Yorkshire Post

Tenants consulted onhomessho­rtage

- DON MORT NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: don.mort@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @Exp_Don

HOUSING: Communitie­s facing a chronic shortage of homes will be visited by housing chiefs as part of a national scheme to help kickstart building projects.

The National Housing Federation (NHF), which represents housing associatio­ns, will be in Hebden Bridge and Dewsbury next week to hear from tenants in the two towns.

COMMUNITIE­S FACING a chronic shortage of homes will be visited by housing chiefs as part of a national scheme to help kickstart building projects.

The National Housing Federation (NHF), which represents housing associatio­ns, will be in Hebden Bridge and Dewsbury next week to hear from tenants in the two towns.

The visits are part of the NHF’s Great Places programme, launched to learn lessons from past regenerati­on projects and find out how to meet rising demand for new homes.

Mark Henderson, NHF board member and chief executive of the housing associatio­n Home Group, will be visiting West Yorkshire on Tuesday and Wednesday.

He said: “We’ll be meeting tenants and residents, running community workshops and bringing real people in to talk about their experience­s. What are the lessons? What can be done better or differentl­y?”

Figures reveal in Calderdale, around 2,900 fewer new homes than were needed were built between 2012 and 2016. The average monthly rent in the district is £514, swallowing up 25 per cent of private renters’ income, the NHF said. In Dewsbury, there was a shortfall of around 5,520 newlybuilt homes between 2012 and 2016.

Mr Henderson said: “We are simply building too few houses for all the people who want houses, irrespecti­ve of tenure.

“We need 250,000 houses a year to meet current demand.

“As a country we are building less than 200,000 a year. That’s a crisis. I think the Government is pretty sincere about this. It’s clearly a priority for Government.

“We just need a long term strategy that’s agreed by all parties.”

The NHF said it was interested in hearing from people in smaller industrial towns after carrying out its last Great Places visit to Liverpool.

The organisati­on has argued that along with a lack of housing supply, parts of the country are having problems with low-quality homes, unemployme­nt and poor transport links.

Calderdale Council said it was planning to publish details of how to deliver 840 new homes annually for 15 years as part of its Local Plan.

The authority also launched the Calderdale Together Housing Investment Partnershi­p. It is expected to see the council and Together Housing Group build up to 650 homes, both for purchase and affordable rent.

Heidi Wilson, Calderdale Council’s Strategic Housing Delivery Manager, said: “We are committed to supporting house building across Calderdale, providing affordable and high-quality homes.

“Working with a range of housing partners we want to increase the number of homes for rent and affordable purchase and help regenerate our local areas.

“The next chapter for Calderdale sees £150m of investment into the borough to improve our transport, public spaces and business premises, building on our heritage, our fine architectu­re, our vibrant business sector and our strong communitie­s.”

Together Housing Group’s Dave Procter will also take part in next week’s visit in his role as a Great Places Commission­er.

He said: “Hebden Bridge is a great place to get honest answers to questions about community housing need so I’m really looking forward to the visit.”

Hebden Bridge is a great place to get honest answers. Dave Proctor, Chairman of Together Housing Group.

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