Plans to tackle housing shortage in England ‘throw spotlight on Scottish crisis’

Nicola Barclay
Nicola Barclay

Scotland’s housing crisis was thrown into the spotlight yesterday as long-term plans to tackle the same problem south of the border were announced by the UK government, industry body Homes for Scotland has said.

Set out the details of the housing White Paper in a statement to MPs, communities and local government secretary, Sajid Javid, said at least 250,000 new homes are needed each year to keep pace with demand.

The White Paper outlined measures including:

  • Forcing councils to produce an up-to-date plan for housing demand
  • Expecting developers to avoid “low-density” housing where land availability is short
  • Encouraging the extension of buildings upwards in urban areas
  • Reducing the time allowed between planning permission and the start of building from three to two years
  • Using a £3bn fund to help smaller building firms challenge major developers, including support for off-site construction, where parts of buildings are assembled in a factory
  • A “lifetime ISA” to help first-time buyers save for a deposit
  • Maintaining protection for the green belt, which can only be built on “in exceptional circumstances”
  • Introducing banning orders “to remove the worst landlords or agents from operating”
  • Banning letting agents’ fees
  • With the total number of new homes being built in Scotland each year still 40 per cent down on pre-recession levels whilst the country’s population has grown to its highest ever level, Homes for Scotland chief executive, Nicola Barclay, said a similar long-term plan is required north of the border.

    Ms Barclay said: “As Sajid Javid said, the root cause of the housing shortage is the simple fact that not enough homes have been built, and that applies equally in Scotland.

    “We need to move away from thinking of housing policy in terms of election cycles and narrowly focusing on ‘affordable housing’ and instead look at the requirements for all tenures over the next 15-20 years. This is exactly the message I gave to our own cabinet secretary Angela Constance at a meeting earlier today.

    “We also need to be brave about the issues that are holding housing back, like the availability of land and the provision of infrastructure, or we will never have enough homes to meet the diverse needs and aspirations of those living in Scotland.”

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