Every area in England should be handed a new local housing deal
by 2025 which combines funding from multiple national housing
programmes into a single pot to spark a “generational
step-change” in council housebuilding, the outgoing Chairman of
the Local Government Association says today.
Cllr James Jamieson, whose four-year term as LGA Chairman ends at
the start of its Annual Conference in Bournemouth tomorrow (July
4) – is setting out a six-point plan to deliver on council
ambitions that could, over time, support the delivery of 100 more
council homes in every local authority per year.
Over recent decades, construction of new homes has failed to keep
pace with population growth and social changes. At the same time,
there are currently not enough affordable homes to meet current
demand with more than 1.2 million households on council waiting
lists in England and over 100,000 households living in temporary
accommodation.
This housing shortage has seen rents and property prices rise
significantly faster than incomes, acutely impacting the lowest
income and vulnerable families and individuals.
Recent government measures to lift the housing borrowing cap,
enable councils to receive preferential Public Works Loan Board
borrowing rates and allow councils to keep all Right to Buy
receipts for two years are positive steps in the right direction
to boosting the supply of social housing.
The LGA said more needs to be done to rapidly build more
genuinely affordable homes to help families struggling to meet
housing costs, provide homes to rent, reduce homelessness and
tackle the housing waiting lists many councils have.
It is calling for the Government to go further and faster in
order for councils to be able to properly resume their historic
role as a major builder of affordable homes by implementing a
six-point plan for affordable housing.
- Roll-out five-year local housing deals to all areas of the
country that want them by 2025 – combining funding from multiple
national housing programmes into a single pot. This will provide
the funding, flexibility, certainty and confidence to stimulate
housing supply, and will remove national restrictions which
stymie innovation and delivery.
- Government support to set up a new national council
housebuilding delivery taskforce, bringing together a team of
experts to provide additional capacity and improvement support
for housing delivery teams within councils and their
partners.
- Continued access to preferential borrowing rates through the
Public Works Loans Board (PWLB), introduced in the Spring Budget,
to support the delivery of social housing and local authorities
borrowing for Housing Revenue Accounts.
- Further reform to Right to Buy which includes allowing
councils to retain 100 per cent of receipts on a permanent basis;
flexibility to combine Right to Buy receipts with other
government grants; the ability to set the size of discounts
locally; and the ability to recycle a greater proportion of
receipts into building replacement homes paying off housing
debt.
- Review and increase where needed the grant levels per home
through the Affordable Homes Programme, as inflationary pressures
have caused the cost of building new homes to rise, leaving
councils needing grant funding to fund a larger proportion of a
new build homes than before.
- Certainty on future rents, to enable councils to invest.
Government must commit to a minimum 10-year rent deal for council
landlords to allow a longer period of annual rent increases and
long-term certainty.
Cllr Jamieson, said:
“Housing is too often unavailable, unaffordable, and is not
appropriate for everyone that needs it. The right homes in the
right areas can have significant wider benefits for people and
communities and prevent future public service challenges and
costs.
“Addressing the chronic housing shortage must be a national
priority. Our six-point plan would lead to a generational
step-change in council housebuilding and give local government
the powers and funding to deliver thousands of affordable homes a
year– at scale, and fast.
“A genuine renaissance in council housebuilding would unlock
local government’s historic role as a major builder of affordable
homes, which support strong and healthy communities and help to
build prosperous places.”
Notes to editors
The three-day LGA Annual Conference begins in Bournemouth on
Tuesday. Speakers include Levelling Up Secretary MP, Labour Leader
Sir MP, Education
Secretary MP and Liberal
Democrat Leader .
The LGA will also be publishing a series of Make it Local
briefings, setting out how local government can solve the
challenges we face as a nation and how the Government can
radically reset the culture of Whitehall.
Visit our Annual Conference
website to view the full programme. To book your place,
please contact media.office@local.gov.uk
for a media promotion code which you can use to obtain a
complimentary pass.