Motion submitted in accordance with Council Procedure Rule 14 as to Reforming the Right to Buy Scheme
To consider the following Motion in the names of Councillors J Lawson and Davies;
“This Council
notes:
1)
The Conservative Government, under Margaret
Thatcher, introduced the Right to Buy scheme in the United Kingdom.
The Right to Buy scheme allows eligible council tenants and tenants
in housing associations to purchase their council property, often
at a discounted rate;
2)
When the Right to Buy scheme was introduced in
England and Wales in 1980, it was designed to help
‘generation rent’ to get on the property ladder and was
seen by some as a means to encourage homeownership and social
mobility. Since 1980, more than two million homes have been sold
under the scheme;
3)
Government figures released in February 2024, which
show that 22,023 social homes were either sold or demolished in
England in 2023, while 9,561 social homes were built, a net loss of
12,462 homes. In the past 10 years, there has been a total loss of
177,487 social homes, while over 1.28 million households in England
are currently on council waiting lists for social housing. This is
at a time when local authorities in England spent a record
£2.29 billion a year in providing emergency temporary
accommodation for homeless households between April 2023 and March
2024, a 29% increase from the previous year. In any one year in
Kirklees, there are between 19,000 and 20,000 people waiting for a
council property, but only around 1,700 to 1,800 homes become
available in any given year;
4)
According to the think-tank, the New Economics
Foundation (NEF), over 40% of council houses and flats sold under
the Right to Buy scheme across the country are now owned by private
landlords. In the last 10 years alone, over 109,000 former council
homes have started being let privately.
This
Council believes that:
1)
Although the
Right to Buy scheme has increased home ownership and has made home
ownership more accessible to some, the failure to
replacehomes sold through the scheme has
hindered its success. Although there was a commitment to the
building of replacement social homes for each one sold when the
scheme was set up, less than 5% of homes sold off through the Right
to Buy scheme have been replaced since the policy was
introduced;
2)
Increasingly, it is
evident that the Right to Buy scheme has failed. It has largely
exacerbated rather than alleviated the housing crisis in the UK.
While thousands of homes are sold through Right to Buy each year,
the number of replacement homes falls drastically short, resulting
in a net loss of social homes. This is at a time when the private
sector isn’t building enough affordable homes and local
authorities are unable to do so. While local authorities, including
Kirklees Council, endeavour to respond to escalating demand for
housing, vulnerable households find themselves locked out of safe
and secure social housing;
3) The Right to Buy scheme effectively forces many households into private renting, when the properties were built originally with the ... view the full agenda text for item 23:
Decision:
Item not considered (Meeting terminated in accordance with Council Procedure Rule 16:2).