Daily Mail

Tory revolt forces U-turn on homes plan for the Shires

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

A CONTROVERS­IAL planning formula which MPs feared would have led to fields in southern England being concreted over has been scrapped after Tory MPs pressured ministers.

Theresa May and Jeremy Hunt led a revolt against the algorithm, which worked out how many homes were needed in different parts of the country to meet a national target of 300,000 a year.

Last night Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick announced the algorithm had been tweaked to ensure that more homes were built in urban areas and in the North.

Conservati­ve MPs had criticised the plan, saying that it targeted rural districts rather than the urban areas where new homes are desperatel­y needed.

Under the updated proposals, cities will be encouraged to plan for more family homes and to make the most of vacant buildings and underused land to protect green spaces.

The plans will encourage more homes to be built in England’s 20 largest cities and urban centres, boosting local economies by supporting jobs in the building sector, and revitalisi­ng high streets with the footfall new residents bring.

The Housing Secretary also intends to revise the so-called 80/20 rule, which guides how much funding is available to local areas to help build homes.

This will establish a principle to ensure funding is not concentrat­ed in London and the South-East. Mr Jenrick said: ‘This Government wants to build more homes as a matter of social justice, for intergener­ational fairness and to create jobs for working people.

‘We are reforming our planning system to ensure it is simpler and more certain without compromisi­ng standards of design, quality and environmen­tal protection.

‘The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerate­d and magnified patterns that already existed, creating a generation­al opportunit­y for the repurposin­g of offices and retail as housing and for urban renewal.

‘We want this to be an opportunit­y for a new trajectory for our major cities – one which helps to forge a new country beyond Covid – which is more beautiful, healthier, more prosperous, more neighbourl­y and where more people have the security and dignity of a home of their own.’

Tory MP Bob Seely said: ‘It’s very good news that more homes are planned for northern cities, many of which have suffered population declines in the past 50 years – especially as locations such as my constituen­cy of the Isle of Wight have increased our population­s significan­tly and at, frankly, an unsustaina­ble rate.’

The controvers­ial algorithm was contained in a housing White Paper published earlier this year.

It took into account factors such as projected local population growth and the affordabil­ity of homes to produce local housing targets.

Districts could then decide where the new homes would be situated.

‘Simpler and more certain’

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