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Sheffield City Council has doubled the number of council homes it is planning to build, following the government’s decision to remove the Housing Revenue Account (HRA) borrowing cap on local authorities.
The council announced it is planning to up its delivery of homes by more than 100% over the next seven years from 1,500 homes to 3,200 homes.
Paul Wood, cabinet member for neighbourhoods and community safety at Sheffield Council, announced the move at a meeting to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Addison Act, which kick-started the large-scale delivery of council housing after World War I. Inside Housing is also marking the anniversary with a series of articles about the history of council housing and local authorities’ new housebuilding plans.
Mr Wood said that new social housing is urgently needed to tackle the waiting list for housing in the city. Figures published by government this year show there were 25,356 people on Sheffield’s waiting list. The council estimates 12,000 “absolutely need social housing”, Mr Wood added. The government announced last year that it would scrap the HRA borrowing cap, after lobbying from a number of councils, including Sheffield.
Janet Sharpe, director of housing and neighbourhoods services at the council, said the new homes would be at social rent levels.
She said: “We have got an increased demand for social housing in the city and demand that we are not [currently] meeting in a number of ways. We have lost some of our stock, through Right to Buy and people purchasing it, so our demand is under incredible pressure.
“We also haven’t got the right type of homes in the right areas and [in] particular homes for younger people but also some of our older people. We haven’t got the right quality and the right mix in the neighbourhoods where we need them.”
The council’s plans include general needs housing, along with extra care schemes, homes for people with learning disabilities, and temporary accommodation, Ms Sharpe added. The new housing will be built to the Lifetime Homes Standard.
Ms Sharpe said: “We not only need to increase the range of general needs housing, we also need to provide the homes for older people, people who need specialist housing and that has not been coming forward through the private sector.
“So that is something that the council is really, really keen to do – that we have homes to meet everybody’s needs.”
The council will publish fuller details of its plans at a meeting in September.
John Bibby, chief executive of the Association of Retained Council Housing (ARCH), said the plan to double delivery was “brilliant” news.
“By lifting the borrowing cap we are not going to go back to the huge estates we built under the Addison Act and subsequently,” he said. But he added that councils now have more freedom to step in to meet needs that “the private sector or even the housing association sector are not meeting, particularly for social rent or specialist housing, like extra care”.
“It is about filling those gaps in the market,” he said.
Mr Bibby added that there is a strong argument for councils and government to invest in social housing, particularly with Brexit on the horizon.
“Post-Brexit people spending 30/40/50% of their income on rent or on the mortgage is not going to help the economy,” he added. “So it makes sense to build for social and affordable rents where people can actually spend the money and generate the money into the economy. If we don’t do that as a country then I think we are going to fail. I think there is a big macro-economic picture here that the government have got to look at.”
To mark the 100th anniversary of the act receiving Royal Assent in July, we have a month of special activities planned, including interviews with senior council housing figures, exclusive debate and comment, and investigations into what local authorities, past and present, are doing to help provide housing.
This will signal the start of a stronger focus on local authority housing issues over the coming months on www.insidehousing.co.uk and in our weekly print and digital editions.
We want to hear from you about your local authority is doing to mark the Addison Act and about the housing issues in your area, email: editorial@insidehousing.co.uk
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Click here to read more about our activity to mark the Addison Act
One hundred years ago, a piece of legislation led to the birth of council housing. Gavriel Hollander introduces Inside Housing’s celebration of the centenary of the Addison Act.
It is so ingrained in our national consciousness that it is hard to imagine just how radical the idea of local authority built and funded housing must have seemed a century ago. Before World War I, almost all housing in the UK was built by private developers (albeit with some notable municipal exceptions in major cities). Given this, it is unsurprising that both quality and consistency of delivery were variable.
The post-war introduction of subsidies for councils to solve the blight of slum estates was supposed to right a wrong and – in the words of then-prime minister David Lloyd George – provide “homes fit for heroes”.
The so-called Addison Act – the very first housing act passed in this country, named after its sponsor Dr (later Lord) Christopher Addison – received royal assent exactly 100 years ago this month.
It may never have achieved its aspiration of delivering 500,000 homes (something that may sound familiar to modern-day watchers of government housing policy) but it was the start of a movement.
New estates began to crop up across the country, built in accordance with recommendations from the Tudor Walters Report, which was produced to parliament in November 1918. This built on the ‘Garden City Principles’ and suggested a number of improvements to the standard of public housing. These included limiting the length of terraced-housing blocks, mandating a minimum number of rooms and providing indoor bathrooms.
“The post-war introduction of subsidies for councils to solve the blight of slum estates was supposed to right a wrong and – in the words of the prime minister David Lloyd George – provide ‘homes fit for heroes’”
Although the abandonment of subsidy in 1921 and a change of government the following year curtailed the immediate growth of council-built housing, the seed had been sown.
This month Inside Housing celebrates the centenary of the Addison Act with a month-long series of articles looking at how it transformed the social fabric of the country and created the housing sector we know today.
Over the course of this month, we visit four estates, each symbolising a different era of council housebuilding. We also take a look at whether new-found financial freedom for local authorities could be the catalyst for a new generation of estates.
To kick off the series, acclaimed social historian John Boughton visits one of the first estates made possible by Lord Addison’s historic legislation: Sea Mills in Bristol. We then travel to Stevenage to look at how the damage to Britain’s inner cities during the Blitz led to the new town movement and a fresh wave of estates through the 1950s and 1960s.
Martin Hilditch, editor of Inside Housing, takes a trip to Hulme in Manchester to examine how the private and public sector had to work together in the 1980s to deliver a regeneration project, which is still thriving more than 30 years later.
Finally, we go to Nottingham and look at one council with grand ambitions to provide housing to a new generation of tenants.
There may still be myriad challenges to face when it comes to providing good-quality, genuinely affordable housing for those most in need, but without the passing of an act of parliament 100 years ago, the sector we work in today may never have come to exist. That alone is worth celebrating.
To read more about the act, go to: www.insidehousing.co.uk/AddisonAct
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Stevenage: home of the new town revolution Stevenage was the first of the post-war ‘new towns’. Gavriel Hollander visits the town to see how it has changed.
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