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London developers to be allowed to reduce percentage of affordable homes

1 day ago
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Developers will be allowed to build lower numbers of affordable homes and claim higher subsidies to build them under plans being drawn up by the government to solve London’s housebuilding crisis,Steve Reed, the housing secretary, and Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, will announce the package within weeks, in what officials say will be a time-limited intervention designed to stall the sudden drop in new building in the capital,The plans, details of which are still being negotiated, have been welcomed by developers but condemned by homelessness charities who say it will increase the record numbers of people who are homeless in the UK,A spokesperson for Khan said: “The mayor is working with the housing secretary on a package of reforms to boost housebuilding in the capital,“Expected to be launched in the coming weeks, the changes will aim to unblock stalled sites and give the mayor stronger levers to approve homes and bring thousands of homes forward more quickly as we continue to build a better, fairer, more prosperous London for all.

”Mairi MacRae, director of campaigns and policy at Shelter, said: “Plans to slash targets on affordable housing in London will allow profit-driven developers to continue looking after their bottom line at the expense of 97,000 children who are growing up homeless in the capital.“The government must urgently reverse these plans.”Ministers have put new housebuilding at the heart of their economic plans, with a target to build 1.5m homes over the course of the parliament, helped by changes to the planning system and billions more pounds for social housing.This has not been sufficient, however, to prevent a sudden and steep drop in housebuilding in London.

Figures published by the consultancy Molior this week (pdf) show the number of homes under construction in the capital has fallen from about 60,000 in 2015-2020 to 40,000 today.Molior’s projections suggest that number will fall further, to as low as 15,000 by 2027.In the first three months of 2025, builders began work on just 3,248 new private-sector homes in the capital.A report on Thursday by the Centre for Policy Studies showed this amounted to 0.12 new homes per 1,000 people, compared with a national average of 0.

5.Robert Colvile, the director of the Centre for Policy Studies, said: “We’re now in a situation where we’re building one 20th of the houses we need in London.That’s going to torpedo the government’s target of 1.5m homes.”Building homes in London has always been more expensive than in the rest of the country because of limited space, which means developers have to build taller projects and often have to knock down other buildings first.

In recent years, however, costs have increased rapidlyas a result of inflation, higher interest rates and tighter regulation after the Grenfell Tower fire.Experts say the Building Safety Regulator, which was set up after the disaster, has struggled to cope with the number of applications it receives, with about 10,000 applications stuck in the approval process.Khan and Reed are considering a number of measures to get the system moving quickly.Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionThe first would be to change the rules governing fast-track planning applications, which developers overwhelmingly use.To qualify for the fast-track process, companies currently need to include 35% of affordable homes in any new development.

The government is thinking of reducing that to 20%.The second measure would be to increase the amount of government subsidy available for building affordable units, so companies can be funded for as many as half of the cheaper homes they build.The third would be to give councils the option not to charge a tax known as the community infrastructure levy, which forces builders to pay for local services such as roads and GP surgeries.Officials want to include an automatic review period for the measures in case the economic situation improves before the end of Khan’s term in office in 2028.One said: “This is an emergency and we need to act.

There is next to no social housing currently being built in London, and 20% of something is better than 35% of nothing.”Kate Henderson, the chief executive of the National Housing Federation, said: “Whilst we recognise the unique challenges to development faced in London, it is essential that we do not water down our affordable housing ambitions.”The best public interest journalism relies on first-hand accounts from people in the know.If you have something to share on this subject, you can contact us confidentially using the following methods.Secure Messaging in the Guardian appThe Guardian app has a tool to send tips about stories.

Messages are end to end encrypted and concealed within the routine activity that every Guardian mobile app performs.This prevents an observer from knowing that you are communicating with us at all, let alone what is being said.If you don't already have the Guardian app, download it (iOS/Android) and go to the menu.Select ‘Secure Messaging’.SecureDrop, instant messengers, email, telephone and postIf you can safely use the Tor network without being observed or monitored, you can send messages and documents to the Guardian via our SecureDrop platform.

Finally, our guide at theguardian.com/tips lists several ways to contact us securely, and discusses the pros and cons of each.
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‘Legacies condensed to AI slop’: OpenAI Sora videos of the dead raise alarm with legal experts

Last night I was flicking through a dating app. One guy stood out: “Henry VIII, 34, King of England, nonmonogamy”. Next thing I know, I am at a candlelit bar sharing a martini with the biggest serial dater of the 16th century.But the night is not over. Next, I am DJing back-to-back with Diana, Princess of Wales

about 23 hours ago
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Dan and Phil’s relationship revelation is a reminder of how toxic fandoms can be | Eilish Gilligan

This week, longtime British YouTubers Dan Howell and Phil Lester uploaded a new video confirming they have been in a secret romantic relationship for the past 16 years.If you weren’t a deeply online child during the 2010s, you probably have no idea who Dan and Phil are, or why this matters. But to those who formed a robust parasocial bond with the duo – who have more than 13 million collective subscribers on YouTube – this was a revelatory moment. It was also a sobering reminder of the emotional damage that toxic fandoms can wreak on their subjects.Over the course of 45 minutes, Howell and Lester, now in their thirties, share the “apocalyptic constant stress of the Dan and Phil dating conspiracy”, where “fans” subjected them to frenzied speculation for 16 years straight

1 day ago
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Banks need stricter controls to prevent romance fraud, says City regulator

The City regulator has called on banks and payment firms to bring in stricter controls protecting customers from romance fraud after a study showed a number of missed “red flags” that led to people losing huge sums of money.The review by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) highlighted one case where someone lost £428,000, another where a customer made 403 payments totalling £72,000 to a fraudster and a case where someone wanted money to transfer cryptocurrency to their “partner” in Iraq.Romance scams, where criminals try to build emotional connections with victims before defrauding them, have been growing in scale and complexity in recent years.Figures from the City of London police put the loss from romance fraud at £106m last year, although the FCA says the real figure is much higher as many people do not report the crime owing to feelings of shame and stigma.The FCA review of six banks and payment firms looked at how they detect and prevent romance fraud and found large disparities in how victims of fraud were treated

1 day ago
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Launch of veteran card will be used to test UK government’s digital ID scheme

Former military personnel will be used to test and refine the government’s divisive digital ID scheme from Friday, when ministers make a smartphone-based veteran card available to 1.8 million people.The proof of service, which in its current physical version gives access to charities, retail discounts and certain public services, will be the first of a series of official credentials the government wants to let people carry in a government app.Digital driving licences will be in development by the end of this year and by the end of 2027, digital versions of every government-issued credential – including disclosure and barring checks – will be offered for voluntary use, officials said. Keir Starmer wants to make carrying a digital ID mandatory for anyone wanting or needing to prove their right to work in the UK by the end of this parliament

1 day ago
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Heed warnings from Wolmar on robotaxis | Brief letters

In assessing the merits of driverless taxis (Driverless taxis from Waymo will be on London’s roads next year, US firm announces, 15 October), passengers should consider the cautions presented in Christian Wolmar’s book Driverless Cars: On a Road to Nowhere. Adherence to Isaac Asimov’s first law of robotics (“A robot may not injure a human being”) requires the taxi to stop if a person steps in front of it. Highway robbery or worse may be facilitated.Prof Clive CoenKing’s College London Your article (Parliamentary staff of colour earn £2,000 less than white colleagues, study suggests, 12 October) says that disabled employees earn £646 less a year “than able-bodied colleagues”. Disabilities come in many forms, not all physical

1 day ago
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Barrister found to have used AI to prepare for hearing after citing ‘fictitious’ cases

An immigration barrister was found by a judge to be using AI to do his work for a tribunal hearing after citing cases that were “entirely fictitious” or “wholly irrelevant”.Chowdhury Rahman was discovered using ChatGPT-like software to prepare his legal research, a tribunal heard. Rahman was found not only to have used AI to prepare his work, but “failed thereafter to undertake any proper checks on the accuracy”.The upper tribunal judge Mark Blundell said Rahman had even tried to hide the fact he had used AI and “wasted” the tribunal’s time. Blundell said he was considering reporting Rahman to the Bar Standards Board

2 days ago
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UK MPs warn of repeat of 2024 riots unless online misinformation is tackled

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New Zealand v England: first men’s T20 cricket international – live

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Unbeaten England eye place in semi-finals but results have masked woeful batting displays | Raf Nicholson

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