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‘Out of reach’: stalled newbuilds leave Labour’s social housing targets in tatters

3 days ago
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The stats are stark: families on Bath and North East Somerset council’s social housing list face a 200-year wait for a four-bedroom property and the latest available figures show England is building just a little over 10,000 social homes a year.Tackling this crisis was a key element of Labour’s election promise to build 1.5m homes over five years, with the government in July announcing plans to spend £39bn building 300,000 affordable homes over a decade, 60% of them for social rent.But hopes of hitting these targets are fading.In London, housebuilding of all kinds has pretty much stalled, prompting the housing secretary, Steve Reed, and the mayor, Sadiq Khan, to announce a controversial package last week that cuts from 35% to 20% the percentage of affordable units a site needs in order for it to be fast-tracked.

While Reed called the measure a “shot in the arm” to get the capital building, homelessness campaigners are sceptical.Mairi MacRae, campaign director at Shelter, wants “a firm guarantee that the latest changes to planning rules will result in more social housing, not less”.The package also includes £322m to set up a City Hall developer investment fund, and low-cost loans through the new National Housing Bank.It comes on top of the government’s wider shake-up of planning law to try to speed up construction and boost the economy.Nevertheless, despite such efforts to pull every lever, progress towards targets remains painfully slow.

The number of new homes delivered in England was 231,300 in the year to September, up from 186,600 in the year to June.To hit the 1.5m goal, the UK’s annual rate needs to be at least 300,000, a pace not achieved since 1970.Khan, who grew up in a council flat, sums up the problem: “There is now a perfect storm facing housebuilding … due to a combination of high interest rates, the rising cost of construction materials, the impact of the pandemic and ongoing consequences of Brexit.” Added to that are a shortage of skilled workers and new regulations.

These problems are magnified for the social housing sector, where housebuilder profits are inevitably lower.Shelter and the National Housing Federation have calculated that 90,000 social homes a year are needed in England.However, according to the latest available annual data, of the 63,743 affordable homes completed in England in the financial year to March 2024, just 10,153 were for social rent, a subsidised arrangement for those on low incomes that is typically about 50% of market rate.The remainder were shared ownership, rent to buy and affordable rent (set at more like 80% of the local average).Such homes used to be mainly built, owned and managed by councils, but in recent decades housing associations have taken over provision.

Yet this supply has dwindled in recent years as these non-profit groups have been clobbered by falling rent income and rising borrowing costs,They have also faced huge bills to install energy-efficient technologies such as heat pumps, remedy fire safety problems and repair ageing properties, an issue made more all the more urgent by the requirement brought in this week under Awaab’s law to fix emergencies within 24 hours,That comes on top of years of underinvestment after the coalition government stopped funding social rent housing in 2011,While this policy ended five years later, construction has yet to recover,Another hurdle has been linking up newbuilds to a council or housing association to manage them.

The Home Builders Federation (HBF) has calculated that of the social or affordable homes in England and Wales that are either unsold, under construction or a year away from being built, 10,000 lack a contract with a social landlord,“Without agreements for housing associations to take over properties, thousands of affordable homes are stalled or left empty, preventing builders from meeting planning conditions,” an HBF spokesperson says,“As a result, delivery grinds to a halt, sites are delayed, rephased or in some cases rendered unviable, impacting an estimated 100,000 private market homes and pushing housing targets further out of reach,”A lack of skilled labour is another big problem, raising concerns that build quality could be compromised after scandals around shoddily constructed homes,“We’ve had problems in the past and bought homes from other developers that were not up to scratch,” says Fiona Fletcher-Smith, chief executive of the housing association L&Q.

“The number of homes that we took over this year were reduced because there’s a particular set of builders where we said ‘No, not good enough, we’re not taking them,’ So we compromised on numbers to keep quality up and the government needs to be aware of that,”Worker shortages range from roofers to surveyors, and construction cost inflation is running at about 40%,Some materials are also hard to get hold of: recent figures show UK cement production has slumped to a 75-year low,“The existing workforce is ageing,” says Anthony Codling, head of European housing research at RBC Capital Markets.

“We estimate the average age of a bricklayer to be 56.We have too few younger people being trained to replace them as they retire, and since Brexit there has been a significant drop in the number of skilled workers from Europe.”Fletcher-Smith adds: “Even if you give us all the money in the world, we won’t have the people we need to be able to do what we have to do.”“Densification” – more units per square metre – has been put forward as a possible solution and was the talk of a social housing forum hosted by Lloyds Banking Group in the summer, although experts stressed it must be done sensitively.In Basingstoke, Hampshire, Sovereign Network Group (SNG), one of the largest housing associations in England with 85,000 homes, needs to win over residents opposed to “high-density” family housing in multi-storey blocks.

Rows of red-brick bungalows in the Buckskin and South Ham neighbourhoods, which are home to 12,000 people, are to be replanned under SNG’s 30-year regeneration project.It intends to improve the layout of the 4,600 home area – equal in size to the Olympic Park in London – and build new houses, flats and green spaces, as well as retrofitting some existing homes.The group has recently secured funding to construct more than 25,000 homes across the south, west and east of England over the next decade.Detailed plans are due to be released early next year but SNG’s initial, hand-drawn sketches, published this spring, have caused anxiety among some tenants and private home owners the Guardian spoke to who fear their homes could be knocked down and replaced with five- to six-storey apartment blocks.SNG insists that nothing has been decided yet, but one resident ,Maggie Hardy, 79, says demolition of the bungalows would “destroy our community … Older people don’t want to go in a block of flats where the lift breaks down twice a week.

”The revamp could lead to the demolition of some 1960s and 1970s homes and pre-fabs from the 1950s, triggering opposition from residents – although many agree the area needs improving,“I’m all for it,” says Stephen Baverstock, a long-time SNG tenant in South Ham, who sits on SNG’s co-design group with planners and architects,He says the area needs better cross routes and car parking, and a doctor’s surgery and dental practice, but adds: “We don’t know what the scale of the demolition is going to be and that creates uncertainty,”SNG has promised to listen and is holding a series of meetings with residents before finalising its plans,Some have written to their MP, Luke Murphy, prompting SNG’s chief executive, Mark Washer, to state publicly that no decisions have been taken yet, and that compulsory purchase orders would be a “last resort”.

Murphy, the Basingstoke MP, says: “This is a close-knit community, built over generations.I have been clear that any plans for the area must be carried out with residents, not done to them.”In such a challenging environment, some have struggled.Peabody, one of the largest social landlords in England,had its credit rating downgraded by S&P Global Ratings in July after it had a weaker year than expected.Others argue that Labour’s measures need to be given time to take effect, pointing to the £16bn of public money backing the National Housing Bank and the announcement in June by Reed’s predecessor, Angela Rayner, that social landlords can raise rents by 1 percentage point above inflation over 10 years, giving them the confidence to kickstart construction.

In 2024 a cash crisis forced L&Q, which owns 105,000 homes, to halt some construction.A year on, Fletcher-Smith is more upbeat, with plans to start 2,000 new homes in the coming year.“We’ve had a pretty dire five years,” she says, but now “we have a government that gets the scale of the problem and they really want to fix it.”A Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government spokesperson said: “We’re getting spades in the ground to build 1.5 million homes, with ambitious measures to speed up planning and building.

“We’ve backed the sector with a record £39bn investment to provide the biggest boost to social and affordable housebuilding in a generation, and taken action to tackle specific issues in London and back the capital to build.”
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Reform councillor defects to Tories after party’s policies left him ‘uncomfortable’

A Reform UK councillor has defected to the Conservatives, saying he became uncomfortable in Nigel Farage’s party.James Buchan, who sits in the borough of Dartford in Kent, said he had struggled with the idea of facing his relatives while a member of a party whose anti-immigration policies spread fear.“I stood for election with the sole aim of working for my community and getting things done for local families. Having had the opportunity to see Reform from the inside, I’ve concluded that the party doesn’t really have the experience or ambition to do that,” he said.Buchan said he wanted to be able to “look my family in the eye and say, ‘that’s not who I am’” after Nigel Farage’s party announced plans to end indefinite leave to remain status

1 day ago
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Ex-Tory member sues party over suspension for criticising Israel

A former Conservative member, whose grandfather was the archbishop of Jerusalem, is suing the party after he was suspended for making critical remarks about the state of Israel.Bruce MacInnes was told by Tory party officials that his “repeated allegation that Israel is committing genocide in Palestine” constituted “allegedly antisemitic”, “discriminatory” and “insensitive and highly offensive” language, which resulted in his suspension from the party last year.MacInnes, who says he did not initially know about the disciplinary proceedings despite the party claiming they had emailed him, is bringing legal action against the party for £30,000 in the high court for breach of contract and discrimination based on belief.The row has raised questions over freedom of speech within the party and has drawn criticism from former foreign minister Sir Alan Duncan who described the party’s treatment of MacInnes as “McCarthysim built on ignorance”.A member since 2018, MacInnes had often shared his views on the political situation in the Middle East on a WhatsApp group with other members

1 day ago
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Bridget Phillipson ‘ready to take on unions’ over year 8 reading tests

Bridget Phillipson has said she is ready to take on the unions in a battle over compulsory reading tests for 13-year-olds and more extracurricular activities for all children to prevent them becoming “stuck in a doom loop of detachment” from school.The education secretary said that teaching unions, who have argued the tests were “unnecessary and distracting”, should “really think carefully” about whether they could justify standing in the way of tackling the “shocking outcomes” that exist for many working-class children.In an interview with the Guardian, in which she said her deputy leadership campaign was “just the beginning” of her efforts to help secure Labour a second term, Phillipson warned that one in four children overall, and one in three disadvantaged children, don’t meet required literacy standards.In response to the curriculum and assessment review published next week, there will be a new mandatory reading test for year 8 pupils in an attempt to tackle underachievement by working-class children. Schools will also be expected to informally assess writing and maths

1 day ago
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UK politics: Worries about immigration are ‘manufactured panic’ says charity as poll shows issue not a local concern – as it happened

Concern about immigration is a “manufactured panic”, a campaign group has said after polling suggested only a quarter of people think it is an important issue locally.As PA Media reports, a YouGov poll found only 26% of people said immigration and asylum was one of the three most important issues facing their community. This was half the 52% who said it was one of the biggest issues facing the country as a whole.These figures have been set out in a report published by the Best of Britain campaign group. It also shows that, while immigration comes second in the list of issues that people say matter nationally, it is only seventh in the list when people are asked about what matters in the places where they live

2 days ago
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Keir Starmer keeps Trumps’ silver necklace gift – for a price

Keir Starmer has paid to keep a personalised silver necklace given to him by Donald and Melania Trump, transparency records show.The necklace was the only gift Starmer chose to keep after he hosted the US president for a historic second state visit in September.The Trumps also gave the prime minister a golf club and a set of silver cufflinks, both personalised, but these were retained by the Cabinet Office. A pair of cowboy boots, given to Starmer’s wife, Victoria, by the Trumps has also been held by the department.Under government rules, ministers cannot keep official gifts worth more than £140 unless they pay the difference between £140 and the gift’s value

2 days ago
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‘Young Tories are fed up’: the students switching to Reform in big numbers

Last year’s freshers’ fair was a dismal time for Newcastle University’s Conservative society, with just six new students showing any interest in joining at the start of the autumn term.But this year’s event brought dozens of students showing up with renewed enthusiasm – after the Tory students merged with the Reform UK students, shrugging off a rebuke from Conservative party headquarters to do so.“Interest increased tenfold. I think we Conservatives were just becoming a bit irrelevant,” said Henry Bateson, a one-time Conservative student who switched to Reform UK and is now president of Newcastle’s merged Conservative and Reform UK society.Recent opinion polls suggest nearly half of Tory members would support a merger with Reform into a single party

2 days ago
societySee all
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How scientists are shining light on the biology behind seasonal affective disorder

about 16 hours ago
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Everyone says they are worried about hate crimes. But Australia’s laws to combat them are all over the place

1 day ago
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Ministers were warned of errors at jail that released sex offender by mistake

1 day ago
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‘Out of reach’: stalled newbuilds leave Labour’s social housing targets in tatters

3 days ago
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Woman turned away from UK-Italy flight due to ill child has benefit stopped

3 days ago
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Charities and stars call on UK government to set child poverty reduction targets

3 days ago