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'Securing the future of England’s council housing: five solutions from 100 council landlords' published 13/09/2024

In March 2024, Southwark Council hosted a summit with 20 of the largest council landlords in England to discuss the shared challenges and ambitions for the future of council housing.  It was decided to commission a report on the challenges facing council housing and how best to secure its future. The report was published on 30 August.  Its recommendations have been endorsed by more than 100 council landlords, responsible for 1.2 million homes.

 

The report concludes: "Our country's council housing financial model is broken and the system's future is in danger - with a £2.2bn black hole in councils' housing budgets expected by 2028. Our 2012 self-financing settlement with the government was based on a ten-year deal that would ensure our rent incomes were predictable and increasing, and that our costs were foreseeable. But that deal was not honoured by the last government. Whilst we have been expected to deliver our side of the agreement, repeated policy changes from central government imposed new costs on councils while at the same time restricting our income."

 

 It recommends:

 

"In recognition of the severe impact the last decade of national policy choices have had on council housing budgets, we call for an emergency capital funding injection of £644m, equal to the income lost from the 2023-25 rent cap. This will stabilise our HRAs in the short term and prevent further waste caused by delaying or cancelling investment plans.

 

Then, at the next Spending Review, we call on the government to:

1. Establish a new fair and sustainable HRA model: including a long-term and certain rent-settlement, an adjustment of HRA debts and more favourable conditions for council investment.

 

2. Reform unsustainable Right to Buy policies: by reducing discount levels and eligibility, as well as protecting newly built council homes from sale.

 

3. Remove red tape on the Affordable Homes Programme and other funds: including extending the strategic partnership model to councils. Funding should be streamlined, allocated simply, reflect recent cost inflation, and allowed to be used flexibly to meet local housing needs.

 

4. Announce a Green & Decent Homes Programme: a long-term, capital-funded programme to bring all council housing up to the new standard of safety, decency and energy efficiency by 2030 - and a road map for achieving net zero by 2050.

 

5. Fund the completion of new council homes: limit the short-term loss of housing supply and construction sector capacity caused by the unfolding market downturn, by funding councils to rescue and complete stalled development projects.


Our detailed and practical recommendations will get the system back on stable foundations, enable us to bring all homes up to the standards our residents deserve and unlock our potential to deliver the next generation of council homes. We look forward to working with the new government to secure the future of England's council housing."

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