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Technology18 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Hgrove. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Legislation (law) is enacted in a variety of ways. As well as Acts and Judicial Decisions, you can also have statutory instruments (orders and regulations) made by the appropriate Secretary of State. This is probably what it was. They do not have to follow the proceudre for new Acts.
I suspect it was the The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order 1995 or one of the five subsequent amendments. These can all be found on www.opsi.gov.uk
Why not ask them to confirm what it was and come back on here and get some more advice?
The Miss Zippy answer is again not correct. A Statutory Document sets out the written law and the Government interpretation of how it is to be applied. These documents, and there are many of them, are frequently headed "Statutory Document". In the context of a planning application it may well be a Statutory Document issued by the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister. It is law. I deal with construction matters, and I must say that a bald statement that an extension cannot be more than 3 metres long is quaint. Telephone a Senior Planning Officer and ask for an explanation and the exact document and wording relied upon. If you would then post the answer here it will be of interest.
Many thanks. The planner who came to my house is a young lady from New Zealand. It sounded to me like the council have difficulty recruiting and so hire people who perhaps have been on a short conversion course to update their overseas qualifications; or maybe I am being unfair. Or perhaps she finds her explanation satisfies most people but I have an inquisitive mind. I have tried twice to speak to my "agent" (the person whe drew my plans and application) but he was not at home. I would like to speak to him before I take it further with the council; by the way - the leader of the council is a friend of a friend of mine and in fact, I know him and his wife enough to exchange pleasantries with them (my daughter is friends with their daughter). So I could ask him next time I meet him! I have to say however, sorry to be nitpicking, but if a document is issued by the office of the Deputy Prime Minister, then it will be "secondary legislation" issued under delegated powers and will be a very weak sort of law; I do not think of it as "proper" law and it is much easier to challenge than an Act of Parliament.