which an owner or occupier of the building incurs for the purpose of complying with the notice, and
(b)amounts which an owner of land pays under subsection (1) in respect of costs incurred by the planning authority in taking steps required by the notice,
are to be treated as incurred or paid for the use and at the request of the person who carried out the works to which the notice relates.
(5)The costs recoverable by a planning authority under subsection (1) are, until recovered, a charge on the land to which the enforcement notice relates.
(6)The charge takes effect as a local land charge at the beginning of the day after the day the authority completes the step to which the costs relate.
(7)Subsection (8) applies where—
(a)a planning authority removes materials from land in the course of taking steps required by an enforcement notice, and
(b)the owner of the materials does not, within 3 days after the day they are removed, claim the materials and take them away.
(8)The planning authority—
(a)may sell the materials, and
(b)if it does so, must pay the proceeds to the person who owned the materials, after deducting any costs recoverable by it from the person.
(9)A planning authority may not recover costs under this section from the Crown.
(1)Where, at any time after the end of the period within which an enforcement notice requires any step to be taken, the step has not been taken, a person who is at that time an owner of the listed building to which the notice relates is guilty of an offence.
(2)A person may be charged with an offence under this section by reference to a day or a longer period, and may be convicted of more than one offence in relation to the same enforcement notice by reference to different periods.
(3)In proceedings against a person for an offence under this section, it is a defence for the person to prove—
(a)that the person did everything the person could be expected to do to secure that the steps required by the notice were taken, or
(b)that the person was not served with a copy of the enforcement notice and was not aware of its existence.
(4)A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on summary conviction, or on conviction on indictment, to a fine.
(5)In determining the amount of the fine, the court must in particular have regard to any financial benefit which has accrued or appears likely to accrue to the person in consequence of the offence.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may issue an enforcement notice if they consider—
(a)that works which involve a breach of section 88 (requirement for works to be authorised) or of a condition subject to which listed building consent has been granted have been or are being carried out in relation to a listed building, and
(b)that it is appropriate to issue the notice, having regard to the effect of the works on the character of the building as a building of special architectural or historic interest.
(2)Before issuing the notice, the Welsh Ministers must consult the planning authority in whose area the building is situated.
(3)An enforcement notice issued by the Welsh Ministers has the same effect as one issued by a planning authority.
(4)Sections 123 to 132 apply in relation to an enforcement notice issued by the Welsh Ministers as if references to a planning authority were references to the Welsh Ministers.
(1)A planning authority may apply to the High Court or the county court for an injunction restraining—
(a)an actual or expected breach of section 88 (requirement for works to be authorised) in relation to a listed building in its area, or
(b)an actual or expected failure to comply with a condition of listed building consent for works to a listed building in its area.
(2)An authority may make an application whether or not it has exercised or is proposing to exercise any of its other powers under this Part.
(3)The court may grant an injunction on any terms it considers appropriate for the purpose of restraining the breach.
(4)Rules of court may provide for an injunction to be issued against a person whose identity is unknown.
(5)An injunction may not be issued under this section against the Crown.
(1)A planning authority may acquire by agreement—
(a)any building wholly or mainly in Wales that it considers to be of special architectural or historic interest, and
(b)any land in respect of which the conditions in subsection (2) are met.
(2)The conditions are that—
(a)the land includes, adjoins or is adjacent to the building, and
(b)the planning authority considers that the land is required—
(i)for preserving the building or its amenities,
(ii)for providing or facilitating access to it, or
(iii)for its proper control or management.
(3)Part 1 of the Compulsory Purchase Act 1965 (c. 56) applies (so far as relevant) to an acquisition under this section, other than sections 4 to 8, section 10 and section 31 of that Act.
(4)References in that Part to the execution of the works are to be read in relation to an acquisition under this section as including the carrying out of building or maintenance work authorised by section 203 of the Housing and Planning Act 2016 (c. 22) (power to override easements and other rights).
(1)This section applies if the Welsh Ministers—
(a)consider that reasonable steps are not being taken for properly preserving a listed building, and
(b)are satisfied that there is a compelling case in the public interest for the building to be acquired compulsorily for the purpose of preserving it.
(2)The Welsh Ministers—
(a)may authorise the planning authority in whose area the listed building is situated to acquire compulsorily the building and any land in respect of which the conditions in subsection (3) are met, or
(b)may themselves acquire the building and land compulsorily.
(3)The conditions are that—
(a)the land includes, adjoins or is adjacent to the building, and
(b)the Welsh Ministers consider that the land is required—
(i)for preserving the building or its amenities,
(ii)for providing or facilitating access to it, or
(iii)for its proper control or management.
(4)This section does not permit the acquisition of—
(a)a building which is a scheduled monument (but see section 43), or
(b)an exempt religious building.
(5)This section does not permit the acquisition of an interest in Crown land unless—
(a)the interest is held otherwise than by or on behalf of the Crown, and
(b)the appropriate Crown authority agrees to the acquisition.
(6)The Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67) applies to an acquisition under this section.
(7)In this Chapter “acquiring authority” means—
(a)in the case of an acquisition or proposed acquisition under subsection (2)(a), the planning authority that acquires or proposes to acquire the listed building or land;
(b)in the case of an acquisition or proposed acquisition under subsection (2)(b), the Welsh Ministers.
(1)An acquiring authority may not start the compulsory acquisition of a listed building under section 137 unless—
(a)the authority has served a repairs notice on every owner of the building,
(b)the 2 months beginning with the day the repairs notice was served have ended, and
(c)the repairs notice has not been withdrawn.
(2)A repairs notice is a notice—
(a)specifying the works the authority considers reasonably necessary for the proper preservation of the listed building, and
(b)explaining the effect of sections 137 to 141 of this Act and section 49 of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 (c. 9) (assumption about listed building consent when assessing compensation for compulsory acquisition).
(3)If—
(a)a listed building is demolished after a repairs notice has been served in respect of it, but
(b)the Welsh Ministers are satisfied that they would have confirmed or made a compulsory purchase order in respect of the building had it not been demolished,
the demolition of the building does not prevent the compulsory acquisition of the site of the building under section 137.
(4)An acquiring authority may at any time withdraw a repairs notice it has served on any person; and if it does do so, it must immediately give the person notice of the withdrawal.
(5)For the purposes of subsection (1) an acquiring authority starts a compulsory acquisition when it serves the notice required by section 12 of the Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67) or paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 1 to that Act.
(1)This section applies where a compulsory purchase order for the acquisition of a listed building under section 137 is made by a planning authority or prepared in draft by the Welsh Ministers.
(2)Any person who has an interest in the listed building may apply to a magistrates’ court for an order that no further steps may be taken in relation to the compulsory purchase order.
(3)The application must be made within 28 days after the day the notice required by section 12 of the Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67) or paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 1 to that Act is served.
(4)If the magistrates’ court is satisfied that reasonable steps have been taken for properly preserving the listed building, it must make the order applied for.
(5)Any person aggrieved by the decision of the magistrates’ court on the application may appeal against the decision to the Crown Court.
(1)A compulsory purchase order for the acquisition of a listed building under section 137 may include a direction for minimum compensation if the acquiring authority is satisfied that the building has been deliberately allowed to fall into disrepair for the purpose of justifying its demolition and the development of the site or any adjoining site.
(2)A direction for minimum compensation is a direction that, in assessing compensation for the compulsory acquisition of the listed building, it is to be assumed—
(a)that planning permission would not be granted for any development of the site of the building, and
(b)that listed building consent would not be granted for any works for the demolition, alteration or extension of the building other than works necessary for restoring it to and maintaining it in a proper state of repair.
(3)Where a direction for minimum compensation is included in an order made by a planning authority or prepared in draft by the Welsh Ministers, the statement of the effect of the order in the notice required by section 12 of the Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67) or paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 1 to that Act must—
(a)include a statement that the direction has been included, and
(b)explain the effect of the direction.
(4)If the Welsh Ministers confirm or make a compulsory purchase order which includes a direction for minimum compensation, the compensation for the compulsory acquisition is to be assessed in accordance with the direction, despite anything to the contrary in—
(a)the Land Compensation Act 1961 (c. 33),
(b)the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8),
(c)section 49 of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 (c. 9), or
(d)this Act.
(1)This section applies where a direction for minimum compensation is included in a compulsory purchase order for the acquisition of a listed building under section 137 that is made by a planning authority or prepared in draft by the Welsh Ministers.
(2)Any person who has an interest in the listed building may apply to a magistrates’ court for an order that no direction for minimum compensation is to be included in the compulsory purchase order as confirmed or made by the Welsh Ministers.
(3)The application must be made within 28 days after the day the notice required by section 12 of the Acquisition of Land Act 1981 (c. 67) or paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 1 to that Act is served.
(4)If the magistrates’ court is satisfied that the listed building has not been deliberately allowed to fall into disrepair for the purpose mentioned in section 140(1), it must make the order applied for.
(5)Any person aggrieved by the decision of the magistrates’ court on the application may appeal against the decision to the Crown Court.
(6)The rights conferred by this section are in addition to, and do not limit, the rights conferred by section 139.
(1)On the completion of a compulsory acquisition of land under section 137—
(a)all private rights of way over the land are extinguished,
(b)all rights to install, keep or maintain apparatus on, under or over the land are extinguished, and
(c)the acquiring authority becomes entitled to any apparatus on, under or over the land.
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply to—
(a)any right to which a statutory undertaker is entitled, or apparatus belonging to a statutory undertaker, for the purpose of carrying on its undertaking,
(b)any right conferred by or in accordance with the electronic communications code on the operator of an electronic communications code network, or any electronic communications apparatus installed for the purposes of such a network, or
(c)any right or apparatus specified by the acquiring authority in a direction given before the completion of the acquisition.
(3)Subsection (1) is also subject to any agreement (whether made before or after the completion of the acquisition) between the acquiring authority and the person who is entitled to the right or to whom the apparatus belongs.
(4)Any person who suffers loss by the extinguishment of a right or the transfer of apparatus under this section is entitled to be paid compensation by the acquiring authority.
(5)Compensation under this section is to be determined in accordance with the Land Compensation Act 1961 (c. 33).
(6)In subsection (2)(b)—
“electronic communications code” (“cod cyfathrebu electronig”) means the code set out in Schedule 3A to the Communications Act 2003 (c. 21);
“operator” (“gweithredwr”), “electronic communications code network” (“rhwydwaith cod cyfathrebu electronig”) and “electronic communications apparatus” (“cyfarpar cyfathrebu electronig”) have the meanings given by paragraph 1(1) of Schedule 17 to the Communications Act 2003.
(1)Where a planning authority acquires a building or other land under this Chapter, it may make any arrangements for the management, use or disposal of the building or land that it considers appropriate for the purpose of preserving the building or land.
(2)For further provision about the use of land that a planning authority acquires by agreement under section 136, see sections 232, 233 and 235 (appropriation, disposal and development), 242 (overriding rights of possession) and 243 (joint body to hold land) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8).
(3)Where the Welsh Ministers acquire a building or other land under section 137, they may—
(a)make any arrangements they consider appropriate for the management, custody or use of the building or land, and
(b)dispose of the building or land, or deal with the building or land in any other way.
(4)For provision removing restrictions on the use of certain types of land acquired under this Chapter, see sections 238 to 240 (consecrated land and burial grounds) and 241 (commons, open spaces and fuel or field garden allotments) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
(1)A local authority may carry out any works it considers urgently necessary for the preservation of a listed building in its area.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may carry out any works they consider urgently necessary for the preservation of any listed building.
(3)The works that may be carried out under this section include works to provide temporary support or shelter for the listed building.
(4)If the listed building or any part of it is in residential use, works may be carried out under this section only if they would not interfere unreasonably with that use.
(5)At least 7 clear days’ written notice of the intention to carry out works under this section must be given—
(a)to every owner of the listed building, and
(b)if the building or any part of it is in residential use, every occupier of the building.
(6)The notice must describe the works proposed to be carried out.
(7)Works may not be carried out under this section in relation to—
(a)a building which is a scheduled monument (but see section 61),
(b)an exempt religious building, or
(c)a listed building on Crown land.
(1)Where works for the preservation of a listed building have been carried out by a local authority or the Welsh Ministers under section 144, the local authority or (as the case may be) the Welsh Ministers may serve notice on any owner of the listed building requiring the owner to meet the costs of the works.
(2)Where the works consist of or include works to provide temporary support or shelter for the listed building—
(a)the costs that may be recovered include any continuing expenditure involved in making available the equipment or materials used, and
(b)notices under subsection (1) may be given from time to time in respect of that continuing expenditure.
(3)Subsection (4) applies if, within 28 days after the day a notice under subsection (1) is served, the owner complains in writing to the Welsh Ministers—
(a)that some or all of the works were unnecessary for the preservation of the listed building,
(b)in the case of works to provide temporary support or shelter, that the temporary arrangements have continued for an unreasonable length of time,
(c)that the amount specified in the notice is unreasonable, or
(d)that the recovery of that amount would cause hardship to the owner.
(4)The Welsh Ministers must—
(a)determine to what extent the owner’s complaint is well-founded, and
(b)serve notice of their determination on—
(i)the owner, and
(ii)if the notice under subsection (1) was given by a local authority, that authority.
(5)The notice of the Welsh Ministers’ determination must state—
(a)the reasons for the determination, and
(b)the amount that they have decided may be recovered.
(6)An owner or local authority on whom notice is served under subsection (4)(b) may, within 28 days after the day the notice is served, appeal to the county court against the Welsh Ministers’ decision.
(1)The costs which a local authority or the Welsh Ministers may recover under section 145 carry interest, at the rate specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers, from the time when the notice under subsection (1) of that section becomes operative until all of the amounts due under that section are recovered.
(2)The costs and any interest are recoverable by the local authority or (as the case may be) the Welsh Ministers as a debt.
(3)The costs and any interest are, from the time when the notice under section 145(1) becomes operative until they are recovered, a charge on the land on which the listed building in question is situated.
(4)The charge takes effect, at the time when the notice becomes operative, as a legal charge which is a local land charge.
(5)For the purpose of enforcing the charge, the local authority or (as the case may be) the Welsh Ministers have the same powers and remedies under the Law of Property Act 1925 (c. 20) and otherwise as if they were a mortgagee by deed with powers to sell the land, make leases, accept surrenders of leases and appoint a receiver.
(6)The power to appoint a receiver is exercisable at any time after the end of 1 month beginning with the day the charge takes effect.
(7)For the purposes of this section a notice under section 145(1) becomes operative—
(a)where no complaint is made to the Welsh Ministers within the period referred to in section 145(3), at the end of that period;
(b)where a complaint is made but no appeal is made to the county court within the period referred to in section 145(6), at the end of that period;
(c)where an appeal is made and the decision on the appeal confirms the Welsh Ministers’ determination under section 145(4) (with or without variation), at the time of the decision;
(d)where an appeal is made but is withdrawn, at the time of the withdrawal.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision for and in connection with conferring powers on local authorities or the Welsh Ministers to take steps to secure the proper preservation of listed buildings which have fallen into disrepair.
(2)The regulations may, in particular, provide for—
(a)notices requiring owners of listed buildings which have fallen into disrepair to carry out works to secure their proper preservation (“preservation notices”);
(b)appeals against preservation notices;
(c)offences for failure to comply with preservation notices.
(3)Regulations under this section—
(a)may disapply, or apply or reproduce with or without modifications, any provision of this Part or Part 5 or 7;
(b)may amend this Part or those Parts.
(4)Regulations under this section may not make any provision that binds the Crown.
(1)A relevant local authority may contribute towards any expenditure incurred, or to be incurred, in the repair or maintenance of—
(a)a listed building which is situated in or in the vicinity of the authority’s area, or
(b)a building in the authority’s area which is not a listed building but which the authority considers to be of special architectural or historic interest.
(2)At the same time as making such a contribution, the authority may also contribute towards any expenditure incurred, or to be incurred, in the maintenance of any garden which—
(a)is occupied with the building, and
(b)adjoins or is adjacent to it.
(3)A contribution under this section may be made by grant or loan.
(4)A relevant local authority may make a loan under this section on any terms and conditions that it determines, which may for example include a term that the loan is free of interest.
(5)A relevant local authority—
(a)may renounce its right to repayment of a loan or any outstanding interest, and
(b)may agree with the borrower to vary any of the terms and conditions of a loan.
(6)A relevant local authority may make a grant under this section subject to any conditions it considers appropriate, which may for example include a condition that the recipient of the grant must make an agreement with the authority for the purpose of securing public access to all or part of the building or garden to which the grant relates.
(7)In this section and section 149, “relevant local authority” means—
(a)a county council or county borough council in Wales;
(b)a National Park authority in Wales;
(c)a joint planning board constituted under section 2(1B) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8).
(1)This section applies where a relevant local authority makes a grant under section 148.
(2)If any condition imposed on the making of the grant is not complied with, the authority may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the recipient of the grant.
(3)Subsections (4) and (5) apply if, during the 3 years beginning with the day the grant is made—
(a)there is a disposal of the whole or part of the interest that the recipient of the grant held in the building or garden to which the grant relates on the day the grant was made (“the relevant interest”), and
(b)the disposal is made by sale, by exchange or by lease for a term of at least 21 years.
(4)If the disposal is made by the recipient of the grant or by a person to whom the recipient of the grant has given part of the relevant interest, the relevant local authority may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the recipient of the grant.
(5)If the disposal is made by a person to whom the recipient of the grant has given the whole of the relevant interest, the authority may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the person to whom the gift was made.
(6)A relevant local authority may not recover amounts under this section which in aggregate exceed the amount of the grant.
(7)In this section references to giving an interest to a person are references to giving it to the person directly or indirectly, other than on the death of the holder of the interest.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may make grants to meet any expenditure incurred, or to be incurred, in—
(a)the repair or maintenance of a building which they consider to be of special architectural or historic interest,
(b)the maintenance of any land which includes, adjoins or is adjacent to such a building,
(c)the repair or maintenance of any objects ordinarily kept in such a building, or
(d)the maintenance of a garden or other land which they consider to be of special historic interest.
(2)The following provisions of this section apply where—
(a)the Welsh Ministers make a grant under subsection (1) on terms which provide for it to be recoverable under this section, and
(b)before or on making the grant the Welsh Ministers give notice in writing to the recipient of the grant which—
(i)summarises the effect of this section, and
(ii)specifies a period, beginning with the day the grant is made and ending not more than 10 years after that day, during which the grant is to be recoverable in accordance with subsections (4) to (6) (“the recovery period”).
(3)If any condition imposed on the making of the grant is not complied with, the Welsh Ministers may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the recipient of the grant.
(4)Subsections (5) and (6) apply if during the recovery period—
(a)there is a disposal of the whole or part of the interest that the recipient of the grant held in the building, land or objects to which the grant relates on the day the grant was made (“the relevant interest”), and
(b)the disposal is made by sale, by exchange or by lease for a term of at least 21 years.
(5)If the disposal is made by the recipient of the grant or by a person to whom the recipient of the grant has given a part of the relevant interest, the Welsh Ministers may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the recipient of the grant.
(6)If the disposal is made by a person to whom the recipient of the grant has given the whole of the relevant interest, the Welsh Ministers may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the person to whom the gift was made.
(7)The Welsh Ministers may not recover amounts under this section which in aggregate exceed the amount of the grant.
(8)In this section references to giving an interest to a person are references to giving it to the person directly or indirectly, other than on the death of the holder of the interest.
(1)This section applies where—
(a)an instrument contains a provision purporting to be a gift of property of any kind to the Welsh Ministers on trust to use the income of the property (either for a limited time or indefinitely) for or towards the repair and maintenance of a relevant building, or of a relevant building together with other property,
(b)the provision does not create a charitable trust, and
(c)the Welsh Ministers accept the gift.
(2)In this section—
“endowment trust” (“ymddiriedolaeth waddol”) means the trust referred to in subsection (1)(a);
“relevant building” (“adeilad perthnasol”) means—
a building which the Welsh Ministers consider to be of special architectural or historic interest and—
in which, at the time when the trust instrument comes into operation, they are or soon will be entitled to an interest, or
which at that time is or soon will be under their control or management, or
a building which at that time is or soon will be under their guardianship under Chapter 6 of Part 2;
“trust fund” (“cronfa’r ymddiriedolaeth”) means the property given to the Welsh Ministers and any property for the time being representing that property.
(3)The validity of the gift and of the endowment trust is not affected, and is to be treated as never having been affected, by any rule of law or equity which would not have affected their validity if the trust had been charitable.
(4)While the endowment trust continues the Welsh Ministers have the same powers of management, disposition and investment in relation to the trust fund as are conferred by law on trustees of land in relation to the land and the proceeds of its sale.
(5)The powers conferred by subsection (4) are in addition to, and do not limit, any powers conferred on the Welsh Ministers by the trust instrument.
(6)If, while the endowment trust continues, an event happens—
(a)which has the immediate effect that the Welsh Ministers are not entitled to any interest in the building to which the trust relates and do not have the building under their control or management, and
(b)which would not otherwise cause the endowment trust to come to an end or be treated as having failed,
on the happening of that event the endowment trust comes to an end and the trust fund passes as it would on a failure of the trust.
(7)Subsection (8) applies if the trust instrument contains a provision purporting to give the trust fund, or to direct the trust fund to be held, on trust for charitable purposes if the endowment trust fails or comes to an end.
(8)The validity of the gift or direction is not, and is to be treated as never having been, affected by any rule of law or equity relating to perpetuities.
(9)In subsection (4) “trustees of land” has the same meaning as in the Trusts of Land and Appointment of Trustees Act 1996 (c. 47) (see section 1(1) of that Act).
(1)A person authorised in writing by the Welsh Ministers may enter any land to survey a building on that land or on any other land in connection with a proposal to list or de-list the building.
(2)A person authorised in writing by a planning authority may enter any land to survey a building on that land or on any other land in connection with a proposal to serve a temporary listing notice in relation to the building.
(3)A person authorised in writing by a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers may enter any land to—
(a)survey that land or any other land in connection with a proposal to make an order under section 107 (modification or revocation of listed building consent or conservation area consent),
(b)survey that land or any other land in connection with a proposal to make an order under section 115 (termination of listed building partnership agreement or provision of agreement), or
(c)assess whether an offence has been or is being committed under section 91(5), 117 or 118.
(4)A person authorised in writing by a planning authority may enter any land to—
(a)determine whether a temporary stop notice should be issued,
(b)display a copy of a temporary stop notice in accordance with section 119, or
(c)assess whether a temporary stop notice has been complied with.
(5)A person authorised in writing by a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers may enter any land to—
(a)survey that land or any other land in connection with a proposal to issue an enforcement notice,
(b)assess whether an enforcement notice has been complied with,
(c)assess whether a listed building on that land or any other land is being maintained in a proper state of repair,
(d)survey that land or any other land in connection with a proposal to serve a repairs notice under section 138, or
(e)assess whether a repairs notice has been complied with.
(6)A person authorised in writing by a local authority or the Welsh Ministers may enter any land to—
(a)determine whether works should be carried out under section 144 for the preservation of a building on that land or on any other land, or
(b)carry out works under that section for the preservation of a building on that land or on any other land.
(7)An authorised person may enter any land to survey it, or estimate its value, in connection with a claim for compensation payable by a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers under this Part in relation to that land or any other land.
(8)In subsection (7) “authorised person” means—
(a)an officer of the Valuation Office of His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, or
(b)a person authorised in writing by the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers (as the case may be).
(9)A power to survey land under this section includes power to search and bore to determine the nature of the subsoil or the presence of minerals.
(1)A power to enter land under section 152 may be exercised at any reasonable time.
(2)A person authorised to enter land under section 152 may not demand admission as of right to any land which is occupied unless at least 24 hours’ notice of the intended entry has been given to every occupier.
(3)Subsection (2) does not apply to the power to enter land under section 152(4) (temporary stop notices).
(4)A person authorised to enter land under section 152—
(a)must, if required to do so by or on behalf of any owner or occupier of the land, produce evidence of the person’s authorisation and state the purpose of the entry before entering the land;
(b)may take on to the land any other persons that are necessary;
(c)must, if leaving the land at a time when no owner or occupier is present, leave it as effectively secured against trespassers as the person found it.
(5)Where a person—
(a)proposes to carry out works in the exercise of a power of entry under section 152, and
(b)is required to give notice of the intended entry under subsection (2) of this section,
the person may not carry out the works unless the notice of intended entry includes notice of the person’s intention to carry them out.
(6)Where—
(a)a person proposes to carry out works in the exercise of a power of entry under section 152 on land which belongs to a statutory undertaker, and
(b)the undertaker objects to the proposed works on the ground that carrying them out would be seriously detrimental to the carrying on of its undertaking,
the person may not carry out the works without the agreement of the appropriate Minister.
(7)A person may not enter Crown land in the exercise of a power under section 152 without the agreement of—
(a)a person who appears to the person seeking entry to the land to be entitled to give that agreement, or
(b)the appropriate Crown authority.
(8)Subsections (2) to (6) do not apply to anything done by virtue of subsection (7).
(9)In subsection (6) “appropriate Minister” has the meaning given by section 265 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8).
(1)This section applies if a justice of the peace is satisfied on sworn information in writing—
(a)that there are reasonable grounds for entering land for a purpose mentioned in section 152, and
(b)that—
(i)admission to the land has been refused or a refusal is reasonably expected, or
(ii)the case is one of urgency.
(2)The justice of the peace may issue a warrant conferring a power to enter the land on any person who is authorised in writing by a person who may authorise entry under section 152 for the purpose in question.
(3)For the purposes of subsection (1)(b) admission to land is to be treated as having been refused if no reply is received to a request for admission within a reasonable period.
(4)Section 152(9) applies to a power to survey land conferred by a warrant under this section.
(5)A warrant under this section confers a power to enter land—
(a)on one occasion only, and
(b)only at a reasonable time, unless the case is one of urgency.
(6)A person authorised to enter land under this section—
(a)must, if required to do so by or on behalf of any owner or occupier of the land, produce evidence of the person’s authorisation and state the purpose of the entry before entering the land,
(b)may take on to the land any other persons that are necessary,
(c)must, if leaving the land at a time when no owner or occupier is present, leave it as effectively secured against trespassers as the person found it.
(7)A warrant under this section ceases to have effect at the end of 1 month beginning with the day it is issued.
(8)This section does not apply in relation to Crown land.
(1)This section applies where a person has a power to enter land conferred by section 152 or by a warrant under section 154.
(2)A person who intentionally obstructs a person exercising the power of entry commits an offence.
(3)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (2) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(4)If damage is caused to land or other property—
(a)in the exercise of the power of entry, or
(b)in making any survey for the purpose of which the power of entry was conferred,
a person suffering the damage may recover compensation from the person who authorised the entry.
(5)A claim for compensation under subsection (4) must be made in writing within 6 months beginning with the day the damage was caused (or if the damage was caused over more than one day, the last day it was caused).
(6)A person commits an offence if the person discloses information which the person obtained in the exercise of the power of entry, and which relates to a manufacturing process or trade secret, for a purpose other than that for which the person was authorised to enter the land.
(7)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (6) is liable—
(a)on summary conviction, to a fine;
(b)on conviction on indictment, to a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years, or both.
(8)This section does not apply to anything done by virtue of section 153(7) (entry on Crown land).
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations provide that a religious building used for religious purposes is an exempt religious building for the purposes of—
(a)sections 83 and 84 (temporary listing of building);
(b)section 88 (requirement for works affecting listed building to be authorised);
(c)section 118 (offence of intentionally damaging listed building);
(d)section 137 (compulsory acquisition of listed building for preservation);
(e)section 144 (urgent works for preservation of listed building).
(2)For the purposes of section 88 a building is to be treated as being used for religious purposes if it would be used for those purposes but for the works in question.
(3)Regulations under this section may—
(a)make provision in relation to religious buildings of a description specified in the regulations (whether by reference to a religious faith or denomination, a use made of the buildings, or any other circumstance) or in relation to a particular building;
(b)make provision in relation to all or part of a religious building;
(c)provide that a building is an exempt religious building only in relation to works of a description specified in the regulations (whether by reference to the extent of the works, the person by whom they are carried out, or any other circumstance);
(d)make different provision for buildings in different areas;
(e)make consequential amendments to any other provision of this Act.
(4)In this section references to a religious building—
(a)include any structure or artificial object that is fixed to a religious building or within its curtilage;
(b)do not include a building used, or available for use, by a minister of religion wholly or mainly as a residence from which to perform the duties of that office.
In this Part—
“enforcement notice” (“hysbysiad gorfodi”) means an enforcement notice issued under section 123 or 134 (as the case may be);
“exempt religious building” (“adeilad crefyddol esempt”) is to be interpreted in accordance with section 156;
“interim protection” (“gwarchodaeth interim”) has the meaning given by section 79(3);
“listing” (“rhestru”) and “de-listing” (“dadrestru”), in relation to a building, have the meanings given by section 76(6);
“local authority” (“awdurdod lleol”) means—
a county council or county borough council in Wales;
a National Park authority in Wales;
a community council;
a police and crime commissioner in Wales;
a fire and rescue authority in Wales constituted by a scheme under section 2 of the Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004 (c. 21) or a scheme to which section 4 of that Act applies;
a body in Wales which is a levying body within the meaning of section 74(1) of the Local Government Finance Act 1988 (c. 41);
a body in Wales to which section 75 of that Act (special levies) applies;
a joint board or joint committee, if all the constituent authorities are local authorities within paragraphs (a) to (g);
“temporary listing” (“rhestru dros dro”) has the meaning given by section 83(5);
“temporary stop notice” (“hysbysiad stop dros dro”) means a temporary stop notice issued under section 119;
“Wales” (“Cymru”) means the combined area of the counties and county boroughs in Wales.
(1)A planning authority must—
(a)from time to time determine which parts of its area are areas of special architectural or historic interest whose character or appearance it is desirable to preserve or enhance, and
(b)designate those parts as conservation areas.
(2)A planning authority may vary or cancel a designation.
(3)If a planning authority designates a conservation area, or varies or cancels a designation, it must give notice that it has done so to the Welsh Ministers.
(4)The notice must contain enough information to identify the area affected.
(5)The planning authority must publish the notice with an explanation of the effect of the designation, variation or cancellation—
(a)in the London Gazette, and
(b)in at least one newspaper circulating in the authority’s area.
(6)A designation under this section is a local land charge.
(1)A planning authority must from time to time prepare and publish proposals for the preservation and enhancement of any part of its area which is a conservation area.
(2)The authority must submit the proposals for consideration to a public meeting held in the conservation area to which the proposals relate or, where there is no suitable place in the conservation area, as near to it as reasonably practicable.
(3)The authority must have regard to any views about the proposals which are expressed at the meeting.
(1)In exercising a planning function in relation to a building or other land in a conservation area, a person must have special regard to the desirability of preserving or enhancing the character or appearance of that area.
(2)In this section “planning function” means any function under or by virtue of—
(a)Part 3, this Part, Part 5 or Part 7 as it applies for the purposes of any of those Parts,
(b)the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8), or
(c)section 70 or 73 of the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993 (c. 28) (estate management schemes).
(1)A person must not carry out works for the demolition of a building to which this section applies, or cause such works to be carried out, unless the works are authorised under section 162.
(2)This section applies to any building in a conservation area, except—
(a)a building which is a scheduled monument (but see section 11);
(b)a listed building (but see section 88);
(c)a building of a description specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers;
(d)a building of a description specified in a direction given to an individual planning authority by the Welsh Ministers.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may direct a planning authority that, despite any provision made by regulations under subsection (2)(c), this section is to apply to a building of a description specified in the direction.
(4)Subsection (1) does not prohibit works carried out by or on behalf of the Crown in the circumstances set out in paragraphs (a) to (d) of section 117(4) (emergency works).
(5)Schedule 11 makes provision about the effect of this section ceasing to apply to a building.
(1)Works for the demolition of a building to which section 161 applies are authorised if—
(a)written consent to carry them out has been granted by the planning authority in whose area the building is situated or the Welsh Ministers, and
(b)the works are carried out in accordance with the terms of the consent (including any conditions attached to it).
(2)Where—
(a)works for the demolition of a building to which section 161 applies have been carried out without being authorised, and
(b)the planning authority or the Welsh Ministers grant written consent for the works,
the works are authorised from the grant of that consent.
(3)Consent under subsection (1) or (2) is referred to in this Act as conservation area consent.
(1)The following provisions of Part 3 apply in relation to buildings to which section 161 applies as they apply in relation to listed buildings—
(a)Chapter 2 (control of works), except—
(i)sections 88 and 89;
(ii)section 90(1)(c) and (4)(b);
(iii)section 95;
(iv)section 96(2);
(v)section 97(5), (6) and (9);
(vi)sections 98(3)(b) and 99(5);
(vii)section 101(2);
(viii)section 104(3);
(ix)section 111(5) and (8);
(b)Chapter 4 (enforcement), except—
(i)section 117(5);
(ii)section 118;
(iii)section 128(3)(c);
(c)Chapter 6 (general), except—
(i)section 152(1), (2), (3)(b) and (5)(c) to (e);
(ii)section 156.
(2)In their application in relation to buildings to which section 161 applies—
(a)the provisions applied by subsection (1) are to be read as if—
(i)any reference to listed building consent were a reference to conservation area consent;
(ii)any reference to the character of a listed building were a reference to the character or appearance of the conservation area in which the building is situated;
(iii)any other reference to a listed building were a reference to a building to which section 161 applies;
(iv)any reference to section 88 were a reference to section 161;
(b)the provisions applied by subsection (1)(a) are to be read as if—
(i)in section 98(3)(a), the reference to section 89(2) were a reference to section 162(2);
(ii)in section 99(3), for “Sections 90 to 95” there were substituted “Sections 90 to 94”;
(c)the provisions applied by subsection (1)(b) are to be read as if—
(i)in sections 117(4), 121(4) and 127(2)(d), the references to the preservation of the building were omitted;
(ii)in section 126(1), the reference to section 89(2) were a reference to section 162(2);
(iii)in section 127(2), for paragraph (a) there were substituted “that retention of the building is not necessary in the interests of preserving or enhancing the character or appearance of the conservation area in which it is situated”;
(d)the provisions applied by subsection (1)(c) are to be read as if, in section 152(3)(c), the reference to section 118 were omitted.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend this section to make additional or different provision about the application of Chapters 2, 4 and 6 of Part 3 in relation to buildings to which section 161 applies.
(1)Subsection (2) applies where the Welsh Ministers consider that the preservation of a building in a conservation area is important for maintaining the character or appearance of that area.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may direct that section 144 (urgent works) applies to the building as it applies to listed buildings.
(3)Where a direction has effect in relation to a building—
(a)sections 144 to 146 are to be read as if references to a listed building were references to the building;
(b)section 144(7) is to be read as if paragraph (b) were omitted.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may make grants to meet any relevant expenditure that they consider has made or will make a significant contribution towards the preservation or enhancement of the character or appearance of a conservation area.
(2)Expenditure is relevant for the purposes of subsection (1) if it has been or is to be incurred in or in connection with, or with a view to the promotion of, such preservation or enhancement as is mentioned in that subsection.
(3)The following provisions of this section apply where—
(a)the Welsh Ministers make a grant under subsection (1) in relation to a building or other land on terms which provide for it to be recoverable under this section, and
(b)before or on making the grant the Welsh Ministers give notice in writing to the recipient of the grant which—
(i)summarises the effect of this section, and
(ii)specifies a period, beginning with the day the grant is made and ending not more than 10 years after that day, during which the grant is to be recoverable in accordance with subsections (5) to (7) (“the recovery period”).
(4)If any condition imposed on the making of the grant is not complied with, the Welsh Ministers may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the recipient of the grant.
(5)Subsections (6) and (7) apply if during the recovery period—
(a)there is a disposal of the whole or part of the interest that the recipient of the grant held in the building or other land to which the grant relates on the day the grant was made (“the relevant interest”), and
(b)the disposal is made by sale, by exchange or by lease for a term of at least 21 years.
(6)If the disposal is made by the recipient of the grant or by a person to whom the recipient of the grant has given part of the relevant interest, the Welsh Ministers may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the recipient of the grant.
(7)If the disposal is made by a person to whom the recipient of the grant has given the whole of the relevant interest, the Welsh Ministers may recover the amount of the grant, or any part of that amount, from the person to whom the gift was made.
(8)The Welsh Ministers may not recover amounts under this section which in aggregate exceed the amount of the grant.
(9)In this section references to giving an interest to a person are references to giving it to the person directly or indirectly, other than on the death of the holder of the interest.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may make a conservation area agreement with one or more planning authorities.
(2)A conservation area agreement is an agreement that a specified amount of money will be set aside for a specified period of years for the purpose of making grants for the repair of buildings which are situated in a conservation area and—
(a)included in a list compiled for the purposes of the agreement by the parties to it, or by them and other planning authorities, or
(b)shown on a map prepared for those purposes by the parties, or by them and other planning authorities.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may pay a grant for the purposes of a conservation area agreement to a planning authority which is a party to the agreement or any other person.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may make arrangements with any such authority about how the agreement is to be carried out (including arrangements for the offer and payment of grants under this section).
(5)Section 165(4) to (9) apply to a grant under this section, but taking the recovery period to be 3 years beginning with the day the grant is made.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations require the payment of a fee or charge to a planning authority for—
(a)performing any of its functions under Part 3, Part 4, this Part or Part 7 as it applies for the purposes of any of those Parts;
(b)doing anything which is calculated to facilitate, or is conducive or incidental to, the performance of any of those functions.
(2)Regulations under this section may in particular—
(a)make provision about when a fee or charge must be paid;
(b)make provision about who must pay a fee or charge;
(c)make provision about how a fee or charge is to be calculated (including who is to make the calculation);
(d)specify circumstances in which a fee or charge is to be waived or refunded (wholly or in part);
(e)specify circumstances in which no fee or charge is to be paid;
(f)make provision about the effect of paying or failing to pay a fee or charge in accordance with the regulations (which may include provision that amends, repeals or revokes any enactment, including any provision of this Act);
(g)specify circumstances in which a fee or charge payable to one planning authority is to be transferred to another planning authority.
(3)If regulations under this section provide for a planning authority to calculate the amount of any fees or charges, the authority must ensure that, taking one financial year with another, its income from the fees or charges does not exceed the cost of performing the functions, or doing the things, to which they relate.
(1)Sections 319ZA to 319ZD of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8) (discharge of functions relating to applications) apply to the exercise by a planning authority of its functions in relation to applications under or by virtue of Parts 3 and 4 as they apply to the exercise of its functions in relation to applications under that Act.
(2)The validity of a consent or determination granted or made, or purported to be granted or made, by a planning authority in respect of an application made under or by virtue of either of those Parts may not be questioned in any legal proceedings, or in any other proceedings under this Act, on the ground that the consent or determination should have been granted or made by another planning authority.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may at any time direct a planning authority to submit for their approval the arrangements the authority proposes to make for obtaining specialist advice in connection with its relevant functions.
(2)The authority must submit its proposed arrangements to the Welsh Ministers within the period specified in the direction.
(3)If the Welsh Ministers are not satisfied with the arrangements that the authority (“authority A”) proposes to make, they may direct authority A and another planning authority specified in the direction (“authority B”)—
(a)to make an agreement under section 113 of the Local Government Act 1972 (c. 70) to place the services of persons employed by authority B who are qualified to give the specialist advice at the disposal of authority A, or
(b)to make arrangements for authority B to exercise of any of the relevant functions of authority A.
(4)A direction under subsection (3)(b) may make provision about the terms of the arrangements.
(5)Before giving a direction under subsection (3) the Welsh Ministers must consult both planning authorities.
(6)For the purposes of this section the relevant functions of a planning authority are its functions under or by virtue of—
(a)sections 83 and 84 (temporary listing of buildings),
(b)Chapter 2 (grant, modification and revocation of consent) of Part 3,
(c)Chapter 3 (listed building partnership agreements) of that Part,
(d)Chapter 4 (enforcement of controls) of that Part,
(e)section 314A(1) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8) (planning permission for development affecting listed buildings), and
(f)sections 158 to 163 of this Act (designation of conservation areas, duties of planning authorities and control of demolition).
The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify the form and content of any notice, order or other document that a local authority is authorised or required to serve, make or issue under or by virtue of Part 3, Part 4, this Part or Part 7 as it applies for the purposes of any of those Parts.
(1)Any local authority or statutory undertaker may contribute towards expenditure incurred by a planning authority or other local authority in or in connection with the exercise of its functions under Part 3 (including its functions under that Part as applied by section 163).
(2)Subsection (1) does not apply to expenditure incurred—
(a)in the payment of compensation under sections 80, 86, 108, 116 and 122 (but this does not prevent an authority complying with a direction under subsection (3)(b)), or
(b)in or in connection with the exercise of functions under sections 143 to 146, 148 and 149.
(3)Where compensation is payable by a planning authority or other local authority in consequence of anything done under Chapters 1 to 4 of Part 3 (including anything done under Chapter 2 or 4 of that Part as applied by section 163), the Welsh Ministers may—
(a)contribute towards the payment of the compensation, if the thing was done wholly or partly in the interest of a service which is provided by the Welsh Ministers, or
(b)direct another local authority to contribute an amount that the Welsh Ministers consider reasonable, having regard to any benefit accruing to that other authority as a result of the thing being done.
(4)Subsection (3)(b) does not apply where a planning authority is liable to pay compensation under section 116 in consequence of the termination of a listed building partnership agreement or a provision of such an agreement.
(5)In such a case, the Welsh Ministers may direct any other planning authority that is or was a party to the agreement to reimburse the authority by which the compensation is payable, in whole or in part.
(6)The Welsh Ministers may not give a direction under subsection (5) unless they have consulted all of the planning authorities that are or were parties to the agreement.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations require a person who makes an appeal to which this section applies to pay a fee to the Welsh Ministers.
(2)This section applies to—
(a)an appeal under section 100 (appeal against decision or failure to make decision on application for listed building consent or conservation area consent, for the variation or removal of conditions or for approval of details);
(b)an appeal under section 127 (appeal against enforcement notice).
(3)Regulations under this section may in particular—
(a)make provision about when a fee must be paid;
(b)make provision about how a fee is to be calculated (including who is to make the calculation);
(c)specify circumstances in which a fee is to be waived or refunded (wholly or in part);
(d)specify circumstances in which no fee is to be paid;
(e)make provision about the effect of paying or failing to pay a fee in accordance with the regulations (which may include provision that amends, repeals or revokes any enactment, including any provision of this Act).
(1)An appeal to which this section applies is to be determined by a person appointed by the Welsh Ministers (instead of by the Welsh Ministers).
(2)This section applies to—
(a)an appeal under section 100 (appeal against decision or failure to make decision on application for listed building consent or conservation area consent, for the variation or removal of conditions or for approval of details);
(b)an appeal under section 127 (appeal against enforcement notice).
(3)But this section does not apply to an appeal if—
(a)it is an appeal of a description specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers, or
(b)the Welsh Ministers direct that the appeal is to be determined by them instead of by an appointed person.
(4)This section does not affect any provision of this Act or of regulations made under it that an appeal may be made to, or that a notice of appeal must be served on, the Welsh Ministers.
(5)Where an appointed person determines an appeal, the appointed person’s decision is to be treated as the decision of the Welsh Ministers.
(6)Schedule 12 makes further provision in connection with appointments under subsection (1) and directions under subsection (3)(b).
(1)The Welsh Ministers must in each case determine the procedure by which proceedings to which this section applies are to be considered.
(2)A determination must provide for the proceedings to be considered in one or more of the following ways—
(a)at a local inquiry;
(b)at a hearing;
(c)on the basis of representations in writing.
(3)The Welsh Ministers must make a determination before the end of the period specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(4)A determination may be varied by a further determination at any time before the proceedings to which it relates are determined.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must notify the following persons of a determination—
(a)the applicant or appellant (as appropriate), and
(b)the planning authority concerned.
(6)The Welsh Ministers must publish the criteria they will apply in making determinations.
(7)This section applies to the following proceedings—
(a)an application referred to the Welsh Ministers under section 94 (reference of application for listed building consent or conservation area consent or for the variation or removal of conditions);
(b)an appeal under section 100 (appeal against decision or failure to make decision on application for consent, for the variation or removal of conditions or for approval of details);
(c)an application for listed building consent or conservation area consent made to the Welsh Ministers under section 106 (urgent works on Crown land);
(d)an appeal under section 127 (appeal against enforcement notice).
(8)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend subsection (7) to—
(a)add proceedings under or by virtue of Part 3, Part 4 or this Part,
(b)remove proceedings, or
(c)modify a description of proceedings.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision about the procedure to be followed in connection with—
(a)proceedings on any application, appeal or reference made to the Welsh Ministers under or by virtue of Part 3 or 4 (whether it is considered at a local inquiry, at a hearing or on the basis of representations in writing);
(b)any other local inquiry or hearing held or to be held by or on behalf of the Welsh Ministers under or by virtue of any provision of those Parts or this Part.
(2)The regulations may include provision about—
(a)the procedure to be followed in connection with matters preparatory or subsequent to an inquiry or hearing or to the making of representations in writing;
(b)the conduct of proceedings.
(3)The regulations may include provision about the procedure to be followed—
(a)where steps have been taken with a view to the holding of an inquiry or hearing which does not take place,
(b)where steps have been taken with a view to the determination of any matter by a person appointed by the Welsh Ministers and the proceedings are the subject of a direction that the matter must instead be determined by the Welsh Ministers, or
(c)where steps have been taken in pursuance of such a direction and a further direction is given revoking that direction,
and may provide that such steps are to be treated as compliance, in whole or in part, with the requirements of the regulations.
(4)The regulations may—
(a)specify a time limit within which a party to proceedings must submit representations in writing and any supporting documents, or enable the Welsh Ministers to give directions setting the time limit in a particular case or in cases of a particular description;
(b)enable the Welsh Ministers to proceed to a decision taking into account only the representations in writing and supporting documents that were submitted within the time limit;
(c)enable the Welsh Ministers, after giving the parties notice in writing of their intention to do so, to proceed to a decision even though no representations in writing were submitted within the time limit, if they consider that they have sufficient material before them to enable them to reach a decision on the merits of the case.
(5)The regulations may also make provision about the circumstances in which—
(a)a direction about the payment of the Welsh Ministers’ costs may be given under section 180;
(b)an order about the payment of a party’s costs may be made under section 181.
(6)The regulations may provide that in circumstances specified in the regulations a matter may not be raised in proceedings on an appeal to the Welsh Ministers unless—
(a)the matter was previously raised before a time specified in the regulations, or
(b)it is shown that the matter could not have been raised before that time.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may cause a local inquiry to be held for the purposes of the exercise of any of their functions under or by virtue of Part 3, Part 4 or this Part.
(2)See also paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 12 for the power of a person appointed by the Welsh Ministers under section 173 to hold a local inquiry in connection with an appeal.
(1)A person holding a local inquiry under this Part may by summons require any person—
(a)to attend the inquiry, at a time and place stated in the summons, and to give evidence, or
(b)to produce any documents in the person’s possession or under the person’s control which relate to any matter in question at the inquiry.
(2)The person holding the inquiry may take evidence on oath, and for that purpose may administer oaths.
(3)A summons under this section does not require a person to attend the inquiry unless the person’s necessary expenses of attending are paid or offered to the person.
(4)A person may not be required under this section to produce the title (or any instrument relating to the title) of any land which does not belong to a local authority.
(5)It is an offence for a person to—
(a)refuse or deliberately fail to comply with a requirement of a summons under this section, or
(b)deliberately alter, suppress, conceal or destroy a document the person is required, or is liable to be required, to produce under this section.
(6)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (5) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale or imprisonment for a term not exceeding the maximum term for summary offences, or both.
(7)In subsection (6) “the maximum term for summary offences” means—
(a)in relation to an offence committed before section 281(5) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 (c. 44) comes into force, 6 months;
(b)in relation to an offence committed after it comes into force, 51 weeks.
(1)At a local inquiry held under this Part—
(a)oral evidence must be heard in public, and
(b)documentary evidence must be available for public inspection.
(2)But if a ministerial authority is satisfied that both of the conditions in subsection (3) are met in relation to an inquiry, it may direct that evidence of a description specified in the direction is to be heard or available for inspection at that inquiry only by persons who are specified in the direction or of a description specified in it.
(3)The conditions are—
(a)that giving evidence of a particular description in public or making it available for public inspection would be likely to result in the disclosure of information about—
(i)national security, or
(ii)the measures taken or to be taken to ensure the security of any land or other property, and
(b)that the public disclosure of the information would be against the national interest.
(4)If a ministerial authority is considering giving a direction under this section, the Counsel General may appoint a person (an “appointed representative”) to represent the interests of any person who will be prevented from hearing or inspecting any evidence at a local inquiry if the direction is given.
(5)If there is no appointed representative when a ministerial authority gives a direction under this section, the Counsel General may at any time appoint a person as an appointed representative for the purposes of the inquiry.
(6)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make provision about—
(a)the procedure to be followed by a ministerial authority before it gives a direction under this section in a case where there is an appointed representative;
(b)the functions of an appointed representative.
(7)In this section and section 179, “ministerial authority” means the Welsh Ministers or the Secretary of State.
(1)This section applies if a person is appointed under section 178 as an appointed representative for the purposes of a local inquiry, whether or not the inquiry takes place.
(2)A ministerial authority may direct a person (“the responsible person”) to pay the fees and expenses of the appointed representative.
(3)The responsible person must be a person that the ministerial authority considers is, or would have been, interested in the inquiry in relation to—
(a)national security, or
(b)the measures taken or to be taken to ensure the security of any land or other property.
(4)If the appointed representative and the responsible person are unable to agree the amount of the fees and expenses, the amount must be determined by the ministerial authority that gave the direction.
(5)The ministerial authority must cause the amount agreed between the appointed representative and the responsible person, or determined by the ministerial authority, to be certified.
(6)The certified amount is recoverable from the responsible person as a debt.
(1)This section applies to the following proceedings—
(a)proceedings on an application, appeal or reference made to the Welsh Ministers under or by virtue of Part 3 or 4 (whether it is considered at a local inquiry, at a hearing or on the basis of representations in writing);
(b)any other local inquiry or hearing held or to be held by or on behalf of the Welsh Ministers under or by virtue of any provision of those Parts or this Part.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may give a direction requiring the applicant or appellant, or a planning authority or other party to the proceedings, to pay the costs incurred by the Welsh Ministers in relation to the proceedings (or so much of those costs as the Welsh Ministers may direct).
(3)The costs incurred by the Welsh Ministers in relation to any proceedings include—
(a)the entire administrative cost incurred by the Welsh Ministers in connection with the proceedings, including in particular a reasonable amount that they determine in respect of general staff costs and overheads of the Welsh Government;
(b)costs in respect of an inquiry or hearing that does not take place.
(4)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations specify a standard daily amount for proceedings of a specified description.
(5)Where proceedings of a specified description take place, the costs incurred by the Welsh Ministers are to be taken to be—
(a)the standard daily amount for each day (or an appropriate proportion of that amount for a part of a day) on which a specified person is engaged in dealing with the case;
(b)costs actually incurred in connection with dealing with the case on—
(i)travelling or subsistence allowances, or
(ii)the provision of accommodation or other facilities;
(c)any costs attributable to the appointment of specified persons to assist in dealing with the case;
(d)any legal costs or disbursements incurred or made by or on behalf of the Welsh Ministers in connection with the case.
(6)In this section “specified” means specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(1)This section applies to the following proceedings—
(a)proceedings on an application, appeal or reference made to the Welsh Ministers under or by virtue of Part 3 or 4 (whether it is considered at a local inquiry, at a hearing or on the basis of representations in writing);
(b)any other local inquiry or hearing held or to be held by or on behalf of the Welsh Ministers under or by virtue of any provision of those Parts or this Part.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may make orders about—
(a)the costs of the applicant or appellant, or a planning authority or other party to the proceedings (which may include costs in respect of an inquiry or hearing that does not take place), and
(b)the person or persons who must pay the costs.
(3)But the Welsh Ministers may not order a person to pay the costs of another party unless they are satisfied that—
(a)the person has behaved unreasonably in relation to the proceedings, and
(b)the person’s unreasonable behaviour has caused the other party to incur unnecessary or wasted expenditure.
(4)The power to make orders under this section must also be exercised in accordance with any provision made under section 175(5)(b) (procedural requirements).
(1)The validity of a decision or order to which this section applies may not be questioned in any legal proceedings except an application for statutory review under section 183.
(2)The decisions to which this section applies are—
(a)a decision on a review under section 81 (review of listing decision);
(b)a decision on an application referred to the Welsh Ministers under section 94 (reference of application for listed building consent or conservation area consent or for the variation or removal of conditions);
(c)a decision on an appeal under section 100 (appeal against decision or failure to make decision on application for consent, for the variation or removal of conditions or for approval of details);
(d)a decision on an application for listed building consent or conservation area consent made to the Welsh Ministers under section 106 (urgent works on Crown land);
(e)a decision under paragraph 2 of Schedule 9 to confirm or not to confirm a purchase notice, including—
(i)a decision to confirm the notice in relation to only part of the land to which it relates, and
(ii)a decision to grant listed building consent or conservation area consent, or direct that consent must be granted, instead of confirming the notice in relation to the land or any part of it;
(f)a decision under section 128(3)(a) or (b) (determination of appeal against enforcement notice) to grant listed building consent or conservation area consent or remove a condition of consent.
(3)The orders to which this section applies are—
(a)an order under section 107 (modification or revocation of consent) made by a planning authority (whether or not it has been confirmed by the Welsh Ministers) or the Welsh Ministers;
(b)an order under section 115 (termination of listed building partnership agreement or provision of agreement) made by a planning authority or the Welsh Ministers;
(c)an order under section 181 (orders relating to costs of parties) made in connection with a decision mentioned in subsection (2) or an order mentioned in paragraph (a) or (b).
(4)This section does not prevent any court exercising any jurisdiction in relation to a refusal or failure to make a decision to which this section applies.
(1)A person aggrieved by a decision or order to which section 182 applies, or the authority directly concerned with such a decision or order, may make an application for statutory review.
(2)An application for statutory review is an application to the High Court questioning the validity of the decision or order on the grounds that—
(a)it is not within the powers conferred by this Act, or
(b)a requirement of this Act, or of subordinate legislation made under it, has not been complied with in relation to the decision or order.
(3)An application for statutory review may only be made with the permission of the High Court.
(4)An application for permission must be made before the end of 6 weeks beginning with the day after—
(a)in the case of an application relating to a decision mentioned in section 182(2), the day the decision is made;
(b)in the case of an application relating to an order made by a planning authority under section 107 and confirmed by the Welsh Ministers (with or without modifications), the day the order is confirmed;
(c)in the case of any other application relating to an order under section 107, the day the order takes effect;
(d)in the case of an application relating to an order made by a planning authority under section 115, the day the order is confirmed;
(e)in the case of an application relating to any other order mentioned in section 182(3), the day the order is made.
(5)When considering whether to give permission, the High Court may make an interim order suspending the operation of the decision or order to which the proposed application for statutory review relates until the final determination of the proceedings on—
(a)the application for permission, or
(b)where permission is given, the application for statutory review.
(6)On an application for statutory review the High Court—
(a)may make an interim order suspending the operation of the decision or order to which the application relates until the proceedings are finally determined;
(b)may quash that decision or order if satisfied that—
(i)it is not within the powers conferred by this Act, or
(ii)the interests of the applicant have been substantially prejudiced by a failure to comply with a requirement of this Act, or of subordinate legislation made under it, in relation to the decision or order.
(7)For the purposes of this section the authority directly concerned with a decision or order is—
(a)in the case of a decision on an application referred to the Welsh Ministers under section 94, the planning authority that made the reference;
(b)in the case of a decision on an appeal under section 100, the planning authority to which the application to which the appeal relates was made;
(c)in the case of a decision to confirm or not to confirm a purchase notice—
(i)the planning authority on which the purchase notice was served (see section 109), and
(ii)if the Welsh Ministers have modified the notice wholly or in part by substituting another local authority or statutory undertaker for the planning authority, that other local authority or statutory undertaker;
(d)in the case of a decision under section 128(3)(a) or (b) on an appeal against an enforcement notice issued by a planning authority, the authority that issued the notice;
(e)in the case of an order under section 107, the planning authority in whose area the building to which the order relates is situated;
(f)in the case of an order under section 115, any planning authority that is or was a party to the listed building partnership agreement to which the order relates;
(g)in the case of an order made under section 181 in connection with a decision or order mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (f), the authority directly concerned with that decision or order.
(1)Rules of court must provide either—
(a)that an interested person may appeal to the High Court on a point of law against a relevant decision made by the Welsh Ministers, or
(b)that where the Welsh Ministers make a relevant decision an interested person may require them to state and sign a case for the opinion of the High Court.
(2)For the purposes of this section—
(a)a relevant decision is any decision (including a direction or order) made in proceedings on an appeal under section 127 against an enforcement notice, other than a decision under section 128(3)(a) or (b) to grant consent or remove a condition of consent;
(b)the following are interested persons—
(i)the person who made the appeal,
(ii)the planning authority in whose area the building to which the enforcement notice relates is situated, and
(iii)any other person who has an interest in the building.
(3)At any stage of the proceedings on an appeal under section 127, the Welsh Ministers may state a question of law arising in the course of the proceedings in the form of a special case for the decision of the High Court.
(4)A decision of the High Court on a case stated under subsection (3) is to be treated as a judgment of the court for the purposes of section 16 of the Senior Courts Act 1981 (c. 54) (jurisdiction of Court of Appeal to hear and determine appeals from judgments or orders of High Court).
(5)Where proceedings are brought by virtue of this section, the High Court or the Court of Appeal (as the case may be) may order that the enforcement notice is to have effect, either in full or to the extent specified in the order, pending the final determination of the proceedings and any re-hearing and determination of the appeal by the Welsh Ministers.
(6)An order under subsection (5) may be made on whatever terms the court considers appropriate, which may include terms requiring the planning authority to give an undertaking as to damages or any other matter.
(7)Rules of court may make provision—
(a)for the Welsh Ministers to be a party to proceedings in the High Court or the Court of Appeal brought by virtue of this section, either generally or in circumstances specified in the rules;
(b)about the powers of the High Court or the Court of Appeal to remit the matter to the Welsh Ministers for re-hearing and determination in accordance with the opinion or direction of the court.
(8)Proceedings in the High Court under this section may only be brought with the permission of the High Court.
(9)An appeal to the Court of Appeal by virtue of this section may only be brought with the permission of the High Court or the Court of Appeal.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of sections 186 and 187.
(2)“Decision document” means a document which records—
(a)a decision to which section 182 applies (see subsection (2) of that section),
(b)a decision on an appeal under section 127 (appeal against enforcement notice), or
(c)any other decision made under or by virtue of Part 3, Part 4 or this Part that is of a description specified in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(3)“Correctable error” means an error which—
(a)is contained in any part of the decision document which records the decision, but
(b)is not part of any reasons given for the decision,
and “error” includes omission.
(1)This section applies where a decision document is issued which contains a correctable error.
(2)If, before the end of the review period, the Welsh Ministers—
(a)receive a request in writing to correct the error from any person, or
(b)send a statement in writing to the applicant which explains the error and states that they are considering correcting it,
the Welsh Ministers must decide whether or not to correct the error.
(3)But the Welsh Ministers may not make a correction unless they have informed the planning authority that they have received the request mentioned in subsection (2)(a) or sent the statement mentioned in subsection (2)(b).
(4)The review period is—
(a)where the decision document records a decision to which section 182 applies, the period within which an application for permission to apply for statutory review under section 183 may be made to the High Court;
(b)where the decision document records a decision on an appeal under section 127 to which section 182 does not apply, the period within which an application for permission to bring proceedings under section 184 may be made to the High Court, not including any time by which the High Court may extend that period,
and it does not matter whether any such application is actually made.
(5)As soon as practicable after the Welsh Ministers correct the error or decide not to correct it, they must issue a correction notice.
(6)A correction notice is a notice which—
(a)specifies the correction of the error, or
(b)gives notice of a decision not to correct it.
(7)The Welsh Ministers must serve the correction notice on—
(a)the applicant;
(b)if the applicant is not the owner of the building or other land to which the original decision relates, every owner of the building or land;
(c)the planning authority;
(d)if the correction was requested by any other person, that person;
(e)any other person who is specified, or is of a description specified, in regulations made by the Welsh Ministers.
(8)Where the decision document was issued by a person appointed under section 173, the functions of the Welsh Ministers under this section may also be exercised by that person or by any other person appointed under that section to determine appeals instead of the Welsh Ministers.
(9)In this section—
“the applicant” (“y ceisydd”) means the person who made the application or appeal, or served the purchase notice, to which the original decision relates;
“owner” (“perchennog”), in relation to a building or other land, means—
an owner of the freehold estate in the building or land, or
a tenant under a lease of the building or land granted or extended for a fixed term that has at least 7 years left to run;
“the planning authority” (“yr awdurdod cynllunio”) means the planning authority in whose area the building or other land to which the original decision relates is situated.
(1)If a correction is made under section 186—
(a)the original decision is to be treated as not having been made;
(b)the decision is to be treated for all purposes as having been made on the day the correction notice is issued.
(2)If a correction is not made—
(a)the original decision continues to have effect;
(b)section 186 and this section do not affect anything done in pursuance of or in relation to the decision.
(3)Where a correction notice is issued in relation to a decision to which section 182 applies, section 183 applies to the correction notice as if it were a decision to which section 182 applies.
(4)Where a correction notice is issued in relation to a decision to which section 184 applies, section 184 applies to the correction notice as if it were a decision to which that section applies.
(5)Where regulations under section 185(2)(c) specify a description of decision, the Welsh Ministers must by regulations make provision which corresponds to section 183 or 184 for questioning the validity of a correction notice issued in relation to a decision of that description.
(6)The validity of a correction notice may not be questioned in any legal proceedings except to the extent provided by virtue of this section.
(1)This section applies to anything that is required or authorised to be done for the purposes of Part 3, Part 4 or this Part by or in relation to an owner of an interest in land (including an interest only as an occupier of the land).
(2)To the extent that the interest is a Crown interest or a Duchy interest, the thing must be done by or in relation to the appropriate Crown authority.
(1)This section applies where a notice or other document is required or authorised under or by virtue of Part 3, Part 4 or this Part to be served on the Crown.
(2)The document must be served on the appropriate Crown authority.
(3)Sections 205 and 206 (general provisions about methods of service) do not apply to the service of the document.
(1)A planning authority must not take a relevant enforcement step in relation to Crown land without the agreement of the appropriate Crown authority.
(2)The appropriate Crown authority may give agreement subject to conditions.
(3)In this section “relevant enforcement step” means anything done in connection with the enforcement of a requirement or prohibition imposed by or under Part 3, Part 4 or this Part.
(4)It includes—
(a)entering land, and
(b)bringing proceedings or making an application.
(5)But it does not include—
(a)issuing or serving a notice (for example an enforcement notice or temporary stop notice), or
(b)making an order (for example an order under section 107 or 115).
In this Part “local authority” has the meaning given by section 157.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must maintain a register of parks and gardens in Wales they consider to be of special historic interest, and must publish the up-to-date register.
(2)The Welsh Ministers must decide whether, or to what extent, to include as part of the registration of a park or garden—
(a)any building or water on, adjoining or adjacent to it, or
(b)any land adjoining or adjacent to it.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may amend the register by—
(a)adding an entry,
(b)removing an entry, or
(c)amending an entry.
(4)As soon as possible after amending the register, the Welsh Ministers must—
(a)serve notice that they have done so on the persons mentioned in subsection (5), and
(b)in the case of any amendment under subsection (3)(a) or (c), include with the notice a copy of the entry or amended entry in the register.
(5)The persons referred to in subsection (4) are—
(a)every owner and occupier of the park or garden in question (including, if different, the owners and occupiers of anything appearing in the register by virtue of subsection (2));
(b)the planning authority in whose area the park or garden is situated (including, if different, the planning authority in whose area anything appearing in the register by virtue of subsection (2) is situated).
(6)In this section references to parks and gardens include—
(a)places of recreation, and
(b)any other designed grounds (including designed ornamental landscapes).
The Welsh Ministers must maintain a list of historic place names in Wales, and must publish the up-to-date list.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must maintain a historic environment record for every local authority area.
(2)A historic environment record is a record which provides—
(a)details of every scheduled monument in the authority’s area,
(b)details of every listed building in the authority’s area,
(c)details of every conservation area in the authority’s area,
(d)details of every park or garden in the authority’s area which is included in the register of historic parks and gardens maintained under section 192,
(e)details of every conflict site in the authority’s area which the Welsh Ministers consider to be of historic interest,
(f)where a public authority (whether by itself or jointly with other persons) maintains a list of historic landscapes in Wales, details of every historic landscape in the local authority’s area which is included in the list,
(g)details of every world heritage site in the authority’s area,
(h)details of every other area or site in the authority’s area which the authority considers or the Welsh Ministers consider to be of local historic, archaeological or architectural interest,
(i)information about the way in which the historic, archaeological or architectural development of the authority’s area, or any part of it, has contributed to the present character of the area or part and about how that character may be preserved,
(j)details of relevant investigations carried out in the authority’s area and of the findings of those investigations, and
(k)a means of accessing details of every historic place name in the authority’s area which is included in the list maintained under section 193.
(3)In subsection (2)(e) “conflict site” means—
(a)a battlefield or a site on which some other conflict involving military forces took place, or
(b)a site on which significant activities relating to a battle or other conflict involving military forces occurred.
(4)In subsection (2)(g) “world heritage site” means anything appearing on the World Heritage List kept under Article 11(2) of the UNESCO Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage adopted at Paris on 16 November 1972.
(5)In subsection (2)(j) “relevant investigation” means—
(a)an investigation by a local authority or the Welsh Ministers for the purpose of obtaining information of historic, archaeological or architectural interest relating to the authority’s area, and
(b)any other investigation for that purpose which the Welsh Ministers consider appropriate to include in the record.
(6)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations amend this section to vary the meaning of “historic environment record”.
(7)Before making regulations under subsection (6), the Welsh Ministers must consult—
(a)every local authority, and
(b)any other persons the Welsh Ministers consider appropriate.
(8)For the purposes of this section—
(a)any reference to a local authority’s area includes, in the case of an authority whose area includes part of the seashore, any part of the sea that lies seaward from that part of the shore and forms part of Wales, and
(b)an area, site or thing is to be treated as being in a local authority’s area if any part of it is in the area.
(9)In this section and section 196, “local authority” means a county council or county borough council in Wales.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must—
(a)make every historic environment record available for public inspection, and
(b)make available to a person wishing to inspect a historic environment record advice on or assistance with retrieving and understanding information provided in the record or accessed by means of the record.
(2)If—
(a)a person requests a copy of part of a historic environment record or of details accessed by means of such a record, and
(b)the Welsh Ministers consider that the request is reasonable,
the Welsh Ministers must provide the person with that copy or those details.
(3)If—
(a)a person requests the retrieval of information provided in a historic environment record or accessed by means of such a record, and
(b)the Welsh Ministers consider that the request is reasonable,
the Welsh Ministers must compile a document for the person containing the information.
(4)In assessing whether a request is reasonable for the purposes of subsection (2) or (3), the matters which the Welsh Ministers may take into account include any previous requests made by or on behalf of the person concerned.
(5)The Welsh Ministers may charge a fee for—
(a)providing advice or assistance under subsection (1)(b);
(b)providing a copy or details under subsection (2);
(c)compiling a document under subsection (3).
(6)A fee must be calculated by reference to the cost of providing the service to which the fee relates.
(1)The Welsh Ministers must issue guidance to the bodies listed in subsection (2) on—
(a)how the bodies may contribute to the compilation of historic environment records and assist in maintaining the records, and
(b)the use of historic environment records in the exercise of the bodies’ functions.
(2)The bodies are—
(a)local authorities,
(b)National Park authorities in Wales, and
(c)Natural Resources Wales.
(3)Those bodies must have regard to the guidance.
(4)Before issuing guidance under this section, the Welsh Ministers must consult—
(a)the bodies, and
(b)any other persons they consider appropriate.
(5)The Welsh Ministers must lay before Senedd Cymru any guidance issued under this section.
(1)A relevant authority may serve a notice (an “information notice”) requiring the occupier of any land or a person who receives rent (either directly or indirectly) in respect of any land to confirm in writing—
(a)the nature of the person’s interest in the land, and
(b)the name and address of any other person known to the person as having an interest in the land.
(2)But a relevant authority may not serve an information notice unless the information required by the notice is needed by the authority to enable it to—
(a)exercise any of the authority’s functions under or by virtue of Part 2, or
(b)make an order or issue or serve a notice or other document under or by virtue of Part 3, 4 or 5.
(3)An information notice may require the information to be given within—
(a)21 days beginning with the day after the day the notice is served, or
(b)any longer period specified by the notice or allowed by the relevant authority.
(4)In this section “relevant authority” means—
(a)the Welsh Ministers;
(b)a local authority (within the meaning given by section 157).
(1)A person required to provide information by a notice under section 197 commits an offence if the person fails, without reasonable excuse, to provide the information.
(2)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (1) is liable on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the standard scale.
(3)A person required to provide information by a notice under section 197 commits an offence if the person, in purported compliance with the notice, knowingly provides information which is false or misleading in a material respect.
(4)A person guilty of an offence under subsection (3) is liable on summary conviction, or on conviction on indictment, to a fine.
(1)This section applies to an interest in Crown land which is not a private interest.
(2)Section 197 does not apply to an interest to which this section applies.
(3)But the Welsh Ministers may, for the purpose of enabling a relevant authority to exercise a function mentioned in section 197(2)(a) or (b), request the appropriate Crown authority to confirm in writing—
(a)the nature of the authority’s interest in the land;
(b)the name and address of any other person known to the authority as having an interest in the land.
(4)The appropriate Crown authority must comply with a request under subsection (3) except to the extent—
(a)that the information requested is not within the knowledge of the authority, or
(b)that to do so will disclose information about—
(i)national security, or
(ii)the measures taken or to be taken to ensure the security of any land or other property.
(1)This section applies where an offence under this Act committed by a body corporate is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to neglect on the part of—
(a)a senior officer of the body, or
(b)a person who was purporting to be a senior officer of the body.
(2)The senior officer or person (as well as the body corporate) is guilty of the offence, and is liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(3)In this section “senior officer” means a director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the body corporate.
(4)But in the case of a body corporate whose affairs are managed by its members, “director” means a member of the body.
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations make any provision in relation to an offence under this Act that they could make under Part 3 of RESA 2008 (civil sanctions) if, for the purposes of that Part—
(a)the Welsh Ministers or any other authority which has an enforcement function in relation to the offence were a regulator, and
(b)the offence were a relevant offence in relation to that regulator.
(2)Sections 59(3) and 60(1) and (2) of RESA 2008 (consultation) apply to regulations under subsection (1) as they apply to an order under Part 3 of RESA 2008.
(3)Sections 63 to 70 of RESA 2008 (guidance, exercise of powers, payment into Welsh Consolidated Fund and disclosure of information) apply in relation to provision made under subsection (1) as they apply in relation to provision made under Part 3 of RESA 2008.
(4)In subsection (1) the reference to an authority which has an enforcement function is to be interpreted in accordance with section 71 of RESA 2008.
(5)In this section “RESA 2008” means the Regulatory Enforcement and Sanctions Act 2008 (c. 13).
(1)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations—
(a)make provision about how a claim for compensation under this Act must be made;
(b)amend any provision of this Act which specifies the period within which a claim for compensation must be made.
(2)The Welsh Ministers may extend the period for making a claim for compensation under this Act in a particular case, if they are satisfied that there are good reasons for doing so.
(3)The period for making a claim may be extended—
(a)at any time, whether before or after the period ends, and
(b)more than once.
(1)Any dispute about compensation under this Act is to be referred to and determined by the Upper Tribunal.
(2)Section 4 of the Land Compensation Act 1961 (c. 33) (costs) applies to the determination of a question referred under this section as it applies to the determination of a question referred under section 1 of that Act, but as if references to the acquiring authority were references to the person from whom compensation is claimed.
(1)The rules in section 5 of the Land Compensation Act 1961 (c. 33) have effect for the purpose of assessing any compensation for depreciation payable under this Act, so far as relevant and with any necessary modifications, as they have effect for the purpose of assessing compensation for the compulsory acquisition of an interest in land.
(2)Where an interest in land is subject to a mortgage—
(a)any compensation for depreciation that is payable under this Act in respect of the interest must be assessed as if the interest were not subject to the mortgage;
(b)a claim for compensation for depreciation may be made by any mortgagee of the interest, but that does not affect the right of the person whose interest is subject to the mortgage to make a claim;
(c)no compensation for depreciation is payable in respect of the interest of the mortgagee (as distinct from the interest that is subject to the mortgage);
(d)any compensation for depreciation that is payable in respect of the interest subject to the mortgage must be paid to the mortgagee or, if there is more than one mortgagee, to the first mortgagee; and it must be applied by the mortgagee to whom it is paid as if it were proceeds of sale.
(3)In this section “compensation for depreciation” means compensation for loss or damage consisting of depreciation of the value of an interest in land.
(1)This section applies where a provision contained in or made under this Act requires or authorises a notice or other document to be served on a person (whether the provision uses the word “serve” or “give” or any other term).
(2)The document may be served on the person in any of the following ways—
(a)by handing it to the person or, in the case of a person who is a body corporate, handing it to the secretary or clerk of the body at its registered or principal office;
(b)by leaving it at the person’s usual or last known place of residence or, if the person has given an address for service, at that address;
(c)by sending it by post in a pre-paid letter—
(i)addressed to the person at the person’s usual or last known place of residence or, in the case of a person who is a body corporate, addressed to the secretary or clerk of the body at its registered or principal office, or
(ii)if the person has given an address for service, addressed to the person at that address;
(d)if the person has given an address for service using electronic communications, by sending it to the person at that address using an electronic communication which complies with the conditions in subsection (3).
(3)The conditions are that the document is—
(a)capable of being accessed by the person to whom it is sent,
(b)legible in all material respects, and
(c)capable of being used for subsequent reference.
(4)Where an electronic communication is used to serve a document on a person and is received by the person outside the person’s business hours, the document is to be treated as having been served on the next working day.
(5)See section 233 of the Local Government Act 1972 (c. 70) for additional provision about the methods by which local authorities may serve documents.
(1)This section applies (in addition to section 205) where a provision contained in or made under this Act requires or authorises a notice or other document to be served on a person—
(a)as having an interest in a building, monument or land, or
(b)as an occupier of a building, monument or land.
(2)Where the document is to be served on a person as having an interest in a building, monument or land, and the name of the person cannot be discovered after making reasonable inquiries, the document may be addressed to the person as “the owner” of the building, monument or land (which must be described).
(3)Where the document is to be served on a person as an occupier of a building, monument or land, it may be addressed to the person by name or as “the occupier” of the building, monument or land (which must be described).
(4)Subsection (5) applies—
(a)where—
(i)a document is to be served on a person as having an interest in a building, monument or land,
(ii)the person’s usual or last known place of residence cannot be discovered after making reasonable inquiries, and
(iii)the person has not given an address for the service of the document, or
(b)where a document is to be served on a person as an occupier of a building, monument or land.
(5)The document is to be treated as properly served if it is addressed to the person, clearly marked as an important communication affecting the person’s property, and is—
(a)sent to the building, monument or land by post and not returned as undelivered,
(b)handed to a person who is, or appears to be, resident or employed in or on the building, monument or land, or
(c)attached conspicuously to the building or monument or to an object on the site of the monument or on the land.
(1)This section applies for the purposes of this Act.
(2)“Crown land” means land in which there is a Crown interest or a Duchy interest.
(3)“Crown interest” means an interest which—
(a)belongs to His Majesty in right of the Crown or in right of His private estates, or
(b)belongs to a government department or is held in trust for His Majesty for the purposes of a government department.
(4)“Duchy interest” means—
(a)an interest belonging to His Majesty in right of the Duchy of Lancaster, or
(b)an interest belonging to the Duchy of Cornwall.
(5)“Private interest”, in relation to Crown land, means an interest which is neither a Crown interest nor a Duchy interest.
(6)“Appropriate Crown authority”, in relation to Crown land, means—
(a)in the case of land belonging to His Majesty in right of the Crown and forming part of the Crown Estate, the Crown Estate Commissioners;
(b)in relation to any other land belonging to His Majesty in right of the Crown, the government department having the management of the land;
(c)in relation to land belonging to His Majesty in right of His private estates, a person appointed by His Majesty in writing under the Royal Sign Manual or, if no such appointment is made, the Welsh Ministers;
(d)in relation to land belonging to His Majesty in right of the Duchy of Lancaster, the Chancellor of the Duchy;
(e)in relation to land belonging to the Duchy of Cornwall, a person appointed by the Duke of Cornwall or by the possessor for the time being of the Duchy;
(f)in the case of land belonging to a government department or held in trust for His Majesty for the purposes of a government department, the department.
(7)“The Crown” is to be treated as including the Senedd Commission.
(8)Any question that arises about who is the appropriate Crown authority in relation to any land must be referred to the Treasury, whose decision is final.
(9)In this section—
(a)references to His Majesty’s private estates are to be read in accordance with section 1 of the Crown Private Estates Act 1862 (c. 37);
(b)references to a government department include a Minister of the Crown and the Senedd Commission (and see section 85 of the Government of Wales Act 2006 (c. 32), which provides for references to a government department to include the Welsh Ministers, the First Minister and the Counsel General).
(1)Where any provision contained in or made under this Act requires or authorises a notice or other document to be served on an owner of land, and the land is Church of England land, a corresponding document must also be served on the appropriate Board of Finance.
(2)Church of England land belonging to an ecclesiastical benefice which is vacant is to be treated for the purposes of this Act as belonging to the appropriate Board of Finance.
(3)Any compensation payable under this Act in relation to Church of England land must be—
(a)paid to the appropriate Board of Finance, and
(b)applied by that Board for the purposes for which the proceeds of a sale by agreement of the land would be applicable under any enactment or Church Measure authorising or disposing of the proceeds of such a sale.
(4)Where an amount is recoverable under section 22 in relation to Church of England land, the appropriate Board of Finance may apply any money or securities held by it towards repaying that amount.
(5)In this section—
“appropriate Board of Finance” (“Bwrdd Cyllid priodol”), in relation to any land, means the Diocesan Board of Finance for the diocese in which the land is situated;
“Church Measure” (“Mesur gan Eglwys Loegr”) means a Measure of the Church Assembly or of the General Synod of the Church of England;
“Church of England land” (“tir Eglwys Loegr”) means land which—
belongs to an ecclesiastical benefice of the Church of England,
is or forms part of a church subject to the jurisdiction of a bishop of a diocese of the Church of England or the site of such a church, or
is or forms part of a burial ground subject to the jurisdiction of such a bishop.
(1)A power to make regulations under this Act is exercisable by statutory instrument.
(2)A power to make regulations under this Act includes power—
(a)to make different provision for different purposes;
(b)to make incidental, supplementary, consequential, transitory, transitional or saving provision.
(3)In the case of regulations made under the powers mentioned in subsection (4), the provision that may be made by virtue of subsection (2)(b) includes provision that amends, repeals or revokes any enactment, including any provision of this Act.
(4)The powers referred to in subsection (3) are the powers conferred by—
(a)section 167 (fees for exercise of planning authority functions);
(b)section 172 (fees for appeals relating to listed buildings and buildings in conservation areas);
(c)section 174(8) (proceedings for which Welsh Ministers must determine procedure);
(d)sections 185(2)(c), 186(7)(e) and 187(5) (correction of decisions).
(5)A statutory instrument containing any of the following may not be made unless a draft of the instrument has been laid before, and approved by a resolution of, Senedd Cymru—
(a)regulations under section 2(3) (religious buildings that are to be treated as monuments);
(b)regulations under section 26(8) (application of provisions to scheduled monument partnership agreements);
(c)regulations under section 114(8) (application of provisions to listed building partnership agreements);
(d)regulations under section 147 (steps for preservation of listed buildings in disrepair);
(e)regulations under section 167 (fees for exercise of planning authority functions);
(f)regulations under section 172 (fees for appeals relating to listed buildings and buildings in conservation areas);
(g)regulations under section 201 (civil sanctions);
(h)regulations that amend or repeal any enactment contained in primary legislation (including any provision of this Act).
(6)Any other statutory instrument containing regulations under this Act is subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of Senedd Cymru.
(7)In subsection (5)(h) “primary legislation” means—
(a)an Act of Senedd Cymru;
(b)an Assembly Measure;
(c)an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
In this Act—
“address” (“cyfeiriad”), in relation to electronic communications, means any number or address used for the purpose of electronic communications;
“appropriate Crown authority” (“awdurdod priodol y Goron”) has the meaning given by section 207(6);
“building” (“adeilad”) (except in Part 2) means—
any building or structure, or
any part of a building or structure,
but does not (except in section 148) include plant or machinery forming part of a building or structure;
“conservation area” (“ardal gadwraeth”) means an area designated under section 158;
“conservation area consent (“cydsyniad ardal gadwraeth”) has the meaning given by section 162;
“the Crown” (“y Goron”) is to be interpreted in accordance with section 207(7);
“Crown interest” (“buddiant y Goron”) has the meaning given by section 207(3);
“Crown land” (“tir y Goron”) has the meaning given by section 207(2);
“development” (“datblygiad”) has the meaning given by section 55 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8);
“disposal” (“gwaredu”), in relation to land, means disposal by sale, exchange or lease, by creating an easement, right or privilege, or in any other way, but does not include disposal by appropriation, gift or mortgage;
“Duchy interest” (“buddiant y Ddugiaeth”) has the meaning given by section 207(4);
“electronic communication” (“cyfathrebiad electronig”) has the meaning given by section 15(1) of the Electronic Communications Act 2000 (c. 7);
“enactment (“deddfiad”) means any enactment, whenever enacted or made;
“functions” (“swyddogaethau”) includes powers and duties;
“land” (“tir”)—
means any corporeal hereditament, including a building or monument, and
in relation to the acquisition of land, includes any interest in or right over land;
“lease” (“les”) includes an underlease and an agreement for a lease or underlease, but does not include an option to take a lease or a mortgage;
“listed building” (“adeilad rhestredig”) has the meaning given by section 76;
“listed building consent” (“cydsyniad adeilad rhestredig”) has the meaning given by section 89;
“listed building partnership agreement” (“cytundeb partneriaeth adeilad rhestredig”) has the meaning given by section 113(5);
“monument” (“heneb”) is to be interpreted in accordance with section 2;
“owner” (“perchennog”), in relation to land (except in sections 15, 25, 26, 91, 113 and 186), means a person who, whether in their own right or as trustee for any other person—
is entitled to receive the rack rent of the land, or
would be so entitled if the land were let at a rack rent,
but does not include a mortgagee who is not in possession;
“planning authority” (“awdurdod cynllunio”) means a local planning authority, within the meaning given by Part 1 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8), for an area in Wales;
“planning permission” (“caniatâd cynllunio”) has the meaning given by section 336(1) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8);
“private interest” (“buddiant preifat”), in relation to Crown land, has the meaning given by section 207(5);
“scheduled monument” (“heneb gofrestredig”) has the meaning given by section 3(7);
“site” (“safle”), in relation to a monument, is to be interpreted in accordance with section 2;
“statutory undertaker” (“ymgymerwr statudol”) means a person who—
is a statutory undertaker within the meaning given by section 262 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (c. 8), or
is deemed by that section to be a statutory undertaker for the purposes of any provision of that Act,
and references to the “undertaking” of a statutory undertaker are to be interpreted in accordance with that section.
(1)Schedule 13 contains minor and consequential amendments and repeals.
(2)Schedule 14 contains transitional and saving provisions.
(3)The Welsh Ministers may by regulations—
(a)make provision that is incidental or supplementary to, or consequential on, any provision of this Act;
(b)make transitional, transitory or saving provision in connection with any provision of this Act.
(4)Regulations under subsection (3) may amend, repeal or revoke any enactment (including any provision of this Act).
(1)The following provisions come into force on the day after the day this Act receives Royal Assent—
(a)Part 1;
(b)section 209;
(c)section 210;
(d)section 211(3) and (4);
(e)this section;
(f)section 213.
(2)The other provisions of this Act come into force on a day appointed by the Welsh Ministers in an order made by statutory instrument.
(3)An order under subsection (2) may make transitional, transitory or saving provision in connection with the coming into force of a provision of this Act.
The short title of this Act is the Historic Environment (Wales) Act 2023.