PCC Logo

Community Council

of the Royal Burgh of Peebles & District

PCC Logo

Community Council

of the Royal Burgh of Peebles & District

View & comment on SBC applications

Use SBC's portal or their map search to find out about and comment on applications. You'll need to register first to comment.

Forgot your password? Click here to reset. Try logging out and closing your browser if you have trouble.

SBC's guide for commenting on an application tells you:

  • What a material planning consideration is
    • I.e. what planners take note of (and what they ignore)
  • How to make a comment on the planning portal
  • The postal address if you'd prefer to post your comment

SBC also have a guide for viewing an application with the portal. There's also a third-party step-by-step guide to registering.

Planning policies

The Statutory Development Plan (SDP) policies relevant to the Borders:

Expired plans include: the 2016 LDP (Vol 1 & Vol 2, adopted 12 May 2016); and previously the Consolidated Local Plan (Vol 1 & Vol 2, adopted 2011).

SBC explain this in full in their plans and guidance overview.

More SBC guidance available under Environment: Biodiversity & Planning; Technical Advice Notes (TANs), bats & otters; Tree Protection Orders (TPOs); and Conservation Areas.

Scottish legal principles also apply, such as: the Precautionary Principle; the Principle of Consistency; and European Protected Species (EPS) chief planner guidance.

Impactful comments

Planners are interested in how proposals affect you, your family and your community. They want to know your reasoning – be succinct. Ideally:

  • Mention one or more planning policies you think are relevant
  • Say clearly why you think these are relevant
  • Explain the 'so what' – e.g. if you think an application breaches a policy, why does this matter?

View/comment on wind farms & energy

Wind farm proposals in your area – even those at very early scoping stages – can be seen on Nature Scot's interactive map of wind farm proposals in Scotland.

To view and comment on applications for windfarms, battery storage, transmission and other energy infrastructure (reference numbers beginning "ECU") visit Scottish Government's Energy Consents Unit.

SBC's supplementary planning guidance on wind farms is relevant and includes the Nov 2016 Ironside Farrar "Update of Wind Energy Landscape Capacity and Cumulative Impact Study."

Local authorities, such as SBC, can approve onshore electricity generation of 50MW or less. Above this threshold, local authorities become a statutory consultee of ECU applications under section 36 of the Electricity Act 1989.

View/comment on forestry

Applications beginning "yyFGS" (Forestry Grant Scheme, yy=2-digit year) or "FPA" (Felling Permission Application) are available on the Scottish Forestry Public Register (help)