Boarded up housing

Green Party MEP launches new report on the housing crisis

This in from the Office of Keith Taylor. Ed


Keith Taylor, Green Party MEP for South East England has launched a new report today on the UK housing crisis called “Everyone knows we have a housing crisis: let’s do something about it”.

The report is officially launched in Oxford on Thursday 19th Mach at the Grove Auditorium, Magdalen College from 6.30pm – 8.30pm alongside guest speakers Professor Danny Dorling and author Anna Minton. Oxford is officially the UK’s least affordable city to live in.

Touring the south east
Keith Taylor will also be touring South East England over the next three weeks to speak about the report in Brighton, Canterbury, Winchester, Reading and Guildford.

See below for some stand out headlines from the report:

  • The report re-affirms the need to build more social rented homes (council housing) and argues that 8650 new social rented homes should be built across the South East region per year.
  • Other policy recommendations include the implementation of a land value tax, council tax reform, new powers for local authorities to bring empty homes back into use and the decriminalisation of squatting in residential properties.
  • In 2013/14, no new homes were completed by local authorities in the South East.
  • The report argues that affordable housing needs to be redefined based on local income and not market rates.
  • Homes in the South East now cost 12 times the average salary.
  • The South East has seen the biggest rise in rough sleeping levels with a shocking 96% overall rise since 2010.
  • Only 17 houses were brought back into use across the whole country in 2014 under the Government’s Empty Dwelling Management Orders. In the South East, the number deployed for 2014 was zero.
  • Margaret Thatcher´s introduction of ‘right to buy´ council housing has led directly to a chronic shortage of social housing, and the resultant long waiting lists.

Radical solutions to the housing crisis
Keith Taylor Green MEP for South East England said,

“People have had enough of living in fear – not knowing how they are going to make next month’s rent. It is imperative that the debate now moves on to looking at the radical but necessary solutions to the housing crisis.

“It is time to move away from treating houses purely as financial assets to be shuffled around for maximum gain and instead ensure that we provide decent and affordable homes that meet people’s needs.

“This report demonstrates that housing has become unsustainably expensive, and that fresh political will and innovative mechanisms are needed to make housing work for people again.”

Image: lydiashiningbrightly under CC BY 2.0

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milly
18, March 2015 11:39 am

Council Housing is the only way.

Caconym
Reply to  milly
18, March 2015 12:39 pm

Council housing, even if new stock could be afforded by our cash-strapped local authority, will only be of any interest to a minority.

Most aspire to own their own home.

Vix Lowthion
Reply to  Caconym
18, March 2015 1:57 pm

Only 60% of people can now afford to buy their own home. And this is falling, rapidly. There is a shortage of houses. Therefore prices are sky high to buy and to rent.

Public investment in new affordable homes will help everyone. It will free up other homes for people to rent or to buy.

milly
18, March 2015 2:35 pm

Most politicians at the top recognise that they need a public house building programme, even the Tories, but they don’t want to do it.It is not just homes but building and skills when it comes to growing the economy. They will have to put some money aside to do it, despite the grant cuts, because only local authority can do it. The machinery at local level would… Read more »

Billy Builder
18, March 2015 2:48 pm

I would suggest that there is a ready supply of cheap housing available in the northern half of the country. The policies that are needed are ones to create employment in areas other than the south-east, allowing people to re-populate the north.

Hermit
18, March 2015 2:55 pm

Local authorities don’t build anymore, it’s down to housing associations to build subsidised housing. But, the Govt has taken away housing subsidy, so housing associations are not building them anymore. You can’t build subsidised housing if there is no subsidy. The crisis will only get worse, the govt knows this, but is keeping very quiet about it.

Cynic
18, March 2015 3:33 pm

“Oxford is officially the UK’s least affordable city to live in.” No. Recent reports say that Singapore is the most expensive followed by Paris.

Vix Lowthion
Reply to  Cynic
18, March 2015 3:34 pm

Oxford is the only one of those in the UK… ;)

Cynic
Reply to  Vix Lowthion
18, March 2015 3:39 pm

Quite right- I missed the “UK” delimiter! :-((

Cynic
18, March 2015 3:41 pm

When will the details of the report be published, Vix?

Steve Goodman
18, March 2015 4:47 pm

Each event will be a chance to hear from Keith Taylor MEP about the findings of this report, and a panel of expert speakers, followed by a Q & A session. Our key speakers include Oxford professor and author Danny Dorling, journalist Owen Hatherley and many other campaigners at the fore of the discussion on housing injustice. See below for key details of each event and how… Read more »

Colin
19, March 2015 9:27 am

There isn’t a housing shortage.

It’s an overcapacity of people…

(Ducks down behind parapet.)

Steve Goodman
Reply to  Colin
19, March 2015 9:39 am

Almost everybody is ducking that issue, which is why it’s only getting worse & putting so much pressure on housing & other resources.

peaceful_life
Reply to  Steve Goodman
19, March 2015 9:57 am

@Steve Goodman. How many buildings in the UK , which could* be habitable, are left to degradation and disrepair and also the perfectly good ones, albeit requiring retrofit, are earmarked for demolition to make-way for *upmarket development*? Having said that, the vast majority of existing buildings are so energy and ecologically inefficient that they render themselves as a liability anyway. I don’t think it’s enough to simply… Read more »

peaceful_life
19, March 2015 9:34 am

@Colin.

‘It’s an *overcapacity*(?) of [greedy] people’

Fixed it for ya. ;-0)

milly
19, March 2015 1:06 pm

Any serious recession has had to have housebuilding to start any real recovery.

peaceful_life
Reply to  milly
19, March 2015 1:36 pm

@Milly. If we’re to use history as a datum of previous predicaments, then yes, but…that/this was no recession*, it’s serious enough, but it’s not something we’re going to tackle with a tweaking here and there and head for *growth* as a means of recovery*. We will do well to achieve a coherent level of *stability* and that’s without the distraction of that favoured word growth. Sure some… Read more »

Cynic
Reply to  milly
19, March 2015 1:56 pm

….or state (not private) investment on the Keynesian model?

peaceful_life
Reply to  Cynic
19, March 2015 3:56 pm

@Cicero, State/central funded and underwritten, yes, also private not for profit, or at least..not solely for. Co-operative, self build, co-housing models able to draw on accessible funds with strict criteria of overall design with form following function and if that can also be intertwined with beneficial economic activity…then all the better. Yes, that somewhat flies in the face of ‘growth’, but then..so do bank bailouts and the… Read more »

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