Thursday, 09 February 2012

Make the case for housing

Housing is society’s unsung hero - and it’s time to change that. As election campaigns begin, it’s crucial we up our influence by shouting about the massive benefits our sector delivers year in, year out. Today Inside Housing and the Chartered Institute of Housing launch House Proud, a new campaign to help you do just that

The billboards are as the ad men intended: impossible to miss. David Cameron, looking gleamingly airbrushed and imploring, ‘We can’t go on like this. I’ll cut the deficit, not the NHS.’

Predictably, campaigning for this year’s general election started almost indecently early, with new year celebrations barely cold. As a Cameron-emblazoned hoarding near you will show, equally foreseeable was the policy area picked to kick it all off.

Health remains the make or break election campaign issue, hotly pursued by education and crime. None of which, as Mr Cameron is careful to hammer home, can be separated from the nation’s limping economy.

What the clever slogans fail to convey is the other element fundamental to every aspect of our lives: housing.

Take Mr Cameron’s billboard pledge. Housing already contributes on both those fronts, helping people stay well, saving precious NHS cash and doing its bit to slow the spiralling £178 billion national economic deficit in the process. We know that. You know that. But are those hoping to run the next UK government in the loop?

Today we launch House Proud - making the case for housing, a joint campaign from Inside Housing and the Chartered Institute of Housing. Its aim is to shout about housing’s crucial contribution to every aspect of social policy; to provide the stats, stories and case studies which prove beyond doubt that successful lives are founded on decent housing; and to present data which persuade whoever wins the keys to Number 10 later this year that cutting the housing budget is a foolhardy move certain to increase pressure on the vote-winning budgets they seek to preserve.

‘Whichever government enters office in 2010, it will have some big decisions to make on public expenditure and priorities,’ says Sarah Webb, chief executive of the CIH.

‘The launch of the House Proud campaign gives us all an opportunity to remind everyone - politicians, civil servants, homeowners, tenants, funders, residents, housing professionals, the media, business - both of the absolute need to maintain housing as a priority and of the essential contribution to wider social policy agendas that housing makes. I hope you will support this campaign.’

So how will House Proud work? It has three aims. First we want 250 backers signed up to a House Proud petition, to be delivered to the new government.

Second, we want each of the three main political parties to include a housing pledge in their election manifestos.

Finally, we want to get the sector fighting housing’s corner as the election approaches. Make housing a key election issue at evey opportunity, and encourage staff, residents, friends and family to do the same.

To get things rolling, between now and the election Inside Housing will make sure you have everything you need to make the argument for housing wherever you are in the UK. We will bring you killer stats and detailed analysis of housing’s contribution in seven key policy areas - from health to crime. (And those running for power will be getting their copies too.) We’ll be chasing big name backers, helping the debate sizzle with regular talking heads, getting out on the stump with the candidates and more.

But for House Proud to succeed in ensuring the sector gets its rightful slice of the pie under the new government, it needs your support. Of course you can sign our petition and send in your manifesto suggestions - and we hope you do (see box: How to get involved). More than this, though, we need you to shout the virtues of housing from every rooftop. In short, you need to be so House Proud you can’t help telling everyone about it. (See the Starters for 10 box for inspiration.)

It has never been more crucial to ensure that whoever wins the forthcoming election knows just how valuable housing is to the nation’s health and prosperity. Think of it as the sector’s very own billboard. Make the case for housing. Be House Proud.

Starters for 10: cut out and keep stats

Every one of the following facts is evidence of the savings good housing makes to the policy areas which will be winning headlines in the coming election. House Proud will bring you many more of these in the coming weeks and months. For now, let’s get these out there.

Health
Children living in acutely bad housing are 20% more likely to attend A&E than other children

Education
25%
of children in bad housing gain no GCSEs compared with around 10% not living in bad housing.

Employment
Housing associations have spent £200m in the past five years on projects to help workless residents.

Sustainability
Every €1 spent on energy efficient housing saves €0.42 in health costs.

Anti-social behaviour
Early intervention by housing management staff resolves about 75% of ASB cases.

Inequality
Average council rents in England are £3,339 a year, compared with £6,696 in the private sector.

Supply
Social landlords contributed almost a fifth of the 1 82,551 new homes built in the UK in 2008.

Vulnerable people
Every £1.60
of taxpayers’ money spent on Supporting People, the government’s supported housing programme, saves £3.41 from other services.

 

How to get involved

  • Sign our online petition in support of our three aims to gain 250 backers, get housing pledges into the manifestos of the three main political parties and get the sector to talk up housing as a key election issue
  • Suggest a housing pledge for the parties’ election manifestos, also at www.insidehousing.co.uk/houseproud. We’ll pick the best and pass them on
  • Pledge to drop House Proud statistics into as many conversations as possible
  • Ask prospective MPs what they’re doing about housing and persuade them to sign the House Proud petition
  • Send us your stories, videos, blogs and statistics about how housing has proved its worth in your area

 

Readers' comments (4)

  • This is a great idea and much needed. Housing has been slowly rising up the political agenda in the 12 years that I have been working in the sector. Not fast enough however. A wholesale change in people's attitude to social housing is needed. We need more housing co-ops and less stigma. Start a Facebook group linked to the House Proud campaign. That would raise the profile of housing for lots of young people. Power to the campaign!

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  • Well done kate what a sound ideal!!!

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  • we must make the link to planning and take ownweship of this subject matter, by understanding the fundamentals we can be bold as a profession, we cannot leave it to the RTPI!!!

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  • I note your article on page 5 of 15 January issue concerning Council Homes and Mr Healey's comments. As one of the Local Authorities who were rejected in the phase-two bidding round we wish to point out that Mr Healey did not mention their own failing in making allowance for LA's who happen to be debt-free and who offered alternative mechanisms to avoid entering into prudential borrowing. The reason for our bid being declined was, and I quote: "You have to be in debt to access this grant", and it was certainly not because we did not present good value for money. Further coverage of this angle of the story would be welcomed.

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