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Right to buy in reverse: how Brighton is tackling its social housing crisis | Richard Partington

1 day ago
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On a windswept housing estate by the Channel, Jacob Taylor surveys the latest addition to his property empire: a mixture of one-, two- and three-bedroom flats, built on the playing fields of an old private school.They might not look like much but these neat rows of redbrick homes are an important acquisition – not for an offshore investor or a real-estate mogul, but for the Labour-run Brighton and Hove city council, where Taylor, its deputy leader, is taking a trailblazing approach.“We are essentially rapidly buying properties from private landlords,” he says, walking through the plot in the Sussex village of Rottingdean, where Rudyard Kipling once lived.In a plan agreed this month, the council is spending £50m to acquire 200 homes over the next two years, with the aim of replenishing its heavily depleted stock of social homes and temporary accommodation.This is right to buy in reverse.

Taking chunks of private property into public hands, Taylor aims to tackle a worsening housing and homelessness crisis in the seaside city, where as many as 10 more people are sleeping rough every week.“The housing crisis is so bad in Brighton – we have near-London house prices but don’t have London wages,” he says.“It’s actually been getting worse in the last year, not better.“You can’t underestimate the impact it’s having on people.As yet, I haven’t got enough homes versus the demand.

But I am not going to put up with this disaster.I am determined to dramatically reduce the problem.”Other councils, and the government, should take note.Housing shortages, spiralling rents, and the cost to local authorities of housing families in temporary accommodation – funnelling public money into the pockets of private landlords – are a massive national problem.In this all-encompassing economic and social crisis sweeping the country, Brighton is but a microcosm.

More than 1.3 million families in England are on social housing waiting lists, enough to fill every home in Lithuania.Their ranks have swelled by 37% since 2015, and a record 164,040 children are homeless and stuck in temporary accommodation, double the number in 2012.For the worst three councils, all in London, it would take more than a century to clear the housing register.Brighton is fairly middle of the pack in the national picture, with about 5,000 households on its register.

However, the wait is long enough that a child born today could finish secondary school without finding a council home.David Chaffey, the chief executive of BHT Sussex, a social housing provider that also supports rough sleepers in Brighton and Hove, says the lack of affordable housing is causing untold social misery and strangling the local economy.“You need to be able to have adequate housing for people to work in your local economy.Jobs can’t be filled.We have helped people who were working in a full-time job but living in their cars before they came to us, as they just can’t afford the rent here.

”When Rachel Reeves talks about “securonomics”, this is exactly what she means.Britain’s social foundations have been stripped bare, eroded by years of neoliberal policymaking, flatlining growth, and under-investment.Brighton’s story shows the scale of the challenge to overcome.Above the windswept white cliffs, one cause of Brighton’s housing crisis is immediately clear.House prices and rents are well above average thanks in part to its fast train line to London, which makes it attractive to affluent City commuters.

“DFLs, we call them,” Chaffey says.The acronym means “down from London”.However, another cause is more pernicious: the erosion of the council’s housing stock under Margaret Thatcher’s right to buy scheme.Since 1980, more than a third of homes locally have been sold off.Many are now student HMOs (houses in multiple occupation) or are rented out by private landlords, often to tenants on housing benefit or in council-funded temporary accommodation.

“If you want to understand why we have huge swaths of the country where the housing market is totally broken, point to that [right to buy],” says Taylor.Although it helped millions of families on to the housing ladder, the Thatcherite policy has been a disaster, costing taxpayers almost £200bn in one of the biggest transfers of public wealth to private hands in modern history.Failure to replace these homes has not only deprived councils of stock to house today’s generation of families in need of support.Privatisation has embedded structurally higher housing costs for local authorities.Spending on housing has ballooned to more than £30bn, with about 90% going on housing benefit.

In Brighton the council expects to overspend its budget by about £3,8m on temporary accommodation this year, money Taylor says is flowing entirely to private landlords,“It’s all a consequence of Thatcherism, plus austerity, and not being able to turn the tide on it properly,“Our aim is to accelerate the increase in stock of social housing, but also to directly reduce the extreme costs of booking temporary accommodation with private landlords, which is pushing us to bankruptcy,”At a national level, Labour’s plan to build 1.

5m new homes will help.But it is increasingly in danger of failing to live up to its full billing.At risk of failure to meet the target, ministers could also sacrifice quality, affordability and targeting construction in the places in most need.This could be problematic for Brighton.Wedged between the sea and the South Downs national park, development land here is scarce or costly.

Taylor fears ministers – playing a numbers game – might prioritise places with lower development costs when allocating £39bn of funding that the government has earmarked to build a new generation of social homes.However, bit by bit, the tide is ebbing in the opposite direction on the south coast, helped by reversing right to buy.Under its acquisition programme, Brighton and Hove is growing its housing stock for the first time in decades.At a pace of about 100 acquisitions a year, progress is slow.“It’s not wiping out the register – we’re honest and acknowledge that,” Taylor says.

Going faster would require Labour not just to build more homes, but to put more financial firepower into the Brighton model.
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How to make sweet-and-sour pork – recipe | Felicity Cloake's Masterclass

Sweet-and-sour sauce, which hails from the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou and is much loved in nearby Hong Kong, has been a victim of its own popularity – you can now buy sweet-and-sour-flavour Pot Noodles, crisps and even dips. But, when made with care, the crunchy meat, tangy sauce and sweet fruit will remind you why you fell for it in the first place.Prep 20 min Marinate 30 min+ Cook 10 min Serves 2For the marinade200g pork loin or lean shoulder 1 garlic clove 1 tbsp light soy sauce 1 tbsp rice wine, or dry sherry ½ tsp salt ¼ tsp Chinese five-spice powder (optional)To cook1 onion, peeled 1 green pepper, stalk, seeds and pith discarded 1 mild red chilli 1 egg 60g cornflour, plus extra to coatNeutral oil, for frying100g pineapple chunksFor the sauce2 tbsp apricot jam – the lower in sugar, the better1 tbsp cranberry sauce – ditto1 good squeeze lemon or lime juice25-40g soft light brown sugar 2½ tbsp Chinese red vinegar, or rice vinegar1 tbsp light soy sauce 1 tsp cornflour, or potato starchI’ve chosen to make this with pork (spare ribs also work well, if you don’t mind a bone; if possible, get your butcher to chop them up), but chicken thigh or breast, chunks of firm white fish or firm tofu would also work well. Anything that can be battered and fried without giving off too much water is a safe bet.Cut the pork into strips about 1cm wide, then peel and crush the garlic

1 day ago
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Fete, Chelmsford, Essex: ‘It absolutely dares to be different’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

Fête in Chelmsford has made a big splash on the Essex food scene, snapping up local plaudits for this quaint, neighbourhood restaurant in a cobbled courtyard. Quaint isn’t a word I use often, but nor do I eat at many places with a spacious upstairs bar area that doubles as a yoga studio. Go for the spice bag potatoes with tropea onions and roast chilli, stay for the 45-minute flow yoga with Amanda.Actually, scrap that: do not even dream of pulling shapes after eating too many spiced onions. Leave it a couple of hours

1 day ago
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Helen Goh’s recipe for forest floor cake | The sweet spot

The forest has always been a place of mystery. In fairy tales, it’s where children get lost, where witches build houses made of cake, and where transformations occur in the shadow of trees. But it’s also a place of deep, loamy quiet – a world that hums with hidden life. This cake draws on that dark magic: a tender chocolate sponge, earthy and aromatic with cocoa powder and olive oil, topped with a rosemary-infused ganache and strewn with textures that nod to moist soil, fallen leaves, moss, bark and fungi. It’s Halloween baking, but less fright night and more folklore

3 days ago
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Peter Hall obituary

My grandfather Peter Hall, who has died aged 82, was one of England’s best known winegrowers. The writer Andrew Jefford described him as “the father of the contemporary English wine scene” – a significant feat for anyone, let alone a man who taught himself winemaking from a paperback, and whose self-planted vineyard totalled six acres.Breaky Bottom Vineyard, near Lewes, in East Sussex, was Peter’s passion. For five decades he worked meticulously on it: tending the vines by hand, labelling each bottle and taking the maligned Seyval Blanc variety from punchline to prizewinner.Peter was born at Rangeworthy Court, his family’s country home in Gloucestershire, and grew up in Notting Hill, London, together with his brothers Rémy and Patrick

4 days ago
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‘Fermented in the gut’: scientists uncover clues about kopi luwak coffee’s unique taste

It is a coffee beloved by Hollywood and influencers – now researchers say they have found an ingredient that could help explain the unique flavour of kopi luwak.Also known as civet coffee, kopi luwak is produced from coffee beans that have passed through the digestive system of the Asian palm civet. The resulting product is not only rare, but very expensive – costing about £130 for 500g.It is also controversial, with animal welfare experts raising concerns that some producers keep civets in battery-style conditions.Researchers say they have uncovered new clues as to the coffee’s unusual taste, revealing unroasted beans retrieved from civet poo have differences in their fat content to those from ripe coffee berries manually collected from trees

4 days ago
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Leftover wine? Now we’re cooking | Hannah Crosbie on drinks

I love to cook with wine – sometimes I even put it in the food! So the saying goes, and whenever I see it on a birthday card, driftwood wall-hanging or kooky coaster, I can’t help but make a mental note that I agree.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.That said, I haven’t always seen the point of cooking with wine, and particularly of cooking wine

4 days ago
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US debt set to soar above Italy and Greece after Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’

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Oil and gas firm Petrofac files for administration, putting thousands of jobs at risk

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‘People thought I was a communist doing this as a non-profit’: is Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales the last decent tech baron?

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US and China reach ‘final deal’ on TikTok sale, treasury secretary says

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‘I’m making it work’: Lando Norris confident he is finally getting to grips with his McLaren

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England look to dodge lightning strike after familiar crumble in opening ODI

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