John Healey named as new Housing Minister
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Housing Minister John Healey has pledged to publish a
consultation document 'before the summer recess' on the reform of
council housing finance.
In a written statement to the House of Commons, Mr Healey told MPs
that he intended to 'dismantle' the current subsidy system and
replace it with a 'devolved' system of responsibility and
funding.
Here is Mr Healey's statement to the House published in full:
"I intend to publish a consultation document before the summer
recess on reform of council housing finance. My intention is to
dismantle the Housing Revenue Account Subsidy system and replace it
with a devolved system of responsibility and funding. However I can
confirm to the House today the principles on which this will be
based.
"I want to provide more flexibility in finances and more
transparency in the operation of the system. I want to devolve
control from central to local government. And, in return, I want to
increase local responsibility and accountability for long term
planning, asset management, and for meeting the housing needs of
local people. The current system makes this difficult to
achieve.
"On 12 December 2007 my predecessor as Housing Minister announced
to the House a review of council housing finance to be led jointly
by my department and the Treasury. Its purpose was to identify
options for a sustainable, long term system for financing council
housing that would be fair to both tenants and taxpayers.
"The review has been conducted with a wide range of interested and
expert organisations through meetings and workshops, calls for
evidence, focus groups and questionnaires. Research and analysis
were commissioned internally and from external experts.
"There is a clear rationale for the current redistributive Housing
Revenue Account Subsidy system. Councils have different spending
needs and different capacities to raise income. Without
redistribution, some councils would have to charge higher rents or
deliver lower quality services. By redistributing money, all
councils should be able to deliver a similar level of service while
charging a similar level of rent.
"However, there are significant drawbacks in a national system for
financing council housing and in the relationship it creates
between central and local government.
"Our consultation following this review will propose a devolved
self financing alternative to the current system. This would remove
the need to redistribute revenue nationally, whilst continuing to
ensure that all councils had sufficient resources. With these
reforms, councils would finance their own businesses from their own
rents, in exchange for a one-off redistribution of housing debt. By
freeing councils from the annual funding decisions in the current
system, this will enable councils to plan long term and to improve
the management of their homes, secure greater efficiencies and
improve the quality of service to their tenants.
"This would provide councils with a financial framework in which
they could plan and manage for the long term in the same way we
expect of other social housing providers. It would give councils a
greater capacity and more freedom to respond to local needs and, in
doing so, increase their responsibility and accountability to local
tenants and residents.
"Change on this scale is complex and will require primary
legislation. The consultation will set out how moving to a
self-financing system will require an adjustment of debt levels for
most authorities. At present around £17bn of housing debt
with annual servicing costs of around £1.1bn is spread across
the 202 councils in the system. The self-financing model would
enable each council to manage directly and fund their own
debt.
"In addition to revenue redistribution, councils are currently
required to pay Government different proportions of the receipts
from Right to Buy sales and sales of other HRA assets. There is a
strong case for allowing councils to retain all of their capital
receipts which could give councils the ability to develop a
comprehensive strategy to maintain, improve and develop their
housing. The consultation document will therefore set out proposals
to end the pooling of all housing capital receipts.
"I want to see councils building and commissioning more of the new
homes that people need in their area. We are therefore taking
immediate steps to support this role for local authorities, based
on the same principles I am setting out for our long term
reforms.
"For the first time, councils can now access the same capital
subsidy through the Social Housing Grant that is provided to
housing associations for new affordable homes. Decisions on the
first Council schemes to be funded in this way will be confirmed in
September.
"At the Budget, we announced £100m to fund some 900 new
council homes. Yesterday, in his Housing Pledge, y the Prime
Minister announced a further £1.5bn to build an extra 20,000
affordable and energy efficient homes, increasing the scale of the
programme for the next two years to a £2.1bn investment for
110,000 new affordable homes. This includes a fourfold increase in
our plans for new council homes. Together, these changes will
enable councils to become once again significant providers of new
housing, with further flexibility to do more, where councils can
act rapidly and offer good value for money.
"We want to maximise our efforts behind building of new affordable
homes. So I can also confirm that we are closing the open market
HomeBuy scheme to new applicants and in future our low cost home
ownership programme will be directed to schemes which support new
build homes.
"Tenants and council tax payers expect to see their services
delivered with the very best value for money. I want to ensure that
our reforms to the council housing finance system have strong
incentives for improving efficiency, which will benefit councils
and their tenants.
"We remain committed to completing our comprehensive decent homes
programme and to maintaining this standard. The reforms I
propose will safeguard this commitment. Capital funding will be
provided to support this. We also intend to complete
improvements required to common areas of estates and will ensure
that there is sufficient funding in the system to maintain them in
the future.
"Our aim in setting up the self financing system is to ensure that
it delivers the investment needed to sustain and maintain the
existing stock of council homes.
"In the future within this self-financing system, local authorities
may also wish to borrow to fund investment. Government is currently
considering whether and how any local flexibilities for new
investment could be reconciled with the need to ensure the overall
fiscal position for Government is not undermined.
"The benefits delivered by Arms Length Management Organisations
that manage council housing services should not be affected by a
change in the system for financing council housing. We see a strong
future role for ALMOs which are valued by their tenants. We would
expect ALMOs to continue to develop their housing management
capacity and to look for opportunities to extend the range of
services they offer, including to other landlords, where this would
improve efficiency and effectiveness.
"Transferring to a housing association should also remain an option
that council tenants can choose. There are potential benefits from
bringing in a not-for-profit body with access to private finance to
own and manage the homes. However, there should be equity in the
terms of public funding whether they are transferred or retained in
the future under self financing. The value placed on the stock in a
self-financing agreement and a transfer deal will be based on
delivering the same standards of service at a comparable
cost.
"We will continue to work with councils whose tenants have voted
for transfer and councils who are currently developing transfer
proposals to bring these to completion. Future transfer proposals
will not gain any financial support beyond what would be provided
under self-financing.
"A number of councils have been developing proposals to establish
Local Housing Companies (LHCs) that combine public land and private
finance to deliver new mixed tenure housing. Current market
conditions create difficulties in taking the next steps, and the
consultation document will confirm how we will assist the
establishment of viable LHCs as quickly as possible. In
future, self-financing will provide another option for councils who
want to put their land and income into schemes to deliver new
housing.
"Responses to the review showed strong support for a more devolved
approach to financing council housing.
"A fully self financing locally devolved system cannot be
implemented in a single step but I want to move as rapidly as
possible to put these reforms in place and the consultation
document will set out my proposed timetable.
"However, there are steps we can take without delay. So I am
announcing that from today we will exclude all new build council
housing from the HRA subsidy system which means that councils will
retain in full the rent and capital receipts from these
homes.
"I will work with all those with an interest in improving the
system to make sure that these plans for reform are robust and
deliverable."
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