21 May 2008 14:02
'WE have throughout our inquiry continually returned to the same fixed point: the supply of homes is insufficient.' That is perhaps the most significant sentence in today's report on the supply of rented housing from the communities and local government committee.
In a report [download PDF here] that reads like a manifesto of unfinished business, the committee calls for a range of measures including more mixed communities, stronger regulation and tenancy reform in the private rented sector, measures to tackle buy to leave, reform of the single room rate, an increase in family-sized accommodation, a commitment to 50,000 social rented homes a year, more rigorous management of section 106, reform of the right to buy including reinvestment of capital receipts and local restrictions where needed, more help for mobility schemes, borrowing freedoms for almos and local authorities.
That's a heavily edited version of a report with something to say about virtually aspect of rented housing - and which makes the important and often neglected link between the social and private rented sectors.
The stark message from this all-party committee is this: 'The government therefore faces a stark choice: does it retrench, leaving social housing as the sector of last resort; or is it prepared to make the investment and policy commitment necessary for social rented housing to play a full role in the creation of truly sustainable communities?'
And it warns: 'There is no short-term fix to the current situation: sustained and substantial increases in spending, together with a firm policy commitment to the creation of mixed communities, will be needed over the medium to long term if social rented housing is to fulfil the aims envisaged for it.'
However, are the people that really matter - the party leaderships - really listening? Housing minister Caroline Flint responded by pointing out that last year was the first since 1983 that more social rented homes have been built than lost to the right to buy and that the government is investing £8bn to provide 45,000 social homes a year.
Both true, but the committee casts doubt on whether that will really be achieved - and says it's not enough. It wants the 50,000 homes a year that is still only an aspirational target for the next spending review in 2011.
Will that ever come to pass - or will another select committee be saying exactly the same thing in three years' time?
Posted by Jules Birch, May 21
Posted in Politics , Private renting, Social housing