Government told to 'get a stronger grip' on Decent Homes programme
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The Government was told today to "get a stronger grip" on a
multibillion-pound programme to improve social housing in
England.
The call came after a parliamentary report found ministers did not
have precise figures on the cost of the work or the number of homes
involved.
The Decent Homes programme has improved more than 1.1 million
properties since 2001, with 810,000 new kitchens, 610,000 new
bathrooms and 1.14 million central heating systems installed, said
the report by the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee.
But some 305,000 homes will not meet the Department for Communities
and Local Government's December 2010 target for all social housing
to reach "decent" standards - with the last work not due for
completion until 2018/19.
And the report said ministers' original estimate of £19
billion for the programme was "not fit for purpose".
Work bringing council and housing association homes up to decent
standards will have cost local authorities and registered social
landlords £37 billion by the end of 2010/11.
It was "not clear" exactly how much money DCLG has given the social
housing sector to cover the cost of the programme, as the
department could not say what proportion of the £22 billion
it provided for repair work up to 2008/09 went on Decent Homes
projects.
The cross-party committee said it was "unacceptable" that the
Department lacked basic information about the programme, such as
robust figures for the total number of homes made decent. Figures
for improvements included some properties which were slated for
demolition or where tenants refused work, said the report.
However, the committee hailed "substantial progress" towards the
target of ensuring that all social housing meets decent
standards.
"The living standards of vulnerable households will have been
greatly improved," said the report.
"There have also been wider benefits, such as more tenant
involvement in housing decisions and jobs created in deprived
areas."
The report urged DCLG to improve its financial control over the
programme and to do more to ensure that landlords can complete
outstanding work and that improved properties do not fall back into
disrepair.
Committee chairman Edward Leigh said: "The department must get a
grip on the programme and introduce improvements in almost every
aspect of its management of the project.
"We are particularly concerned that the department will not do
enough to make sure that landlords can complete the outstanding
improvement work and that improved properties will not fall back
into disrepair."
Housing minister John Healey said: "Rigorous steps, such as
thoroughly assessing every bid, have been taken to ensure greater
value for money from landlords, but I am working with the HCA
(Homes and Communities Agency) to look at what more we can
do.
"For the longer term I intend to dismantle the current system of
council housing finance to ensure more money is available for
councils to maintain their housing stock at a decent level for the
future."
Conservative housing spokesman Grant Shapps said: "This is yet
more evidence that the Government's housing policy is in chaos.
They simply cannot continue to make meaningless announcements -
they have utterly failed to construct the homes this country
needs.
"In terms of social housing they have built fewer homes than under
either of the two previous Conservative governments. With the
social housing waiting list soaring to a huge 1.8 million families,
their top-down, Whitehall-driven targets have failed the most
vulnerable people in our society."
Meanwhile, the National Federation of ALMOs (NFA) has responded
to the Public Accounts Committee Decent Homes Report released this
week, by defending the achievements of ALMOs in delivering the
Decent Homes programme.
The report recognises the important contribution of ALMOs in
bringing more than 250,000 properties up to the Decent Homes
standard, but questioned why ALMOs have spent roughly £10,000
per property on improvements compared to the £6,000 per
property spent by Local Authorities.
The NFA has explained that ALMOs inherited a housing stock in a
worse condition than other authorities which required a greater
level of investment to meet the standard.
Gwyneth Taylor, Policy Director at the National Federation of
ALMOs, said: “ALMOs are spending more on Decent Homes because
the ALMO programme was established specifically for those
authorities that could not bring their homes back up to decency
levels because their stock was in a poorer condition and they could
not manage to achieve decency with their own resources.
“If ALMOs did not have a need to spend as much, they would
not have been allowed the extra funding and if they were not
spending more than the other local authorities it would be a great
concern.”
The NFA has also reiterated calls for the government to continue to
fund the Decent Homes programme through to completion, following
concerns raised in the report which states that ‘funding
could be at risk given the likely pressure on public
spending’.
The report also describes how a review of the business plans of 15
ALMOs by the Homes and Communities Agency, had concluded that
‘ALMOs have not been over-funded’.
Further commenting on the report, Gwyneth Taylor said: “It
is important to remember that there are degrees of subjectivity in
the assessment of the Decent Homes standard – for example it
is difficult to define disrepair.
"In addition it is possible for housing providers to only complete
certain elements in the Standard, rather than address all of
them.
“Because ALMOs had access to the extra funding, they have
generally delivered works to a higher standard than some
traditional retained stock authorities, in order to save money on
long-term maintenance.”
Following the general election in May, the NFA, whose members
manage more than half of the country’s council homes, is
calling for the new government to ensure that completing the Decent
Homes programme remains a priority.
The Public Accounts Committee Decent Homes Report follows the
publication of a review into the Decent Homes programme in January
by the National Audit Office. This report found that the Decent
Homes programme is now expected to finish in 2019 – nine
years after the 2010 deadline and at a cost of £37bn compared
to the £19bn originally budgeted.
ALMOs have a remarkable record of improving services and involving
tenants in key decision making with 37 ALMOs having achieved the
Audit Commission’s two-star rating while a further 21 have
been awarded the maximum three-star rating; a track record
unsurpassed by the housing association or traditional local
authority sectors.
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