Liberal Democrat conference has passed a motion calling for the
Government to ensure everyone has a right to affordable, safe and
secure homes in England.



The motion included a commitment to build at least 50,000 new
social homes for rent every year, as part of the long-standing
commitment of the Liberal Democrats to build 300,000 homes a year
over the next decade.
It also called for better environmental standards for
housing, to reduce both fuel poverty and greenhouse gas
emissions, and to deliver more security for tenants in
the private rented sector through increasing landlords’
notice period from 2 months to 6 months and an expansion of the
‘rent to buy’ scheme.
The creation of a British Housing Company which would acquire
unused land for building through compulsory acquisition was also
incorporated into the motion.
Commenting, Liberal Democrat Housing Spokesperson
MP said:
“Radical action must be taken to ensure people have the right to
live in an affordable and secure home. With our country in the
midst of a housing crisis and homelessness at a record high, the
Government’s inaction is a dereliction of duty.
“If we are to truly tackle the housing crisis, we must embark on
a large programme to rebuild our social housing stock. We
must also alleviate the insecurity faced by many tenants in the
private rented sector such as through giving tenants a minimum of
six months’ notice before they have to leave the property.
“The housing crisis is a human crisis and this country must
demand better of its Government. It is long overdue they made a
sincere effort to create a national strategy for investment in
housing, rather than the piecemeal approach we have seen thus
far”.
ENDS
Notes to editors:
Conference notes that:
I.
Homelessness is at record levels with rough sleeping rising,
large numbers of young people sofa hopping and tens of thousands
of homeless families trapped in unsuitable temporary
accommodation.
II.
Over the last decade Government subsidies for rent through
housing benefit have tripled to around £25 billion (of which £10
billion goes to private landlords) when subsidies to increase the
supply of social housing have declined to around £1 billion a
year.
III.
The ratio of house prices to gross average earnings per head is
at record levels of around 10 to 1 and that as a result home
ownership has become unaffordable for most young people and for
most people on average incomes.
IV.
Too many people have been forced into the private rented sector
which now provides one fifth of all homes in the UK, a third of
which fail to meet the Decent Homes Standard.
V.
Government policies to promote owner occupation through taxpayer
subsidies have boosted demand and house prices without effective
measures to increase supply and affordability.
VI.
The number of new social homes has contracted from over 200,000 a
year at its peak to the unacceptable level of just 1,400 social
home starts in 2017/18.
VII. The
market in land does not work in the public interest, with large
builders getting unearned rewards for hoarding land and
restricting supply with house prices forced upwards thus making
homes unaffordable for most first-time buyers, and the present
system of viability assessments for affordable housing being too
weighted in favour of the developer leading to inflated land
prices at the expense of infrastructure, affordable housing, and
design quality.
VIII. One and a
half million council homes have been sold under the Right to Buy
with only one replacement for every five sold.
Conference believes that:
a) Government housing policies have increased social,
financial and inter-generational inequalities.
b) There are still too many long-term empty homes which are seen
as financial investments rather than places to live.
c) Local government can play a critical role in achieving
the number of homes required by directing the use of publicly
owned land before disposal for affordable and social housing and
by being able to borrow both to buy land for housing and to build
it.
d) In the private rented sector, there should be:
- A system of mandatory licensing with a publicly available
database of rogue landlords
- Promotion of longer private tenancies with inflation or
wage-linked rents.
- A right to buy (or first refusal) for sitting tenants when a
landlord sells.
- A cap on upfront tenant deposits.
- A ban letting agents' fees.
e) Green space in towns and urban areas and green field
between towns are vital components of our quality of life and
provide essential protection for neighbourhoods against urban
sprawl.
f) Poor quality or disused land (for example, former petrol
stations and warehouses) defined as green belt may be suitable for
development as part of local or neighbourhood planning.
g) 'Rent to Own' homes would enable many younger people to
get on the housing ladder without a deposit by renting from housing
associations at a market level rent giving them an increasing stake
in their property over time.
i)Second home owners should always pay their fair share
of local taxation for the provision of local services.
j) Fiscal incentives could help to encourage older owner
occupiers to downsize their properties and should therefore be
considered further.
Conference calls for:
1.The creation of a British Housing Company as a dedicated,
arms-length, not for profit non-governmental body to acquire land
of low amenity at current use value through compulsory
acquisition to reduce prohibitive land costs and excessive
developer profits.
2. Removal of the cap on local authority borrowing.
3. The construction of 50,000 social homes for rent per year
by both councils and housing associations rising as soon as
practicable to 100,000 a year.
4. Local authorities to have the power to decide on the
availability of Right to Buy in their areas and for Right to Buy
receipts to be reinvested in social housing.
5. A big expansion in 'Rent to Own' where occupants pay rent
to housing associations, in return for an increasing stake in the
property over time.
6. Higher quality, safety and environmental standards in the
existing housing stock including the retrofitting of 4 million
homes to higher standards.
7. An increase to 500% in council tax levied where homes are
being deliberately bought as investment properties and left empty
for long periods with a stamp duty surcharge on overseas
residents purchasing such properties.
8. The Government to deliver its commitment to building
300,000 homes a year by
i) ensuring
the workforce in the construction industry is sufficient to build
them
ii) encouraging
new building techniques to build quality new homes in shorter
timescales.
9.
Local government to adopt a civic house building model working in
partnership with developers and supported by a planning system
which is less about gatekeeping planning applications and more
about creating places in which people want to live, work and
play.
Applicability: England only.