Portsmouth News

Dispute over numbers of sub-standard homes

City fares badly in official list

- By JOE WALSH newsdesk@thenews.co.uk

MORE than a third of the council home tenants in Portsmouth are living in old or run-down buildings, according to the latest government figures.

The recently released government figures show that 38 per cent of all council homes in Portsmouth failed to meet the Decent Homes Standard by the end of March 2020. However, the council disputes these numbers, saying that the figure it provided to the government – which takes into account council housing it manages in Havant – was 26 per cent.

Homes that fail to meet the standard are either run down, too cold, or have facilities that are too old and fail to meet statutory safety requiremen­ts. The council also says that the rules applied under the Decent Homes Standard’ are ‘arbitrary’ as they only look at age, not quality of housing.

Only Lewisham Council in London fared worse than the city in the government’s list.

But none of the 3,840 nondecent homes in the city is considered a ‘category one hazard’, which poses an immediate risk to a person’s health and safety.

Portsmouth City Councillor Darren Sanders, the cabinet member for housing and preventing homelessne­ss said: ‘The problem with this government-imposed standard is that it focuses on how old something is, not if it is any good.

‘We replace things when they stop working, not when the government says it's too old. Therefore, our figures will be higher than those authoritie­s that do the opposite.

‘Despite these flaws, we dutifully report our numbers. Even then, the figures quoted are incorrect. I am told that the council told the government that 26 per cent of the total stock does not meet these arbitrary targets, lower than places like Hackney, Enfield, Kensington and Chelsea, and Ealing.’

The local authority has 26 per cent of its total stock as non-decent, accounting for 4,804 properties it owns in Havant.

Opposition spokesman Cllr Cal Corkery said that residents want efforts to drive up standards – not ‘excuses’.

He said: ‘Since being introduced by the last Labour government, the Decent Homes Standard has seen millions of properties refurbishe­d to ensure they have modern facilities and are in reasonable states of repair.

‘It's disappoint­ing so many council homes in Portsmouth fail to meet those necessary standards.’

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Only Lewisham Council fared worse
‘NON-DECENT’ Only Lewisham Council fared worse

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