Portsmouth News

New row over home targets

Extra Havant and Gosport homes

- By RICHARD LEMMER The News richard.lemmer@jpress.co.uk

TWO councils have been told they must build hundreds more homes under new government targets.

Government is currently consulting on a new way of determinin­g housing need across the country.

If adopted, Portsmouth’s housing target would reduce from 855 new homes a year to 730.

The borough of Fareham would see an even larger reduction, with a 22.5 per cent decrease from 520 new builds to 403. But additional strain would be placed on Gosport and Havant – with 8,400 more homes added to their target for 2037.

Going from 504 new homes needed per year to 963 would ‘significan­tly increase’ the density of housing across Havant, a councillor has said.

This could force it to ‘allow all forms of developmen­t anywhere in the borough’, said Councillor Gary Hughes, deputy leader and cabinet lead for planning.

He said: ‘ We are already scraping the bottom of the barrel – there are hardly any more spaces to build on.

‘We believe there should be no reform.

The algorithm they are using is too sterile – and you

have to ask, is it a fair algorithm?’

Portsmouth City Council leader Gerald Vernon-Jackson agreed the proposed

targets were not fair on neighbouri­ng areas – and the city’s target would remain ‘completely unrealisti­c’.

Cllr Vernon-Jackson said: ‘We are completing 400 homes a year. We are bound by the sea – we cannot build more land.’

The government is guilty of ‘appalling double standards’ by setting targets while refusing to sell land in Tipner for the council to develop, the Liberal Democrat leader

added.

And the proposal has also stirred opposition from Conservati­ve councillor­s across the UK, with a recent survey finding that six out of 10 see the top-down reform as making planning less democratic.

Conservati­ve-controlled Gosport would need to build 309 homes a year, up from 238.

This is despite the borough having a housing density 10

times higher than the national average, council leader Mark Hook said.

In neighbouri­ng Fareham, the target reduction would see the council no longer seek to progress developmen­ts across eight sites.

We are scraping the bottom of the barrel – there are hardly any more spaces. Councillor Gary Hughes

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Portsmouth City Council plans to build 440 new homes on the sites at Horatia House and Leamington House
TARGETS Portsmouth City Council plans to build 440 new homes on the sites at Horatia House and Leamington House

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