Yorkshire Post

Ministry ‘failing’ on housing for troops

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR ■ Email: rob.parsons@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

FORCES: The Ministry of Defence has fallen “woefully short” with its plan to meet the housing needs of troops, a new report has claimed.

The Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) says it runs the risk of driving people away from the Armed Forces unless a “coherent and detailed” housing strategy is developed.

THE MINISTRY of Defence has fallen “woefully short” with its plan to meet the housing needs of troops, a new report has claimed.

The Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) has told the Government it runs the risk of driving people away from the Armed Forces unless a “coherent and detailed” housing strategy is developed.

The think-tank’s paper, entitled The Home Front: The Future Accommodat­ion Model For The UK Armed Forces, calls on the MoD to make significan­t changes to housing provision if it is to stay “affordable and relevant”.

The paper suggests that the Armed Forces “should give increased priority to families’ accommodat­ion” and recognise that it is a significan­t element in the overall employment offer.

While RUSI acknowledg­es that the MoD has recognised the need to reform through its Future Accommodat­ion Model (FAM), the paper argues that the plans for this initiative are “woefully short on detail and methods of delivery, frustratin­g representa­tives of service families and other stakeholde­rs”.

The authors underline that “there is significan­t unease that the current FAM ambition will drive people, potentiall­y, to leave the military rather than properly aiding retention”.

Moreover, the report states that the FAM does not adequately address the reality that the Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force have differing needs and preference­s for families’ living accommodat­ion.

RUSI also points to the sell-off of more than 55,000 service family homes to Annington Property Limited in 1996 as “significan­t”.

The MoD was criticised in January after the National Audit Office (NAO) found the ministry was up to £4.2 billion worse off for the sale.

The MoD has since rented them back on 200-year underlease­s, and is paying more than £178 million a year for the remaining 39,000 properties.

RUSI’s report states that the sale has brought year-on-year financial obligation­s to the ministry that it is “struggling to manage effectivel­y and to afford”.

In North Yorkshire, efforts to turn Catterick Garrison into a “super garrison” will see thousands more servicemen and women move into the town over the next 15 years.

Europe’s largest Army base is set to become one of the fastestgro­wing towns in the country and will more than double in size when the number of service personnel based there increases by 50 per cent.

An MoD spokeswoma­n said: “We are committed to providing our troops with accommodat­ion that meets their needs and is good value. In the last three years, we have invested over £500m in housing and pledged a further £1.8bn through our Army Basing Programme to build thousands of new homes across the UK.

“Our Future Accommodat­ion Model will offer increased choice to a greater number of personnel and we have been clear we will consult troops and their families as this develops.” Comment: Page 14.

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