The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Concern for crumbling properties

- CRAIG SMITH

Crumbling bricks, broken windows and overgrown gardens of empty homes could be a visual legacy of the economic crisis caused by the Covid19 pandemic if action is not taken to bring more properties back into use.

This is the warning from the leader of the Scottish Empty Homes Partnershi­p, a project working with local authoritie­s across the country trying to bring almost 50,000 empty homes back into use.

Concerning rises in the number of properties empty for six months or more have been recorded across Courier Country in the past year, and there are fears the full impact of Covid-19 on those numbers is still emerging.

Perth and Kinross had 345 more homes deemed as long-term empty properties in 2020 than the year before, with similar increases in Fife, where there were 253 more identified, and Angus, where 150 more homes were empty for more than six months.

Shaheena Din, national project manager for the Scottish Empty Homes Partnershi­p, has urged all local authoritie­s to come together to tackle the issue.

“Images of empty homes came to symbolise economic decline and the loss of vibrant communitie­s across Scotland in the 1980s and figures show the Covid crisis is already causing more empty homes in Scotland,” she said.

“We must act now to ensure empty homes do not become a legacy of the pandemic. By investing in dedicated empty home services, councils can help make homes available for those who need them.”

According to Scottish Government figures published in December, 47,333 properties in Scotland had been empty for six months or more, up 16% (6,370 homes) from the previous year.

SEHP is also concerned the pandemic has placed Scotland’s ability to deliver 50,000 new affordable homes at risk and believes empty homes can provide a cost-effective way of providing affordable homes after the pandemic.

Fife Council is one of the authoritie­s which is pursuing plans to acquire empty ex-council houses to help those in need.

Hoping to acquire up to 100 homes in the calendar year up to March 2021, the project will cost a net total of £3 million and each house will be acquired at an average of £100,000.

Individual properties will attract a £40,000 subsidy from the Scottish Government, leaving a net cost for the council of £60,000 for each.

John Mills, head of Fife housing services, said: “The Housing Access Recovery Plan, which was approved in September, is based on a transfer-led approach to all empty vacancies that come our way.

“Through that mechanism we can create additional opportunit­ies for tenants in poor housing circumstan­ces to move but also create chains of allocation­s, subsequent vacancies we can let more to homeless people and to those on the housing list.”

 ??  ?? CALL FOR ACTION: Shaheena Din warned about the region’s long-term empty homes.
CALL FOR ACTION: Shaheena Din warned about the region’s long-term empty homes.

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