A pot of more than £2 million secured from developers for healthcare in Lewisham has still not been handed to the NHS, according to a new report. 

Local authorities use planning contributions, such as Section 106 agreements, to secure funding that will mitigate the impact of new developments on communities.  

The money can go to anything that improves local infrastructure, ensuring it can support the new development, such as healthcare and education.  

But according to a report on Freedom of Information requests from think-tank Reform, Lewisham has failed to allocate a significant chunk of the funding it secured between 2013 and 2019.  

The council received £3,130,715 through S106 agreements for healthcare but has only allocated £1,008,312 of the money, leaving more than £2 million yet to be allocated.  

A Lewisham Council spokesperson said the S106 funding for the NHS is “being spent” and the council “will continue to work with the CCG to identify ways to use this funding to deliver investment in vital health infrastructure and services in Lewisham”. 

She said: “S106 funding for the NHS is being spent.  

“In March 2019 we allocated £1m to the Waldron Health Centre to deliver improvements.  

“These include supporting the expansion of community-based services, primary care development and the integration of adult social care and health facilities.  

“We are actively working with the CCG to allocate the remaining S106 funding to develop hubs in three other neighbourhoods, and to identify ways to use this funding to deliver investment in vital health infrastructure and services in Lewisham.” 

The £1 million for the health centre is not part of the more than £2 million of unallocated NHS funds referred to above.

The report also showed that only 36 per cent of the local planning authorities who responded in full to the FOI requests had secured funds for healthcare infrastructure projects.  

And when councils do secure the funds, the NHS often fails to spend it – Lewisham has £882,283 left unspent currently.  

From interviews with NHS experts, the report cited “a lack of awareness of the Section 106 process, insufficient expertise and skills amongst staff, and poor coordination as key barriers to the use of Section 106”.