Our proposals would be delivered through:
Building new social homes and transforming the North’s communities
- A new long-term Affordable Homes Programme announced in the Government’s first 100 days, with greater flexibility to support regeneration projects, more influence for Mayoral Combined Authorities over where and how the money is spent in local areas, and social rent as the predominant tenure.
- Delivering up to 320,000 homes on the North’s brownfield land, through a ten-year £4.2 billion fund delivered through Mayoral Combined Authorities.
- Unlocking more sites and more delivery across the North by ensuring wider social and economic benefits are properly taken into account in all Government funding streams.
- The devolution to local authorities of key aspects of Right to Buy policy, allowing discounts to be set locally and all receipts to be retained and spent within local areas.
A retrofit revolution to tackle the North’s older, colder homes and create jobs
- Unlocking up to 77,000 good green jobs across the North through a phased 10-year investment in decarbonisation of homes in the North. Government would need to invest £500 million a year to meet EPC C by 2030, and £1 billion a year up to 2035 to make meaningful progress towards Net Zero.
- Devolving funding for retrofit for all housing tenures to Mayoral Combined Authorities – as part of expanded devolution agreements, to enable a place-based approach to domestic retrofit.
Making sure everyone across the North has a good quality home
- A new Decent Homes Standard for both the social and private rented sector to ensure good quality homes for northerners.
- This should be backed up by a new financial settlement for social housing providers including a guarantee that social sector rents can increase by up to Consumer Price Index +1% over the next ten years, so the sector can deliver the changes needed.
- Support for local authorities to tackle poor quality homes in the private rented sector, removing barriers to local authority licensing schemes and providing an initial 2-year funding pot for enforcement.
We are also calling for a sustainable financial settlement for local authorities to underpin the vital work our members do in local communities, and specific investment to rebuild much-needed planning capacity which has been more badly hit by cuts in the North than other regions.
For further information or to discuss the document further, please contact Executive Director (Policy & Public Affairs) Patrick Murray patrick.murray@northern-consortium.org.uk