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Nick Raynsford: The effect of the CSR on housing

October 27, 2010 By Nick Raynsford MP

Housing is an issue with which I have been closely involved for almost all my working life, in the course of which I have seen a number of ups and downs. But at no time in the past 4 decades can I recall a bleaker outlook for people looking for a new home or a solution to their housing problem.

We have just come through the most serious recession in my lifetime.  Housing inevitably was badly affected.  Private housebuilding in England fell from just over 150,000 new starts in 2007 to just 60,000 in 2009.  This clearly had a serious impact, but things would have been far worse had the then Labour Government not taken a series of bold measures to counter the downturn.  As a result of the fiscal stimulus and more specific policies targeted at the housing market, repossessions which had been forecast to rise to similar levels to those seen in the recession of the early 1990s peaked at half that level; and because of investment through the Homes and Communities Agency in schemes such as Kickstart, the National Affordable Housing programme and Homebuy Direct, social and affordable housing programmes were maintained and confidence began to return to the market.  In the early months of this year, housebuilders were reporting month on month improvements in house sales and in the output of new homes.  It appeared that we had turned the corner.

Then came the General Election and the formation of the coalition government.  Since then a series of ill-considered, uncoordinated, untested and frankly irresponsible policy announcements and cuts have destroyed the prospects of recovery, brought the housing market to the verge of a double-dip recession and spread alarm and concern around almost every sector of the community in need of better housing.

Confidence in the private housebuilding industry has been severely damaged over the past 5 months by ill-thought out changes to the planning regime, a continuing mortgage famine, fears about rising levels of unemployment, and severe cuts to the Homes and Communities Agency budget that had been supporting many new housing and regeneration schemes.

The Times reported last week (20th October) that Bellway, Britain’s sixth largest housebuilder had “delivered what one analyst described as an ‘unremittingly bleak’ assessment of the housing market”.

“The Newcastle-based company said that while it had enjoyed a strong spring selling season consumer confidence had ‘slowly ebbed away’ after the general election and subsequent media discussion of how the government planned to tackle Britain’s budget deficit.”

The Daily Telegraph also reported last week (22 October) the Bank of England warning that home prices are likely to remain static or decline in 2011 as home loans become harder to secure after the spending cuts.

“The warning (it commented) will add to growing fears about the fragility of the housing market after values dropped last month by the biggest monthly amount ever recorded”.

The Guardian also reported last week that:

“Britain’s struggling housebuilding industry is ‘bewildered’ by the Government plan to radically change the finances of council houses, as experts warn the measures could have ‘a devastating impact’ on the future supply of social housing’”.

Now one might expect that Ministers, confronted with such dire evidence of the negative impact their policies have had over the past 6 months would now be reconsidering some of their impetuous early decisions and their harsh cuts package.  One certainly might expect Liberal Democrat Ministers to be wondering why they have lashed themselves to the mast of a Tory ship which is heading directly onto the rocks, steered by a demented helmsman, while the captain appears blithely unaware of the immediate perils they face, fixing his gaze instead on some distant coastline and imaginary sunlit uplands.

However instead of changing course, Ministers continue to press ahead on their doomed journey, ignoring all the evidence of impending disaster, and pinning their hopes on the so called ‘Housing bonus’ incentive which is as about as unconvincing as the imagined sunlit uplands.

The scheme has been promised as the panacea for the housing market for the last 6 months or more.  In the summer, the Housing Minister promised anxious housebuilders that it would be launched before the summer recess.  Then we were told all would be revealed in the autumn.  Now we are promised a consultation in November.  Yet all the while, confidence is draining away from the housing market.

And there remain huge question marks over the scheme and how the supposed panacea will work.  Will it as originally claimed, apply to all new homes granted planning consent, or only to net additions to the housing stock?  If the latter how will that incentivise regeneration and brownfield developments where because of the need to demolish existing substandard dwellings, no net increase in the stock is likely for many years.

How many homes will the scheme generate – and how will this compare with the 160,000 homes for which plans have already been ditched since the general election, and the further 120,000 – 140,000 which could be lost in the coming year, according to the report from Tetlow King planning for the National Housing Federation?

And what will be the impact, in terms of cuts to local authorities, of funding the scheme?  Which authorities will gain and which lose?

Given all the questions and doubts that have been raised from all quarters about this scheme, why has it not been trialled or piloted, to test whether there is any realistic prospect of it delivering the benefits which the Minister for Housing constantly assures us it will bring?  How can the Government claim to believe in evidence-based policy-making, while having not a shred of empirical evidence to support the case for the Housing Bonus Incentive Scheme?

As if the damage caused by their harsh Housing Benefit Cuts and their maladroit destabilising of the housing market was not enough, this Government has also embarked, in clear breach of Conservative election pledges, on dismantling the whole basis of social housing in England.

Being able to enjoy security in one’s own home is an asset which almost all of us in this House take for granted.  So do the great majority of the population.  The old adage ‘An Englishman’s home is his castle’ reflects a deep-seated belief that a secure home is a bedrock of a decent society.  So why is it that Coalition politicians who take it for granted that they should enjoy the benefit of security, should so lightly – with no manifesto commitment or mention in the Coalition agreement – move to take away that precious security from a whole group of our fellow citizens, who arguably need security more than anyone?

The only credible argument advanced by those who advocate the policy is that it will ‘free up’ social housing, so making more homes available to those in need.  But any serious analysis of the Government’s proposals shows very clearly, first that it will not have this effect, quite the contrary it will discourage mobility, and second that if it did have the intended effect, this would have disastrous social consequences.  Let’s take them in turn.

If existing tenants are not to lose their security, but new lettings will be on a new basis, without traditional security of tenure and at 80% of market rents, what will be the consequence?  Obviously existing tenants who might have considered moving to a small home, so releasing larger accommodation to those in need, will have second thoughts if the result is a loss of security and a rent increase.  So the policy would have the opposite effect of that intended.

Worse still would be the consequence of using the new insecure tenancies to require tenants to move on if their income increased or if they were judged to have enjoyed sufficient time in social housing.  What chance is there of creating mixed and balanced communities rather than ghettos of deprivation, if anyone who gets on, is told they have to leave.  If only the poor and the unemployed can occupy social housing, this is a recipe for residualisation and a total disincentive to aspiration.

So the whole concept is flawed in principle, and it would have catastrophic effects in practice.  How would people on low incomes be able to cope with a near market rent for supposedly social housing.  In the SE10 postal district at the heart of my constituency, average market rents are estimated at £380 a week. 80% of that would involve a rent level of over £300 a week for a supposedly social letting. No one in low-paid work could consider such a tenancy, unless they were to have most of the costs met by Housing Benefit.  And if they did, I can already see the double whammy of some sanctimonious Minister calling for further Housing Benefit cuts or caps on the grounds that people on benefit should not be able to live in such expensive areas.

So who will occupy any homes that are built on this basis.  Some may go, perfectly properly, to people in what is often described as the ‘intermediate’ market.  One of the more encouraging trends in recent years has been the development of mixed tenure communities with opportunities for people to occupy housing on a range of different terms – social renting, intermediate renting, market renting, low cost home ownership and outright ownership.  The whole point of such diversity is to provide for a range of needs and people in different economic circumstances.  So it makes a lot of sense to provide intermediate renting solutions as part of mixed developments.  But it makes no sense to substitute intermediate rent for social renting options, available to those on low incomes.  If in Greenwich, where social rents for council and housing association tenancies are currently in the £80-£110 a week range, all new lettings involved their substitution by lettings at 80% of market rents, the poor would lose out, and even so the scheme would probably fail, because low cost home ownership would provide a more attractive proposition to those able to pay a rent in excess of £300 a week.

In its 5 months in office the Coalition Government has already has a disastrous impact on housing in this country. The recovery from recession has been stalled, housebuilding is in crisis, social housing is facing a death warrant, private renting is being undermined by Housing Benefit cuts, hundreds of thousands of tenants are fearful as to how they can continue to afford their rent, many many more are under the threat of having to move or facing the bleak prospect of homelessness.  It is difficult to think of a more inept and deplorable record in such a short period of time.  One can only hope that Ministers will come to their senses and recognize that this is no way to run housing policy.  Our country and our people deserve better.

Filed Under: Magazine Tagged With: Nick Raynsford, Platform, Property

New Family Council Homes Approved for Woodlands Park Road

November 26, 2009 By Rob Powell

SIX new council homes will be built in Woodland Park Road after the go-ahead was given at a meeting of the Council’s Planning Board last night.

There will be five 4-bed homes built, and one 5-bed home. The semi-detached family sized homes were given the green light along with twenty-eight other new council properties around the borough.

The homes will be paid for with £4.2million worth of funding that has been allocated by the Homes and Communities Agency.

Cllr Peter Brooks, Deputy Leader of Greenwich Council, said, “The new Government programme which allows councils to build homes themselves offers a great opportunity to use local sites in the borough for the creation of family homes, and in particular to help meet the housing needs of larger families.

“It’s also an opportunity to create job opportunities for local people and we will be ensuring that our contractors work closely with Greenwich Local Labour and Business to ensure that local residents have access to work and training on these sites.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Planning Decisions, Property, Woodlands Park Road

Kidbrooke Regeneration Begins

September 15, 2009 By Rob Powell

Yesterday saw the ground breaking ceremony for the huge regeneration project taking place in Kidbrooke.

Chris Roberts, Leader of Greenwich Council, joined Sir Bob Kerslake, Chief Executive of the Homes and Communities Agency, Tom Dacey, Chief Executive of Southern Housing Group, and Tony Pidgley, Chairman of The Berkeley Group at the former Ferrier Estate for the official start of the  project.

The first phase of the project, boosted by a £30million cash injection from the HCA, will deliver 449 houses and apartments with the first residents expected to move in next year. Of the first 449 properties, 220 are for private sale and 229 will be affordable homes. When completed, the regeneration will have created 4,000 new mixed-tenure homes in total.

Cllr Chris Roberts, Leader of Greenwich Council, said: “It’s excellent to see the progress that’s being made in building the first homes of the new Kidbrooke development. This is an exciting moment for the Council, and for local residents, who have given consistent backing to the Council’s vision for transforming the area, creating a better environment and improving the quality of life.”

David Lunts, London Regional Director of the Homes and Communities Agency said: “Kidbrooke is exactly the kind of transformational project that the HCA was established to support and is a scheme which is at the heart of the HCA’s commitment to supporting regeneration in London. The partnership will be working to transform the estate into a vibrant neighbourhood with new affordable homes, fantastic parks and open space, a new community building and improved travel links.”

From left to right: Tom Dacey (Southern Housing Group), Sir Bob Kerslake (Homes and Communities Agency), Tony Pidgley (Berkeley Homes), Cllr Chris Roberts (Greenwich Council)

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Chris Roberts, Greenwich Council, Kidbrooke, Property

Greenwich House Prices Climb 2%

August 29, 2009 By Rob Powell

Latest figures published by the Land Registry show that house prices across the borough of Greenwich recorded a 2% increase in July.

But even with this small increase, houses prices in Greenwich were, on average, 13% down on a year ago.

It was a different story in neighbouring Lewisham where home prices were down 2.2% in July. Across the river in Tower Hamlets, they had the biggest increase of any London borough with a movement of +3.1%.

Across London as a whole, there was an average increase of 1.6%, which was almost mirrored across the whole of England and Wales where there was an average increase of 1.7%.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: House Prices, Property

Small Drop for Greenwich House Prices in June

July 28, 2009 By Rob Powell

Land Registry figures released today show that house prices in the borough of Greenwich have continued to fall, despite an average increase for London as a whole during June.

Greenwich house prices saw a change last month of -1.2% with the average price of a home in Greenwich now standing at £236,417 – that’s down 15.9% on a year ago.

But there may be signs that the market is beginning to bottom out with prices in nearby Lewisham increasing by 0.5% and house prices across London as a whole rising by 2.0%.

Jason Lamb from King Sturge in College Approach told Greenwich.co.uk “We are finding that activity has significantly improved, and we think that this is largely due to increased mortgage availability. In addition, there is a feeling amongst the buyers that house prices have reached their floor… The main problem that we now face, though, is a lack of stock rather than a lack of buyers! High demand and low supply will, in my view, continue to dominate in the Greenwich area for some time, and this will hopefully curtail any further house price depreciation.”

Are you trying to move home in Greenwich at the moment? What are your experiences of the local housing market?

See also: Estate agents in Greenwich

Filed Under: News Tagged With: House Prices, Property

HCA Gives Cash Boost To Greenwich Developments

July 10, 2009 By Rob Powell

The London board of the Homes and Communities Agency has announced a cash injection worth £32 million to kickstart stalled developments projects in the borough of Greenwich.

The HCA has allocated just over £30 million to the first phase of the Kidbrooke Regeneration project where 456 new homes will be provided by Berkeley Homes and Southern Housing Group.

£2 million will be used for the first phase of new housing delivered by Bellway Homes and London & Quadrant Housing Trust at Greenwich Peninsula. Greenwich Council is working closely with the HCA and its partners on both sites.

The Mayor of London, and Chair of the HCA’s London Board, Boris Johnson, said: “This further funding from London’s housing budget will deliver more urgently needed affordable homes, create jobs to support the capital’s economy during the downturn and transform the quality of life for thousands of Londoners.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Greenwich Peninsula, Kidbrooke, Property

Heart of Greenwich Receives Kick Start

March 4, 2009 By Rob Powell

The Home and Community Agency and the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, have announced a cash injection into five affordable housing projects across London which have seen development stalled because of the economic climate. One of the five sites to receive additional funding is the Heart of Greenwich development in East Greenwich on the site of the old Greenwich District Hospital.

The Mayor, who chairs the HCA’s London Board sub-committee, said: “The money we are investing today is also a major shot in the arm for London’s development sector and the economy. As this rolls out thousands of construction sector jobs will be saved but more importantly the sector will emerge strong to build and grow London when the recovery comes.”.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Property

Travelodge Coming To Greenwich High Road

January 18, 2009 By Rob Powell

The housing slump and economic malaise has led property developers to sell a 25 year lease in Greenwich High Road to Travelodge rather than go ahead with a planned residential development. The site had been earmarked for 14 luxury apartments by City and Surburban Homes, but with the property market firmly in the doldrums, the owners have instead opted to lease it to the budget hotel chain, Travelodge.

The forthcoming Travelodge is not the only new hotel coming to Greenwich – we reported in August that Whitbread are planning a 197 room Premier Inn.

See a list of hotels in Greenwich

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Hotels, Property

House of Horror

January 14, 2009 By Andrew Gilligan

JUST as it was once traditional to report on the first cuckoo of spring, some of Britain’s indefatigable estate agents have recently been claiming to hear the early chirp of returning buyers. “It is…clear that parts of the market are perhaps beginning to bottom out…Our members are starting to see enquries increase again, as people begin to believe they can find a bargain,” says Peter Bolton King, chief executive of the National Association of Estate Agents. Last month, the NAEA professed to discern “finally…glimmers of hope,” with autumn figures “not as bad as expected” and a rise in the percentage of first-time buyers in the market.

Away from the world of glimmers and expectations, however, the actual figures remain resolutely bad. This week, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors reported that property transactions were at their lowest level since they started counting in 1978 – with London the hardest hit. According to the Halifax, UK prices fell by 15.9 per cent during 2008.

The borough of Greenwich took a smaller hit – 4.1 per cent down in the year to November, according to the Land Registry, and with actually a small rise in November itself. The number of transactions is now so small, however, that this last figure needs to be treated with considerable caution. Figures for SE10 alone show an annual reduction of almost 20 per cent – though the sample here is even smaller, and more fluctuating, and the figures even less certain.

So I thought I’d ask around myself to see whether any of the optimistic noises are matched by the reality of a better 2009. In one place, it seemed, they were. “We’re actually doing very well this year,” said Tony Usher, of King Sturge, formerly James Johnston. “Last weekend was incredibly busy. We’ve seen a pickup in applicants and viewers and we’ve had more investment buyers in the last 14 days than in the whole of the last year, roughly. We’ve tied up numerous sales, in Greenwich and Blackheath, and we’re about to deliver leaflets asking for more properties.”

Asked how many sales “numerous” meant, Mr Usher became rather more coy, declining even to discuss whether it meant single or double figures. He wasn’t allowed to tell me, he said, but promised someone would call me back, which they didn’t.

In all the other estate agents I asked, the only part of King Sturge’s good tidings they recognised was a rise in enquiries. “It’s better than it was before Christmas, which is something,” said Doug Norris of John Payne, probably the most important local agent and someone who can usually be trusted to tell it roughly as it is. “The number of viewings has increased substantially from almost next to nothing in the first three weeks of December. In the 15 days [since Christmas] we’ve been open we’ve arranged about 90 viewings at this branch. It has produced offers, some of which will go somewhere and some of which won’t.”

Mr Norris admitted, however, that the Greenwich branch of John Payne had not sold a single property since the first week of December and only 25 in the last six months – compared with a figure of about 15-20 a month at the 2007 peak. Two houses in West Greenwich are likely to be sold soon – on one of them, in Roan Street, there are three offers. Discounts on already depressed asking prices are around the 5 to per 10 per cent mark. “Buyers are still driving prices down and making random offers,” says Norris. “Vendors are coming to terms with [the falling market] now. Their expectation levels have come down and we can talk about prices sensibly.”

The trajectory is clear in the prices on local agents’ websites. A pretty three-storey end-of-terrace “needing upgrading” in King George Street, the heart of Greenwich’s nicest neighbourhood – the kind of house that might have fetched around £700,000 at the peak – came to the market at £599,995, is now down to £550,000 and is on the verge of finding a buyer at around the £500,000 mark.

A house in Peyton Place, nearby, started off, many months ago, at £710,000 and is still on the John Payne site, now at £599,995, with no offers shown. Many other properties have been for sale for over a year. And prices continue to be cut: a house “needing complete modernisation” in Calvert Road, East Greenwich, on at £395,000, is about to be reduced to £345,000 (the one next door sold last year for £475,000.) “I can’t be bullish about the market,” says Norris. “Not by any shape or form have we turned the corner.”

John Payne handles mainly period property, catering in many cases to established buyers with equity. At Oliver Bond, an agency with many of Greenwich’s large stock of new-build flats and a first-timer clientele, the picture is even worse. “Transactions of Victorian semis are going through with reductions of 10 to 15 per cent, but the newbuilds are being crucified,” says Bond’s Ryan Vella. “Valuers are predicting in some cases 40-45 per cent less than last year’s value. We are amazed at the level of enquiries, but we’re doing viewings but no offers. Once a purchase becomes a serious possibility, the buyers find out how difficult it is. The crucifying valuations combined with the difficulties getting mortgages are slowly killing us.”

Vella has, in fact, sold four properties already this year, although he says they are really hangovers from last year with buyers grimly perservering through all the difficulties. In the last six months, including those four, Oliver Bond has sold just eight properties. As with the other agents, rentals are keeping the shop going.

“I can’t for a moment believe that anyone is rushed off their feet selling,” he says. “Anyone who tells you different is insane.”

It’s easy to see why the NAEA is so keen to claim a bottoming out. No-one wants to buy a home for more than it will be worth in a few months’ time. No-one wants to buy a home that will immediately lose some of its value or (if a first-time buyer) put them into negative equity. The market, here and elsewhere, won’t recover until people feel that prices have reached their floor.

But on this evidence, that may not have happened yet.

Filed Under: Andrew Gilligan Tagged With: King George Street, Peyton Place, Property, Roan Street

Peninsula Projects On Hold

December 7, 2008 By Rob Powell

Regeneration projects on the Greenwich Peninsula could be delayed by up to half a decade. That was the verdict of Andrew Storey – joind Chief Exec for the Greenwich Peninsula – when he spoke at the Thames Gateway Forum.

“‘House prices are now 20 per cent below where they were [when permission was granted in 2007], so we need to wait until they return to what they were before we can go ahead” said Storey.

This means that planned developments for thousands of new homes in the area will be mothballed, and even projects where work had begun may be put on hold.

Read more about what came out of the Thames Gateway Forum at The Architect’s Journal.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Greenwich Peninsula, Property

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