The Scotsman

European cash will help us provide homes – and jobs – for the disadvanta­ged

Creating training opportunit­ies is critical, says Martin Armstrong

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The European Investment Bank’s decision to extend a £185 million low-cost loan to Wheatley will do more than enable us to expand our ambitious building programme of affordable houses and flats, and improve and refurbish thousands of existing homes. It will provide fresh funds to improve the life opportunit­ies of disadvanta­ged people and families across Scotland.

It is the largest loan of its kind made by the EIB in Scottish social housing and is a major boost for what we are doing in support of the Scottish Government’s More Homes Scotland agenda. As First Minister Nicola Sturgeon remarked when the investment announceme­nt was made at a neighbourh­ood centre in the East of Glasgow, this is a huge vote of confidence in Scotland, social housing and Wheatley.

Wheatley was recently confirmed – for the second consecutiv­e year – as the largest builder of social-rented homes in the UK. This is on the back of having raised £800m of private investment over the past five years to fund a house-building programme. Our plans now encompass building and completing 7500 new homes in the decade covering 2015 and 2025.

But it is about so much more than simply bricks and mortar. Wheatley’s mission is to make lives, not just homes, better and the new EIB funding will aid us to bring about positive change in the lives of people in our communitie­s.

Wheatley works for some of the most challenged communitie­s in Scotland and our staff see up close and personal every day the impact poverty and disadvanta­ge can have on the people and families living there.

In some parts of Glasgow almost three-quarters of people are unemployed and more than half of those of working age don’t have any qualificat­ions. School attendance is low and people’s chances of going to university lags far behind their middle-class neighbours.

Creating jobs, apprentice­ships and training opportunit­ies is for us a critical objective. Over the past decade or so, our Registered Social Landlords – Glasgow Housing Associatio­n, Cube, Loretto, West Lothian Housing Partnershi­p, Dunedin Canmore and Barony – have created no fewer than 13,000.

This has been done through our award-winning Modern Apprentice­ship programme, the community benefits clauses written into contracts with the suppliers and contractor­s who work for us and the

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