Portsmouth News

Big drop in new social housing lettings during the past decade

- Chris Broom chris.broom@thenews.co.uk @portsmouth­news

The number of new social housing lettings in most of The News’ region has dropped significan­tly in the last decade, new figures show.

In Fareham and Gosport the numbers plunged by about half, while in Portsmouth the numbers fell by more than 10 per cent. However, Havant bucked the trend as lettings rose by more than a third.

Across England, access to affordable rental properties has steadily declined, with the number of households provided with new social lettings each year falling from 396,000 in 2011-12 to 267,000 last year.

Housing charity Shelter said the only way to solve the housing crisis is to ‘invest in a new generation of good quality and sustainabl­e social homes’.

The latest Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s figures show there were 772 new social housing lettings offered to tenants in Portsmouth in 2021-22 – up from 646 the year before. Despite the recent increase in new lets, 884 new lets were offered in 2011-12.

In Gosport, the figures showtherew­ere301news­ocial housinglet­tingsoffer­edtotenant­s in 2021-22 – up from 296 the year before. 570 new lets were offered in 2011-12.

In Fareham, 170 new social housing lettings were offered to tenants in 2021-22 – down from 172 the year before. In 2011-12, 386 new lets were offered.

Meanwhile, in Havant, 499 new social housing lettings were offered to tenants in 2021-22 – up from 298 the year before. In 2011-12, 350 new lets were offered.

This covers all social housing, which is split into affordable or intermedia­te rent, and social rent. The former means a tenant pays 80 per cent of market value, while the latter is set by the government, is paid to registered providers and local authoritie­s, and is significan­tly lower than the private market.

The figures also show 1.2m households were on local authority waiting lists at the end of March 2022.

Polly Neate, chief executive of Shelter, said: ‘Every day our frontline services deal with the consequenc­es of not having enough social housing, from families stuck in unsuitable and often poorqualit­y temporary accommodat­ion to people being pushed into homelessne­ss because they can no longer keep up with soaring private rents.

‘There is only one lasting solution to the housing emergency, and that is to invest in a new generation of good quality and sustainabl­e social homes.’

Nationally, the number of new properties let as solely social rents – the more affordable social housing category, and roughly equal to 50 per cent of market value – has declined significan­tly over the last decade. There were just 225,000 in 2021-22, down from 391,000 in 2011-12.

Luke Murphy, associate director at think tank the Institute for Public Policy Research, said: ‘The long-term decline in the share of new lettings in council homes also reflects the ongoing shrinkage of the number of local authority-owned social homes.

‘All of this points to the failure to build sufficient homes to meet demand, including genuinely affordable homes.’

The DLUHC said it is investing £11.5bn into building more social homes to deliver tens of thousands of homes available for rent and sale through its Affordable Homes Programme.

 ?? ?? Social housing lettings have fallen
Social housing lettings have fallen

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