BDBC Local Plan
Shaping the Basingstoke & Deane Borough Council Local Plan to ensure it works for our communities.
The work shown here is guided by community priorities that shape how I approach local issues. Below you'll find information about your parish council, the work areas relevant to this community, and updates on progress.
Steventon Parish Council represents the local community and handles parish-level matters. Find their contact information on the Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council website.
Contact Steventon Parish Council →Shaping the Basingstoke & Deane Borough Council Local Plan to ensure it works for our communities.
Helping residents report fly tipping and litter, and supporting BDBC to keep our local area clean.
Improving accessibility to countryside and green spaces, ensuring residents of all ages and abilities can enjoy them.
Informing residents about what a Hampshire Mayor means and how it will affect local decisions.
Supporting the right structure for local government that serves our communities best.
Ensuring safe, modern, and accessible play spaces for children and families across our villages.
Independent Councillors working to protect the River Test and Loddon through legally binding commitments.
Listening to residents' concerns about roads, footpaths and bridleways, and escalating them within Hampshire County Council (HCC) so issues are prioritised and acted on.
Basingstoke & Deane wouldn’t be big enough on its own, but could work with Hart and Rushmoor to create a North Hampshire Council. This would be closer to people than other proposals. We think North Hampshire is the better choice – it’s close enough to be local, but big enough to deliver all the services we need.
We are saying no to Hampshire County Council’s plan for a mega-council that would see Basingstoke combined with Petersfield and Winchester. We are backing the local plan for a North Hampshire Council.
Read more →Basingstoke & Deane Borough Council has opened a consultation on the Local Plan. This is a crucial opportunity to shape how our communities develop and ensure the plan reflects local priorities.
The Local Plan will set out:
I am engaging with the consultation to ensure:
Read more →The Government confirmed the timeline for local government reorganisation on 5 February 2025, when the Minister of State for Local Government and English Devolution invited councils in two-tier areas to develop proposals for unitary local government. The English Devolution White Paper was published on 16 December 2024, outlining the government’s vision, and the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill was introduced to Parliament on 10 July 2025. Councils were invited to submit interim reorganisation plans by 21 March 2025, with full proposals due by 28 November 2025.
Read more →Chalk streams like the River Test and the River Loddon are globally rare – and they’re under real pressure from pollution, over-abstraction and development.
Earlier this year, Basingstoke & Deane Borough Council backed a “Rights of Rivers” motion (led by an Independent councillor) to give these rivers much more weight in local decision‑making. The next step is practical: work with residents and partners to produce a local Declaration on the Rights of the River by spring 2026, and then use those principles to shape planning and policy (including the Local Plan).
Read more →A new Hampshire Mayor will bring changes to how decisions are made locally. I have created hampshiremayor.com – an independent political resource outlining what’s happening, what it means, and where to stay informed with documents and background information.
The Government wants Hampshire and the Isle of Wight to have a Mayor, like London or Manchester. It wants to replace borough, county and district councils with new unitary authorities. The site provides more information about what this means for residents.
Read more →Basingstoke & Deane Borough Council has backed a “Rights of Rivers” motion to strengthen protection for our locally important chalk streams – including the River Loddon and the River Test.
It’s a commitment to treat rivers as living ecosystems that deserve a stronger voice in decisions – especially when it comes to planning and development, and how we tackle pollution and over-abstraction.
The motion also commits the council to work with residents and partners to develop a local Declaration on the Rights of the River by spring 2026.
Read more →