Westcountry MP on Commons Standards Committee fails to declare massive earnings on time

[Geoffrey Cox MP – Torridge and West Devon] …
is known as one of parliament’s highest earners, and has argued that continuing to practise law alongside his parliamentary duties means he has “practical experience of a world outside politics”.

“According to the latest register of members’ financial interests, Mr Cox received £325,000 on June 15 and 16 this year for 500 hours of work carried out between June 2014 and March 2015.

… Under Commons rules external income needs to be registered within 28 days, but the sum was not declared to the authorities until September 30.”

A number of other payments also appear to have been registered late.”

http://www.westerndailypress.co.uk/Devon-MP-Geoffrey-Cox-QC-resigns-parliament-s/story-28012067-detail/story.html

The (party) politics of housing

“… Homeowners are more than twice as likely to vote Conservative as Labour and those in social rented homes are more than twice as likely to vote Labour as Conservative. Housing has always been tribal.

It is generational too. According to the last census, among the over 50s more than 80% are owner-occupiers. But among the under 35s, a majority are in the rented sector. What is more, twice as many pensioners voted Conservative as Labour at the last election. …”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-34570348

Campaign for Better Transport for the South West

“Local campaigners are coming together to launch the Campaign for Better Transport South West, with the question: “What’s your beef?”

The group says it will aim to tackle the many problems facing everyday transport in the South West, from bus cuts and “needless” new roads, to poor rail links.
t
Chris Todd, roads campaigner, said: “We urge people to book their place at the launch event in Bristol for our new transport group, Campaign for Better Transport South West.

“It’s an opportunity, for people to voice their concerns about transport in the region and get involved in issues that really matter to them.

… Event details: Saturday 14 November, Hamilton House, 80 Stokes Croft, Bristol BS1 3QY Time: 10.30-4.30pm

Guest speakers: Steve Melia, senior lecturer in Transport and Planning at University of the West of England and Stephen Joseph, chief executive, Campaign for Better Transport.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/New-transport-camapaign-calls-road-rail-bus/story-28006848-detail/story.html

EDDC planners confirmed holiday accommodation at Queens Drive two years ago

Agenda Item 3 SW Region Planning Officers meeting, Cranbrook:

“Exmouth and Seaton Regeneration:

Presentation by Alison Hayward, Principal Regeneration Project Manager at East Devon District Council – Appendix 2
Exmouth noted signs of economic decline in earl y 2000’s.
Council – enabling role and significant landowner.

Masterplan adopted 2011 and delivery strategy. Public realm improvements £1m. Elizabeth Hall community venue to redevelop as Premier Inn. Indoor bowling alley, soft play, venue (all from private investment). Station area – aim to improve connectivity, discussions with stagecoach (depot). Rugby club to be relocated to enable supermarket development. Watersports facilities at Queens Drive – looking to relocate road for better linkage with sea – inc hotel / holiday accommodation. Outline planning application prior to selling some of the site to developer partner / operator. Mamhead slipway (deepwater) collapsed – engineering solutions to replace/enhance, up to £1.3m council costs. Town centre area also being examined – land ownership issues complex.

Seaton – special policy (regeneration) in 2006 local plan. Capital receipt of EDDC land sale (Tesco + 400 homes) reinvested. Coastal communities and HLF funding bids for fossil centre. Wetlands reserve (Devon Wildlife Trust). Other projects: Seaton Quay, workshops, tramway improvements.

Q&A – Tesco does not appear to have impacted on town centre. Ex estuary mitigation strategy for Premier Inn south.”

Planning Officers SW meeting October 2013

Click to access SW%20Region%20Notes%20181013.pdf

Exmouth regeneration: a resident writes

I spent my youth living in Ramsgate, and saw the town councillor’s over several years close down businesses and dither about making idiotic plans they could never keep. Usually big investors pulling of projects. I have lived in Exmouth for 2 years and would not like to see the same thing happen here.

My message to Richard Cohen is simple enough. If you force a business to close, you need to have something there to replace it. Big ideas cost big money. Have the council got all the funding they need.

So we hear of plans for a supermarket in the rugby grounds apparently going back a few years ago. It should already have happened. Now we hear of Marks and Spencer planning on opening a store in the bus depot. Then we hear the council yet again dithering about where they should have a store.

I have seen it all before, and know the outcome. Mr Richard Cohen needs to get his act together. Before this fine town ends up a ghost town.

Paul Meyer

Seaton: Town Council changes Green Wedge planning meeting venue

The Seaton Town Council Planning meeting which will consider the Green Wedge application will now be in the United Reform Church, Cross Street, at 7 on Monday 19th October, as the council anticipates a large public turnout.”

seatonmatters.org

On the one hand … Cranbrook gets housing awards …

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Cranbrook-scoops-national-housing-awards/story-28002705-detail/story.html

But did they take this into account:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/09/14/what-mainstream-media-isnt-telling-you-about-that-dcc-cranbrook-repo

or this:

https://public-api.wordpress.com/wp-admin/rest-proxy/#http://widgets.wp.com

“Democratic Audit”

Democratic Audit, based at the London School of Economics, is an independent research unit based at the Public Policy Group in the LSE’s Government Department. Its core objective is to advance democracy and freedom, and to undertake and promote research into their quality, durability and effectiveness in a UK context.

Here is an extract from its comments on “deliberative democracy” – an initiative of the Electoral Reform Society:

“Tomorrow marks the beginning of a series of citizens’ assemblies, organised by the Electoral Reform Society in partnership with academics from Sheffield, Southampton and London, which will be taking place in Southampton and Sheffield over the next month. In this article, Chris Terry discusses the trend of grassroots deliberation which has been gaining momentum since the late 1980s. He argues deliberative democracy tools can help to improve and legitimise political decision-making in an age of detachment from traditional political elites.

… Deliberative democracy is not a replacement for traditional democratic structures. Rather it should be thought of as an addition to them. By involving ordinary citizens in the process of political decision-making, these tools can help to improve and legitimise political decision-making in an age of detachment from traditional political elites.

Perhaps one of the greatest challenges for the UK’s political elites is devolution. Since the Scottish independence referendum the constitution of the UK seems weaker and more fractured than ever. A patchwork of devolution settlements exists, stewarded in a top-down way by political elites. This is not the way to build a lasting, sustainable UK constitutional settlement.

That is why the Electoral Reform Society, together with academics from the Universities of Sheffield, Southampton, London and Westminster, is running two Citizens’ Assemblies in Sheffield and Southampton over the next month, looking at how those areas should be run in the new devolution age.

We hope that this will only be the beginning, building towards a national citizens’ convention to look at Britain’s democratic future and how the UK works together. Whatever the future of the Union, it is vital that our institutions have the legitimacy that can only be conferred by a grassroots re-evaluation of our political processes. Our democracy is changing – and it’s time citizens had a say how.”

http://www.democraticaudit.com/?p=16848

Tourism is a money spinner, but EDDC ignores it!

“Sightseers spend £499million a year in the South West, more than anywhere else in the UK, new figures show.

Even more (£547million) is spent on visitor attractions in the region – second only to London, a survey of domestic tourism has revealed.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/West-sightseers-outspend-London-Scotland-study/story-27997609-detail/story.html

And still East Devon District Council ignores tourism. The more incursions of housing and industrial units into our beautiful coastal and countryside areas, the fewer tourists we get.

Two Successes but a thumping Failure for Chardstock at yesterday’s Scrutiny Committee

Two successes for EDA Independent councillors’ campaign for openness and democracy at last night’s EDDC Scrutiny Committee Meeting –and a thumping failure.

At the suggestion of EDA Independent councillor Ben Ingham, the committee unanimously recommended that the shadowy activities of the secretive Asset Management Forum should be dragged into the light. They agreed that Forum meetings from now should be minuted and open to press and public.

They also unanimously approved “best practice” recommendations from a recent Government training session for scrutiny committees.

In fact, EDA Independent councillor Marion Rixson was praised for having already pre-empted the recommendation that individual councillors should do detailed research into topics of concern. Her comparative study of different councils’ management of beach huts was crucial in influencing the EDDC’s recent decision to scrap its plan to auction the rental of its beach huts to the highest bidder.

Sadly the Committee was unable to shine a light on the scandalous Chardstock affair.

Two speakers expressed their frustration and disappointment that the Committee could not scrutinise the dubious way in which their small, isolated community had been declared suitable for large scale development in the Local Plan.

If any village in East Devon in “unsustainable” it’s Chardstock with its few facilities and poor access. The Parish Council thought so, EDDC’s planning officers thought so. But at an Extraordinary Council Meeting on March 25, called to finalise the Local Plan, Chardstock was designated “sustainable”!

Grave doubts have been expressed about the process that led to this astonishing decision. A member of the public, who many assumed was a Chardstock councillor, spoke strongly in favour of designation as sustainable. He was later identified as a developer, not resident in the village.

Deputy Leader Andrew Moulding spoke eloquently in his support – and a majority of the Council agreed to re-designate the unfortunate village.

To many observers, including Independent councillors, this appeared to be a shameful manipulation, and an earlier meeting of the Scrutiny Committee had agreed to investigate the process.

Last night it emerged that the Council’s Legal Officer had advised that the Scrutiny Committee should not discuss the matter until the Inspector had ruled on the Local Plan. By which time it would be impossible to change Chardstock’s designation!

The Legal Officer did not attend, and it was left to a deputy to try justify the decision.

In frustration, one of the Chardstock councillors accused the Committee of kicking the Chardstock scandal “into the long grass”. Chair Roger Giles denied it, and said it would be investigated whenever the Inspector had made his decision.

EDA Independent councillor Cathy Gardner said she was embarrassed to be a member of the Scrutiny Committee which had let down the public.

There’s obviously work to do before all the dark corners of EDDC are open to daylight!

Runaway rent increases throughout the UK – 5.5% in southwest

“Inflation may have dipped into minus figures, but rents have leapt by an average of between 6.3% and 8.5% over the past year, according to two reports, highlighting the dramatic extent to which the cost of a place to live has uncoupled from the cost of living.

The average rent paid by private tenants in England and Wales reached a record high of £816 per month in September, compared with £768 a year earlier, said letting agents Your Move and Reeds Rains. Meanwhile, the latest official inflation figures showed UK prices were 0.1% lower than this time last year. …”

http://gu.com/p/4dbha

Earlier this month David Cameron changed rules so that developers no longer have to build “affordable homes” for rent or shared ownership.

Beach Management and Think Tanks

East Devon councillor Cathy Gardner reports on the EDA website:

I had some new experiences this week – attending a ‘think tank’ and a Sidmouth Beach Management Plan (BMP) Steering Group meeting. Think Tanks are informal discussions arranged by Portfolio Holders (Cabinet members given specific areas of responsibility like Economy or Tourism). I have no idea yet if there will be any actions as a result of the discussions on Monday (12/10/15) but Officers were present and some good ideas were put forward. The topic of this meeting was how to use grant money that the Council had received for supporting the local economy. The workings of EDDC are becoming clearer, if still frustrating.

The BMP meeting was very informative, although progress seems to have been slow. The Steering Group consists of a range of people, mostly not on EDDC although it is Chaired by Cllr Moulding (Axminster) who is Deputy Leader. An area of concern is Alma Bridge: continued erosion means that another solution will be needed soon. Even so it seems highly likely that the coastal path will be diverted over the footbridge at the ford at some point. There does not seem to be any urgency from DCC to start work on a long-term answer (probably with the bridge further inland than it is now). They seem to want to wait until the BMP process advances some more. Another challenge for the BMP is the quality of the data being used to estimate erosion rate. This is a historical problem as good data has only been recorded recently, however the inclusion of data that everyone agreed was wrong seems counter-intuitive. We will have to wait many more months before a plan is drafted and then more months before funding is found to start work.

I hope this insight into the workings of EDDC is informative.”

http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/

Beach huts: a very messy “compromise”

Some reading between the lines needed here:

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Partial-victory-celebrated-East-Devon-beach-hut/story-27994867-detail/story.html

Auctioning leases has NOT been ruled out when 5 year leases are offered ( it is unclear if leases apply to all sites or just Budleigh Salterton and Seaton sites).

Taking out the word “significant” from the original phrase ” significant increase” means nothing.

“Market rents” will be charged.

A typical EDDC non-transparent fudge that only benefits one side: EDDC.

Tenants beware!

Yet another Local Plan consultation

Will this nightmare never end?

From EDDC:

“The East Devon Local Plan Inspector has asked that we consult on additional changes to the local plan. The consultation will run from Friday 16 October 2015 to 12.00 Noon on Monday 30 November 2015.

These changes and further information about the consultation can be viewed on the Council web site at:
http://eastdevon.gov.uk/planning/planning-policy/emerging-plans-and-policies/the-new-local-plan/examination-and-hearing-sessions-and-further-consultation/work-programme-autumn-2015/#article-content

We will send copies of the paperwork to public libraries in East Devon and to Lyme Regis Library and Exeter Central Library and paper copies can be inspected at the council offices here in Sidmouth.

To save paper we have provided the web link, however, if you are unable to view or download documents via our web site please contact us directly and we can supply a paper copy of the proposed changes and a form for making comments.

Please ensure that we receive any response by 12.00 noon on Monday 30 November 2015 at the latest.”

Standards in public life – not high enough

” …..In late 2013 Lord Bew, the Chair of the Committee for Standards in Public Life, made a keynote speech for lawyers in local government and observed that:

“the lack of sanctions meant that success of the standards regime is entirely dependent on robust local leadership and ethical championing. This is a fragile balance and we fear those local authorities who are “good at this stuff” will continue to be while others resort to monolithic culture which have in the past had the most difficulty in dealing with issues internally.” (Bew 2013, p.4)

Bew’s view was that it was necessary to establish an open culture in which challenge of poor behaviour is encouraged. He made a further observation at the OEDC Policy Forum that leadership behaviours were established on either:

1. Compliance based systems – that is a well designed and systematically enforced external system of rules; or
2. Integrity based – that is internally driven.

But by dismantling the national body of Standards for England and the Audit Commission, the Government has removed much of the compliance means of control of behaviour. This leaves the integrity based formula. The question is can an integrity based system suffice, if the next election is years away?

Recent research (Feild 2015) confirms that there is widespread concern held regarding misconduct of council leaders and lack of sanctions. The evidence from this research supports an argument that there needs to be a statutory ability of the Secretary of State to intervene where there is failing leadership on standards. As Lord Hanningfield’s credit card expenses case shows and re-inforced by the Tower Hamlets (PwC 2014) and Rotherham Borough Council (Casey 2015) interventions, the authorities concerned were not capable on their own of remedying their failure of leadership.

This sustained a local culture of poor standards. Indeed the research supports the thesis that the Localism Act standards duty in its current form cannot displace a poor local culture. In a nutshell, those organisations were no longer capable of healing themselves and needed external intervention. While there was intervention, it was taken under the Local Government Act 1999 because of a failure to deliver ‘best value’. Yet the failure to deliver was arguably at least equally due to lack of adherence to the Nolan principles rather than just organisational inefficiencies.

In addition, the Local Government Act 1999 intervention arrangements to date are heavily dependent on the use of expensive external expertise. It is unfair that the council tax payers of a failing standards council have to suffer bad governance and then have to pay the cost of the external consultants to tell them of it!

Worse still, adding insult to injury, if there is a finding of poor value or poor administration, there is no power to remove the member(s) from their elected positions or their members’ allowances. So there needs to be a process for dealing with errant members and particularly leaders which includes the power of suspension including allowances and if need be disqualification. This must be located with the Secretary of State via an amended 1999 Act because the Localism Act seems incapable of changing a culture that has set in of poor leadership on standards at the local level.
Time for a change

So what can be done now? There is a consultation being led by the anti-corruption Tsar Sir Eric Pickles to look particularly at the implications of electoral fraud (contact here by 13 October 2015).

The key issue that has prompted this review has much about the consequences of unethical leadership with the reins of power of elected mayors. I suggest we all get involved and tell Sir Eric Pickles your experiences and views for change. In my view the power to intervene needs to be increased before we allow any further power to be transferred from the centre to local leaders, be they powerhouse mayors or Sheriffs. It is not good enough that the intervention is based on “best value”; there needs to be a power to remove errant leaders and their appointees if there is a failure in standards.

Furthermore this responsibility for standards needs to be set out in a functions and responsibilities regulation made under the Local Government Act 2000. It appears that many authorities have simply placed the S.27 (1) 2011 Act promotion of standards responsibility with their now non-statutory standards committee or its successor. Not good enough.

For it to be effective there has to be leadership from the council leader and the chief officers together with full council. Apart from the strong leader measures there is very little legislation directly affecting the council leader, but it is not unknown to place special responsibility on an elected Member, indeed the Children Act 2004 section 19 establishes a ‘lead member for children’s services’. It would seem right to place a similar responsibility on the council leader to be lead member for the promotion and maintenance of high standards of conduct.

Dr Paul Field has just completed his doctorial thesis – How does localism for standards work in practice? The practitioner’s view of local standards post Localism Act 2011. Paul is a local government lawyer.

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=24636:game-of-mayors&catid=59&Itemid=27

Blackhill Quarry

It is interesting that Natural England, the East Devon AONB and even EDDC oppose this extension of use for a further 5 years.

If this site had been reclaimed in 2012 (as could have happened) the increased recreational area would be a great recreational benefit to the developments in the western side of East Devon (SANGS) and also Exeter yet this did not seem to make any difference to DCC’s decision at the time.

Industrial Aggegates has now submitted new evidence in its quest to continue to use the Blackhill Quarry for a further 5 years to process imported sand and gravel from Straitgate Quarry, Ottery St. Mary. ( planning application DCC/3775/2015)

Two previous deadlines for de-commissioning have not been honoured. The original restoration of the site was supposed to be complete in 2012. A further decision in 2008 allowed importation until November 2009. The final approval in April 2011 stipulated that all operations cease by 2016.

The impact is severe as traffic takes aggregate in for storage & processing and the same traffic movements ships it out on very narrow Devon roads , in total 200 movements daily.

The site is in the East Devon AONB and lies adjacent to the Pebblebeds Heaths SYA, SAC and SSSI. It therefore has the highest level of protection in regards to the environment, landscape and habitats. The stocking of large amounts of aggregate is contrary to all international, national and local policies.

It is interesting to note that a planning inspector recently refused a planning application in Talaton in part because it was within 10 km of the East Devon pebblebeds SSSI, when this quarry is even closer.

http://www.devon.gov.uk/index/environmentplanning/planning-system/planning_applications-mw/planning_applications.htm

A tale of two Science Parks …

In Plymouth, their Science Park is flourishing:

“Since June, 15 new businesses have relocated to the 25 acre site near Derriford Hospital which specialises in supporting businesses in the areas of science, technology, marine and digital.

The park is a world-class office, research and laboratory environment that provides the space, flexibility and support for businesses to accelerate their growth and success.

Its community of 80 businesses employing upwards of 800 people, combines to create one of the South West’s most desirable working environments – plus it offers a free mentoring service for all businesses on site through it’s bespoke Advisory Board.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Record-number-businesses-Plymouth-Science-Park/story-27983859-detail/story.html

In Exeter, a further £2.5 m is being put in by Devon County Council to make it more attractive to the Met Office and any other tenants which might turn up. Quite why it wasn’t originally designed with footpaths, cycleways and proper drainage isn’t made clear.

“An access road to the Met Office site and GEFC has already been completed. The funding boost from Devon County Council will be now be used to create a network of footpaths and cycleways, car parking and improved drainage. Planning permission has already been obtained for the essential infrastructure works.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/100m-growth-investment-unlocked-Exeter-Science/story-27985321-detail/story.html

When does an “inconvenient” pothole become a ” dangerous” one?

Devon County Council intends to “relax” the rules about when potholes must be filled.

” … Potholes in the county will now be assessed based on where they are in the road and whether they are a “danger” or a “serious inconvenience”, says the report.

It also proposes that the “defect classification” for road markings is to be “relaxed”, senior Conservatives heard.

Liberal Democrat opposition leader, Alan Connett, called it “another assault on Devon’s roads and motorists”.

“Now they’re looking at whether it’s the right type of pothole to be eligible for repair, they want to take longer to repair the pathways and slacken the classification for repairing road markings,” he added.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Wrong-kind-potholes-fixed-quickly-Devon/story-27983532-detail/story.html

Housing myths

Following on from the post below, here is an article from Simon Jenkins challenging myths about housing that appeared in the Guardian earlier this month:

“Here are the most damaging myths about the policy issue that’s on everyone’s lips – and a few brutal realities
Housing is Britain’s top policy issue. It is the “crisis” of our day. London’s mayoral elections, says Labour’s Sadiq Khan, should be a “referendum on the housing crisis”. The migration crisis, the NHS crisis and the poverty crisis all pale before its awesome might. So what is the “solution”?
There is no solution. As in all political crises, there are tribal myths and economic realities. When the myths win, policy degenerates into chaos and counterproductivity. First, let’s deal with the myths.

1 That there is a housing “crisis”. There is none. Too many people cannot find the house they want in London and the south-east, which is where most politicians and commentators live. This is inevitable where an economy is booming. Average prices in London may be £500,000, but in the north-west and north-east of England they are £150,000. You can get a decent home in Salford for £65,000.

2 That an average is a minimum. It is not. Housing hysteria is based on averages. When someone asks “How can I possibly afford £500,000?”, the answer is: you cannot, but somebody presumably can. But go on Zoopla and there are houses in parts of London for £180,000. Even the poorest newcomers seem to find somewhere (usually private) to rent.

3 That there is a national “need” for 250,000 new houses a year. For decades this has been Whitehall’s meaningless concept of “household formation”, taking no account of regional preference, propensity to move home, house prices or cost of finance. Housing need implies homelessness. It should refer to the 60,000 people currently in temporary accommodation, who ought to be the chief focus of policy attention. All else is “demand”.

4 That the solution to house prices lies in building more new houses. New houses are always worth building, where the infrastructure is in place. But new houses account for a mere 10th of housing transactions. The chief determinant of house prices is the state of the market in existing property and the cost of finance. During the sub-prime period, prices soared in America and Australia despite unrestricted new building. It was cheap money that did the damage. The house-builders lobby equates housing to “new build” because that is where their interest lies.

5 That the solution lies in the green belt. This is an anti-ruralist’s version of myth four. Even were the green belt obsolete, which few accept, or partly so (which I accept), it will not dent the pressure of overall demand. Nor is sprawl remotely “sustainable” development. It requires new infrastructure and puts more pressure on roads and commuting. It is bad planning.

6 That high buildings are the answer. They are inefficient as the higher you build the more is spent on servicing. London’s most popular and economic housing is “high density/low rise”. Towers have supplied mostly empty pads for the rich, housing no one.

7 That the answer lies in new social housing. Security of tenure and low turnover – not to mention right to buy – renders the fixed stock of public housing inflexible and immobile. Increasingly it has become a generous donation by the taxpayer to a fortunate few, for life. It is largely irrelevant to acute homelessness.

8 That people have a “right” to live where they or their parents lived before. Localities benefit from stable populations, but conferring and bequeathing such a right to discriminatory subsidy is in no book of rights.

9 That there is also a “right” to home ownership. The state has a housing obligation for those who need help. Home ownership is capital accumulation, developed out of the Tories’ mortgage tax relief as a form of saving for old age and to endow offspring. It promotes inequality and cannot be termed a right.

10 That renting is stupid. Renting is buying a service. About 60% of Germans rent. They do not think of buying until their 40s. Booming Berlin has 90% of its population renting. Renting aids labour mobility and channels savings into productive investment. As a result, Germany has little house price inflation and no “ladder” advantage to owning not renting.

11 That buy to let is evil. The poorest people rent from the private sector. The more houses are available to rent, the more flexible is the housing stock and the lower are rents for those who do not buy. Whether buyers-to-let should enjoy tax breaks and whether rents should be regulated are quite different matters.

Facing these myths stand a few realities.

1 There is no “need” to build on rural land outside cities. Jobs, leisure and infrastructure are available in cities. We should not aid hypermobility with sprawl. Every city, in de-industrialising, leaves empty sites stuck in planning arguments or delayed decontamination. The London agents Stirling Ackroyd have identified sites for 500,000 houses in London without touching the green belt. People may like houses in the countryside, but that is preference not need.

2 The one massive reservoir of vacant residential property in Britain is under-occupied property and underdeveloped city land. London is awash with small houses and empty rooms, its residential density the lowest of any big city in Europe. Detached houses, spare rooms and gardens are the nation’s luxury. Britons had 1.5 rooms per person in 1981 and have 2.5 today, even as new housebuilding is declining. Freeing up this capacity should be the overwhelming goal of policy.

3 Tax makes it worse, not better. VAT discriminates in favour of new building and against the conversion of existing properties. Stamp duty is a tax on transactions, and thus on downsizing and more efficient use of space. Council tax is wildly regressive, promoting wasted space. Inheritance tax relief rewards hoarding.

4 Planning control is too strict. Permitting an extra storey, apartment or back extension on every existing property would drastically increase density and capacity. London can grow higher without growing high.

5 The most effective way to relieve housing poverty is through housing benefit, at present chaotically administered. Cash payments are more flexible and fit for purpose. They should extend to a new “public sector Airbnb”, geared to bringing vacancies to market.

6 The only way to force down rents and house prices in the south is to strain every policy sinew to make London poorer and the regions richer. That seems too radical for anyone.”

Simon Jenkins
The Guardian, Thursday 1st October 2015

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/sep/30/housing-crisis-policy-myth-realities