Wednesday 7 December 2022

Time to rebuild housing strategy in wake of axing house building targets, say Greens


 Ellie Chowns, Green Party spokesperson on Housing and Communities

 

The Green Party has welcomed a decision by ministers to axe arbitrary house building targets LINK and have called for future housing development to be led by affordability, quality and environmental standards. 

Green Party spokesperson on Housing and Communities, Ellie Chowns, who is also a Cabinet Member on Herefordshire Council, said:

Councils of all political colours have pushed back against unrealistic top-down housing targets, which have taken decision-making away from local authorities and ignored the views of local people. And where targets have been missed, it has allowed developers to get away with lower quality housing that is less sustainable and less affordable.

It’s time to rebuild a housing strategy that takes powers away from central government and the giant house builders funnelling money into Tory Party coffers and give councils the power to set their own housing targets to meet the needs of local populations. We need the focus of future development to be on building genuinely affordable housing that is good for local people while helping to tackle the cost of living crisis and the climate emergency. 

We certainly do need thousands more new homes but the priority should be on homes for social rent, built to the highest environmental standards so they dramatically cut energy bills and carbon emissions. We also need to prioritise building on brownfield sites and preserve our precious green spaces which are good for public health and for nature. 

All new housing must also be served by high quality walking and cycling routes and much improved public transport services.


2 comments:

David Walton said...

Unfortunately, the brownfields include schools land and the only remaining small public open space serving South Kilburn taxpayers (quintupling population from 6000 in 2001 to 30,000 by 2041, car-free, no gardens flats).

So little is mandatory required of councils that Brent really don't want/ or need to understand the human needs of its car-free mega-density re-development new town. MAD.

Doubling the length of neighborhood roads by 2041 for 30,000 people with no cars? MAD. Destroying the only remaining small public open space (rather than extending it and massive investing). MAD.

How long can this, green spaces protect and invest only neighbourhoods where population doesn't grow and brownfield neighbourhood green spaces where population massively grows London political consensus sustain?

David Walton said...

The Levelling Up Secretary 5/12/2022 announced abolition of mandatory housing targets for councils, and that includes Brent!

Housing target numbers are from now only "advisory," especially where "genuine constraints" exist (like education and park nature access needs being destroyed) or "where density changes the character of an area." The Tories now want to create "proper neighbourhoods" rather than grey zoned-in colonial pile ups for this new pandemics age?

No wonder 8 Grey Zones Labour Brent is in such a panic and mad Xmas rush to Planning Application build on the remaining green spaces and schools of Kilburn and Not Kilburn, South!