The Local Government Association has called on ministers to drop plans to transfer responsibility for local land charges to the Land Registry.

It said the proposal in the Infrastructure Bill should be halted until an independent review of the concept can take place.

Land charges services could be improved locally, instead of going through a national transformation “that is likely to have a negative impact on the system”, it said.

An LGA briefing noted that a survey among conveyancers by the Local Land Charges Institute last autumn found 67% preferred a local service and were satisfied with the overall provision by local authorities.

Centralising the service would hamper efforts to integrate it with planning, highways and other locally regulated services, it said.

The LGA also warned that handing land charges registration functions to the registry would separate them from the additional land searches process (known as CON29), which local authorities will continue to provide.

Councils would therefore still need to employ people to collate information locally for the registry, but would lose fee income.

“The proposals risk stripping councils of income, while leaving them with many of the current costs,” it said.

The LGA’s warnings came as the Land Registry confirmed its intention to proceed with the plan, despite widespread opposition.

Some 95% of respondents to the consultation said the organisation should not proceed with its plans to take over local authorities’ local land charge registration functions.

The LGA meanwhile had other concerns about the wide-ranging Bill, which draws together a number of measures related to the built environment.

It said community benefit and compensation packages for fracking should be put on a statutory footing and that fracking sites should be permitted only through councils and the planning system.

The LGA added that:

A copy of the LGA’s briefing can be viewed here.

Mark Smulian