Policy is destructive and divides communities
Nov 13 2007
by David Bartlett, Liverpool Daily Post
Housing Market Renewal is a deliberately misleading title.
It does the very opposite of the basics of a free market, the state through councils and housing associations uses vast public funds to purchase up properties and lands to take them off the market.
These public sector agencies then deliberately move people out and board up the area, creating a blight of dereliction.
The remaining owner occupiers are bought out at depressed prices and the few are forced out up by the abuse of compulsory purchase powers.
In areas designated for degradation and demolition, the land is then handed over to a combination of housing associations and one of four national housing builders who have been give a monopoly over the purchase of all significant land sites in their quarter of the inner city.
This deliberate restriction works against local builders and consumer choice.
Outside the inner city, planners obstruct the redevelopment of areas for housing.
Thus we have vast areas of blight outside the city being deliberately withheld from private housing development.
In the current three years, the council intends to demolish 4,000 homes forcing 3,000 families on to the ever-growing housing waiting lists.
This policy we are told has community support but when discussed at the Housing committee, press and public were excluded as it was “confidential”.
The demolition coalition of Lib-Dem and Labour councillors were afraid to debate this municipal vandalism in public.
They claim this policy leads to rises in home ownership.
Buying houses at £70,000 to £120,000 to then demolish then seems a pretty expensive way of doing it.
Who in these working class communities can afford smaller homes starting at £120,000?
In the words of Jane Kennedy MP, it is “social cleansing”.
div>
I challenged for evidence that home ownership rises were not more likely due to private landlords selling their houses to capitalise on rising house prices, but council officers could not bring forward any statistical evidence.
Their policies might as well be driven by reading tea leaves.
In Pathfinder areas, people are paid compensation but the Joseph Rowntree Trust has shown that the average owner occupier will be worse off by £30,000 after the enforced move.
This policy is destructive, divides communities and creates a sinister cartel of council, housing associations and national house builders profiteering by forcing thousands out of their homes abusing hundreds of millions of pounds of our taxes.
Source:
Liverpool Daily Post
Absolutely spot on!
Bookmarks