“Social housing is for losers”

Zoe Williams, Guardian, today:

High earners will no longer be eligible for “subsidised” social housing, and will instead have to pay “market rates”, the chancellor has announced. George Osborne speaks directly to the nation from the pages of the Sun on Sunday in a column that doesn’t actually use the words “clampdown” or “crackdown”, but those are the terms that crop up in all the reports, so we can assume a briefing note somewhere, in which the jargon of tackling crime is deployed to describe people who have the brass neck to rent social housing and have jobs.

This is the first strand of the narrative: that social housing is for the vulnerable, and anybody not vulnerable has no business with it. It follows that aspirational people, hard-working families, strivers – real people – wouldn’t ever want to be socially housed, because they would know it wasn’t intended for them.

The language is all about support (“In times of economic hardship it is more important than ever that social housing helps the most vulnerable in society,” began the consultation paper in 2012), but the underpinning principle is that the state has no business being a provider of ordinary, decent housing to ordinary, decent people. It should instead be thought of as the houser of last resort.

That’s a pretty standard Thatcherite line, but there’s more: what counts as “high income” is a household wage of £40,000 (in London) or £30,000 (elsewhere). The Joseph Rowntree Foundation last week released their minimum income standard figures for 2015: the MIS is reached in a citizen’s jury style: a sequence of small groups are asked to figure out the least a person would need to live an acceptable life. It’s not intended as a poverty threshold, and it’s not as basic as food, clothes and shelter (it includes the category, “social and cultural participation”), but there’s also no frivolity on it.

The most recent calculation was that a couple with two children would need to be earning £20,024 each in order to reach the minimum. In other words, what Osborne calls a high-earning household is actually, in London, one that is only just managing to get by – and outside London, £10,000 per annum shy of an acceptable life. This is a pretty extraordinary manoeuvre, an apparently serious attempt to persuade the nation that a little money is actually a lot of money.

A rather pompous idea in the consultation document is that servicemen and women should take priority on social housing lists; but anybody above the rank of level-three private would, if married to someone on the same salary, immediately be “clamped down upon” and required to pay “market rent”.

The third element of Osborne’s story is this “market” of his: social housing is subsidised, while the price of private rental stock is the true price, the natural one, reached by the irresistible logic of the market. Of course, social housing is only subsidised in the cost of its creation: it then pays for itself in two or three decades of rents. It only looks cheap in comparison with private rents, which themselves aren’t arrived at by market imperatives at all, but are the result of three decades of governments subsidising landlords with housing benefit.

The chancellor’s tableaux, in which high-earning chancers, who shouldn’t be in social housing in the first place, must have their rents brought into line with the private rents around them – otherwise, and this is the best bit, it is not fair on those hardworking private tenants – is wrong, in all the usual, useful ways. The message is to forget the state (unless you are a loser); resent your neighbour (he is probably a high earner masquerading as a low earner, to get that social flat you’re subsidising with your taxes); and trust the market (where prices are created elegantly, neutrally, perfectly, like physics).

Like so many of these measures – the closure of the independent living fund, even the bedroom tax – I sincerely doubt that this will save the money they claim it will, and sometimes doubt that it will save any money at all. Rather, it’s about changing the atmosphere, the commonly held assumptions: life is hard and you’re on your own.

I spent the entire coalition complaining about things on practical and/or human terms: whatever they say they’ll save, they won’t, and this hits the wrong people, and that is inhumane, and what are we punishing disabled people for anyway, and how much is this parsimony going to cost when it explodes down the line? All of that served, by some strange jiu jitsu, to reinforce the Conservatives’ opening proposition, that the country had been mired in a project of human kindness for far too long, which the state could no longer afford.

So while it is useful to critique the bones of this plan, in the way a crossword is useful to pass the time, the vital bit is to refute the underlying principles: the state isn’t over; your neighbour isn’t a crook; the market isn’t magic; life doesn’t have to be hard; we’re not on our own.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jul/05/tories-social-tenant-council-housing

CPRE on housing

From the blog of Susie Bond, Independent councillor, Feniton

I have been banging on for years about the naivety of assuming that releasing more greenfield land for housing will lead to a big increase in housing supply. The big house builders, who dominate the market to an unhealthy extent, have no great interest in significantly increasing supply. They will build the number of homes they want to build and which they think the market will support; but if they are allowed to build them in the countryside they will do so, rather than building them in towns.

Now CPRE’s housing researcher, Luke Burroughs, has written Getting Houses Built, a report that pretty well confirms this view, backed up by plenty of hard evidence. It strongly suggests that questions of land availability or housing targets, which dominate both debates on housing and the politics of planning, are side shows relative to the question of who is going to build the houses.

There is an increasingly influential narrative on housing, familiar to any reader of the Times or Financial Times, that goes something like this. We need to build 250,000 or more houses a year, around double current output. There may be lots of brownfield land, but some of it needs remediation or is in places people don’t want to live. The need is urgent and if we are to solve the housing crisis we must develop more greenfield land, in particular the land around the towns and cities where people most want to live. That means building in the Green Belt and reforming planning policy so that local people cannot stand in the way of necessary development.

It is surprising how few of the clever people peddling this line stop to ask who is going to build the houses, surely a first order question that must be answered before we consider the second order question of where the houses should go. Once we start to build 200,000+ houses a year, we may need to make difficult choices about where they go. But until we sort out how to get them built we will continue to fall short however many impossible targets are imposed (there have been many) or planning reforms introduced (there have been many and the Chancellor is now promising more) or impossible targets imposed (ditto).

The analysis in Getting Houses Built is not anti-developer. The big house builders act rationally and in the interests of their shareholders. It is not their fault that in Britain, unlike much of Europe, land acquisition and house building is left almost entirely to private companies. They can make big make profits but they also bear significant risks.

The need for developers to maximise profits on each housing unit has seen them adopt business strategies which focus on land trading as much as on actually building houses. Once they have secured land, they build at a rate that will hold up prices. This puts extra pressure on the countryside as land still to be developed on a site with planning permission is removed from the estimate of a local authority’s housing land supply, meaning that it has to allocate land or approve new developments elsewhere.

Getting Houses Built has a number of proposals for improving things. It argues for giving local authorities a bigger role in acquiring land by reforming compulsory purchase provisions and implementing ‘use it or lose it’ measures against those (generally not house builders) who are sitting on land without developing it. The intention would be to remove from the system some of the volatility that suppresses supply. It would also have the effect, potentially, of improving design and encouraging custom building by SMEs.

One of Luke’s earlier reports, Better Brownfield includes a case study of Vauban a 40 hectare, 2,000 home urban extension to Freiberg in Germany. The local authority bought the land at close to current use value; ensured a tramline into Freiberg; then sold the individual plots to small builders and groups of residents. It is hard to imagine similar developments in England, and that is a pity.

The report argues for making the development process far more transparent, including through the compulsory registration of all land ownership, options and sales agreements with the Land Registry. At present, land is often traded, as it were, under the counter. Much of it does not enter the open market, making it hard for small builders to get a look in. Developers buy between 10 and 20% of their land from each other, and having bought a parcel of land the new owner will often renegotiate planning permissions, further delaying the process of getting houses built and, in many cases, lowering the quality of schemes and the number of affordable homes in it.

If they really believe that a lack of developable land is the main thing holding back house building, it is amazing that the advocates of planning reform are not keener to throw some light on the extremely opaque business of land trading.

Transparency should extend to the vexed question of ‘viability’. Negotiations around viability delay many developments, with house builders whittling down planning obligations (design standards, the number of affordable homes, support for infrastructure) on the grounds that they make a scheme unviable. But there is no agreed methodology for assessing viability and much of the data is redacted on grounds of commercial confidentiality, making it impossible for a local authority to assess its accuracy. There is now a growing ‘viability industry’, with agents incentivised to reduce developer obligations.

The report proposes that in order to increase transparency and speed up house building, there should be an open book approach to assessing viability. Guidance should be given on assessing viability, with a single methodology to reduce uncertainty and give greater clarity to developers (who are obliged to game the system as it now stands), local authorities and land owners.

Finally, the report has recommendations for improving the identification of potential sites for new housing. Only 8% of planning permissions for new houses are for sites of under 10 units. These tend to be developed much quicker than larger sites (22 months from planning permission to completion, compared to an average of 47 months for schemes of more than 250 units). Much more effort should be made to identify small sites for development (CPRE hopes to do some work on this).

If the Government is serious about building more houses while at the same time fulfilling its manifesto commitments to protect the countryside, it should seriously consider the practical proposals in Getting Houses Built and other recent CPRE reports on supporting small and medium-sized builders and improving the viabilityand quality of brownfield development. We really are trying to be constructive. Alternatively, it could take its lines from a handful of think-tanks who want to have yet another round of planning reforms (‘one last push’, as generals used to say a hundred years ago). This will be diverting. But it is unlikely to result in a single extra home being built.

https://susiebond.wordpress.com/2015/07/06/getting-houses-built-a-view-from-the-cpre/

EDDC Cabinet agenda – 15 July 2015

All 203 pages of it:

Click to access 150715-combined-agenda.pdf

Far too many important discussions to mention here – best look at the papers though pages 175-177 on Local Government Ombudsman complaints (particularly those upheld in different local districts) make interesting reading. And then the report on Freedom of Information requests from page 178 -180 is an almost whitewash analysis of current difficulties.

The situation with the Information Commissioner (who recently called East Devon unhelpful and discourteous and of submitting misleading documentation, is discussed under the heading of “Review of recent request for information decisions” – itself perhaps somewhat misleading!

Basically the report is whining, self-serving and contains no insight whatsoever as to the council’s failings. No-one is named (only designations) and EDDC’s correspondence reveals a total lack of admission of responsibility for massive failings of all kinds.

The only recommendations are that EDDC needs a second FoI officer and when they are deciding if a matter should be kept secret another EDDC officer should read the documents and comment!

Meetings about sale of beach huts to rich people tomorrow

Tuesday 7 July

In Seaton at 2 pm at Town Hall
https://www.facebook.com/groups/498639013619794/

In Sidmouth at Kennaway House
https://www.visionforsidmouth.org/calendar/2015/july/the-future-of-east-devons-beach-huts.aspx

Selling beach hut leases to highest bidders – meetings in Sidmouth and Seaton

Basically, EDCC wants to give notice to all current beach hut tenants and sell 5 year leases of sites only to highest bidders – local, not local, individual or business or investors.

They have 300 beach huts and a waiting list of 300. No attempt to create more sites – just flogging off current sites (some used by families for decades) to the highest bidder.

Brave New World!

East Devon: “pensioner pocket”

” …West Somerset had the highest projected proportion of pensioner households by 2021, with nearly half (47%) of households there expected to be headed by someone aged over 65.

North Norfolk, East and West Devon, East and West Dorset, the New Forest, South Lakeland, the Malvern Hills, Ryedale, the Derbyshire Dales and the Cotswold district were also on the list. …

… Here are the areas of England where over 40% of households are predicted to be headed by people aged over 65 by 2021 according to the NHF (urban areas are specified as such, with the remainder classed as being rural):

… East Devon: 44.5%”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Rural-West-pensioner-pockets-young-driven-house/story-26841095-detail/story.html

Housing: scandal after scandal after scandal

Buy to let scandal:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/article-3149797/Is-Britain-sitting-200bn-buy-let-time-bomb-Landlords-borrow-vast-sums-fund-property-empires.htm

Right to buy housing association properties scandal:
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/apr/14/tory-housing-association-right-to-buy-policy-attacked-big-business

Empty homes scandal:
https://www.contributoria.com/issue/2015-07/5551cea1853daab15a00018f/proposal

Mouldy rental homes scandal:
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jul/04/mouldy-rentals-are-no-place-to-raise-kids-why-isnt-housing-a-scandal

Former council homes now rented out scandal:
http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/Cambridge-right-buy-scandal-half-sold-council/story-26831176-detail/story.html

Homes owned by tax haven investors scandal:
http://www.michaelmeacher.info/weblog/2015/06/scandal-of-100000-uk-properties-covering-12-million-acres-now-owned-by-companies-in-tax-havens/

Fracking: get ready to rumble!

Honiton and Tiverton MP Neil Parish has said the government should do more to “get people behind fracking” (see earlier post). However, those in the fracking areas of Oklahoma might disagree:

http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/jun/25/oklahoma-fracking-regulations-earthquakes

Planning and democracy

Andrew Rawnsley, Observer:

” … What is the alternative? Well, there is dictatorship. That is a way of getting airports, power stations, roads, railways and other large-scale infrastructure built much more quickly. Turn me into Stalin and I can build houses where I like because I have a grand vision of what is best for the nation. Give autocratic power to exponents of fracking and they will have a drilling rig anywhere they fancy. The cheerleaders for expanding Heathrow point to China and, as if it were the clinching argument for laying down more tarmac, say that the Chinese are banging out a new airport every week – or something like that. That you can do when you do not have to be troubled by democratic debate and public consent and can crush communities with the pen stroke of a Beijing autocrat.

Democracy is much more complicated. It is fractious. It can be tortuously slow to arrive at decisions. It can be extremely frustrating to men with grand plans. Thank goodness for that. As Winston Churchill said, democracy is the worst form of government – except for all the other ones.”

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jul/05/planning-policy-major-infrastructure-heathrow-fracking-democracy

Government Briefing Paper: Calling in planning applications

Anyone can ask for a planning application to be called-in. Applications for a planning application to be called-in should be directed to:

National Planning Casework Unit 5 St Philips Place
Colmore Row
Birmingham
B3 2PW

Tel: 0303 444 8050
Email: npcu@communities.gsi.gov.uk

Applicants should give clear reasons why they think that the application should be called-in, including why it is of more than local importance. For further information see the Planning Inspectorate Procedural Guide: Called-in planning applications – England.

http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN00930/SN00930.pdf

Street trading “consent streets”: whose consent?

From a correspondent:

One of the interesting facts in the report to this week’s EDDC Overview Committee about street trading is the proposal that all currently Prohibited Streets in Sidmouth are proposed to be changed to be Consent streets as far as street trading is concerned.

Any applicant for a License to trade on one of these Consent streets must submit, as part of the application, the written consent of “the owner”.

In Sidmouth the beach is having its status changed from Prohibited to Consent for street trading from the mouth of the Sid westwards as far as Clifton cottage.

Now the Queen owns the beach up to the high tide mark for much of the UK – does she own East Devon’s beaches? And is she likely to give her signed approval for street trading on Those beaches? She owns up to the high tide mark and, for example, in Sidmouth that is pretty well at the sea wall.

It is not up to the applicant to identify who the owner is since the owner’s name is not required on the application form. So it will just be down to an EDDC Licensing Officer to check who owns a street or any place to which the public has access without paying and ensure that the consent in writing is given?

Why aren’t the beaches in Seaton and Exmouth included as Consent beaches – is Sidmouth being marked out for bad treatment here or good treatment? The Sidmouth Chamber of Commerce is against this proposal. It was approved by the Overview Committee and so will begin its progress to full approval.

I’ll bet EDDC have no idea who owns each part of various areas involved. If an area becomes a Consent Street under this proposal. I may know who owns what, indeed, I may even own it, but does East Devon? I wouldn’t mind betting that some street traders in Folk Week will apply to set up stalls along various streets not previously allowed and which might have very high passing footfall during Folk Week.

Interestingly on pages 41 and 42 of the Overview papers, where the process about dealing with objections to an application for street trading is detailed, there is an implication that even if the owner of a site objects, then the Licensing and Enforcement Committee may still approve the application. This seems to imply that if someone applies to put a market stall on my part of a private street, then whether or not someone is allowed to trade there is not in my determination but in the determination of and EDDC Committee of Conservative Councillors.

So what is the point of demanding the owner’s consent in writing as part of the application? Di I count at all in this process?

EDDC’s Transparency Code

But HAVING a Transparency Code doesn’t make you transparent – BEING transparent makes you transparent!

Secret meetings are not transparent and secret reports are not transparent, fighting the Information Commissioner when she says you must be transparent isn’t being transparent either!

http://eastdevon.gov.uk/help/transparency-code/

Parish council fights affordable housing allocation

Old Hunstanton Parish Council claims that the government should not have given the green light to a development of 15 affordable homes on a field on the edge of the village.

The council says there is not a local need for them and has asked the judge to reverse the decision made by the former communities secretary Eric Pickles last year.

Luke Wilcox, for the parish council, told the court that planning rules allow rural greenfield development if there is a “local identified need.”

In this situation that must mean “local rural need,” he said. He claimed that the planning inspector who recommended the go-ahead for the project to the secretary of state did not appreciate that and wrongly considered the needs of the nearby town of Hunstanton as well.

Old Hunstanton has around 600 inhabitants while nearby Hunstanton has around 5,000 inhabitants. According to the housing register there are only two households in housing need in Old Hunstanton, compared with 22 in Hunstanton itself, said Mr Wilcox.

He added that the statistics showed that there was no need for 15 affordable homes in Old Hunstanton.

John Dobson, the chairman of Old Hunstanton Parish Council, attended the hearing. Speaking outside of court he said that the dispute, which has gone on for around two years, was “multifaceted and very complex.”

However, he said that he was the leader of the borough council that wrote the rules allowing development on green field sites if there was a “local need.”

He said that the borough council brought in the rule because the number of people buying holiday homes in the area had made houses in the villages too expensive for local people.

But he said greenfield development should only be allowed to let the people in the village who need housing build houses.

He added that the policy was not intended to allow people from the nearby town to be housed in the village.

However, Richard Honey, the counsel for the secretary of state who is opposing the challenge, told the court that the parish council was wrong.

He said that in reaching his decision the planning inspector had applied a “clear and natural” interpretation of the rules in a way that was in line with “local planning authorities up and down the country.”

Mrs Justice Lang has reserved judgment in the case and will give it in writing later. No date has yet been fixed.

Old Hunstanton Parish Council v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government. Case Number: CO/79/2015

http://www.planningresource.co.uk/article/1354381/parish-council-takes-fight-against-affordable-housing-scheme-high-court

Minister says councils should “take back power” from Whitehall

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Minister-urges-councils-power-Whitehall/story-26827606-detail/story.html

But who will take back power from power-hungry councils!

Beach huts: is this EDDC’s most biased consultation yet?

https://www.snapsurveys.com/wh/s.asp?k=143273873752

How DO you reduce the negative impact of taking beach huts off people and selling them to the highest bidder? Answers to that question will be interesting!

And what would you rather have – a secret auction for taking them away or an open one? What do you prefer: the rock or the hard place?

And then, with waiting lists being so long they ask people if they would like to be added to them! So that they can justify this by saying they have even longer waiting lists because they proactively asked people who might never have thought of it to join one!

According to the Save the Beach Huts Facebook page this survey is costing upwards of £1000 (plus, of course, officer time, which is never costed).

Does East Devon need a CEO if South Somerset doesn’t?

Thanks to an EDW correspondent for this exchange of views in a local edition of Streetlife:

https://www.streetlife.com/conversation/10dtul2zio85n/

Local Government Transparency: a new House of Commons Briefing PPer

A House of Commons Briefing Paper on Local Government Transparency in England was published on 24 June 2015 – see link below.

Amongst other things it specified that the following MUST be provided to members of the public in a format that can be easily understood:

“The Code requires the publication of specified categories of data, and recommends the publication of additional data, under the headings below

Individual items of expenditure exceeding £500;

Data on the land and buildings held by the authority

Information on invitations to tender, and every contract or purchase order, with a value of over £5,000;

Details of every transaction on a Government Procurement Card used by the authority;

Grants to voluntary, community and social enterprise

organisations: dates made and amounts granted;

The authority’s organisation chart, covering the top three levels in

the organisation, including salary bands;

Details of trade union facility time: number of representatives and

spending upon them

The number of controlled parking spaces within their area;

Data on the value of the authority’s social housing stock;

Data on senior salaries (see section 3 below);

The pay multiple (see section 3 below);

The authority’s constitution;

Details of counter-fraud work;

Details of waste contracts;

Data on parking revenues.”

For more information, see

Click to access SN06046.pdf

Neil Parish MP says the public should be encouraged to “buy into fracking”: Green MEP disagrees

“The new head of Parliament’s environment and rural affairs committee has urged ministers to do more to encourage people to “buy into” fracking.

Neil Parish, chairman of the Efra select committee and MP for Tiverton and Honiton, suggested the controversial practice would be “good for the country”. But he said it was important for the Government to demonstrate “tangible” benefits to local communities first in order to get their support.

His comments came during a Westminster debate in which he acknowledged there were no current plans to extract shale gas in Devon. But large areas of the Westcountry are open to applications, and the energy secretary is pushing for extraction to be permitted in national parks.

Mr Parish argued a “competitive and efficient” shale gas industry would be “good for the country”, adding that the UK could end up producing “a lot more” of the resource than expected. He qualified this by saying the gas “should not be brought out of the ground at any price” and recommending investment in infrastructure to ensure minimal disruption to communities and landscapes.

However, his comments drew criticism from Green MEP Molly Scott Cato, who said the Government’s approach to fracking was proof of its willingness “to prioritise corporations over people’s rights and their health”.”

Read more: http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Devon-MP-suggests-public-buy-idea-fracking/story-26822148-detail/story.html