logo
Planning reforms could break housebuilders' ‘failed' dominance

Planning reforms could break housebuilders' ‘failed' dominance

He told peers that small building firms were responsible for 10% of new homes since 2000, down from a previous figure of 40%.
A Government report from 2024 found the 11 biggest housebuilders, including Barratt Homes, Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon made up 40% of all new homes built in 2021-22.
The crossbench peer said: 'A key question hanging over the ambition to build 1.5 million more and better homes is, who will the nation entrust to get this job done?
'For many years, the answer for most house building has been 'we will let the volume housebuilders acquire the sites, come up with the plans, design and build the homes, and make their profits, while we try to require them to allocate a modest proportion of their output for affordable housing'.
'My lords, this reliance on the large housebuilders has not produced the quantity or quality of homes we need.'
Lord Best's comments come a year after a report by the Competition and Markets Authority criticised the speculative model employed by many of the largest housebuilders.
He added: 'It's led to so-called 'fleece-hold' sales to homebuyers, to uniform, soulless design, and with little attempt to provide the green spaces and community facilities that are the making of any place.
'And the housebuilders have worked at a rate that suits themselves, a build-out rate that ensures no reduction in house prices.'
He said he believed the proposed development corporations, which form part of the Planning and Infrastructure Bill which was getting its second reading in the House of Lords on Wednesday, would make the Government less reliant on large firms which could see more homes built.
'(It) enables the use of this development corporation model for any major development, introducing an alternative to the failed business model of the oligopoly of volume housebuilders,' he said.
'Here is the breakthrough that the Bill could achieve.'
The Bill includes measures to help the Government achieve its central manifesto commitment of building 1.5 million homes by 2029. It restores mandatory housing targets, legislates for a generation of new towns, and will reform planning to make it harder to reject developments.
The debate heard that there are 1,000,000 planning permission applications for homes that have gone unbuilt in England, with 250,000 in London. ONS figures showed fewer than 185,000 homes were completed in 2024.
Housing minister Lord Khan of Burnley had hit out at his predecessor's 'mismatched territory of ill-fitting, short-termist reforms, tinkered around the edges rather than resolving our problems'.
The Labour peer said the Bill could 'turn this around'.
He said: 'Home building has fallen from already insufficient levels. There are simply not enough homes … this would be the lowest year for net-additional dwellings in England since 2015-16.'
However, his opposite number, shadow housing minister Baroness Scott of Bybrook said: 'In 2019 the Conservative Party committed to delivering one million additional homes over the Parliament. In 2024, before the general election, we delivered on that commitment.
'The Labour Party has now committed to deliver 1.5 million homes over this Parliament, and it is essential that they deliver on that manifesto commitment.'
Conservative former housing minister in John Major's governments, Lord Young of Cookham warned about a lack of planning officers in councils which could hamstring the Government's housebuilding hopes.
Lord Young recalled a discussion with a senior economist from his time as a Treasury minister. He said: 'I suggested a new policy that had been tried in New Zealand. He said it may work in practice, but it doesn't work in theory.
'Now, the risk of this Bill is exactly the opposite. It may work in theory, but it won't work in practice unless planning departments are resourced.'
Party colleague Lord Patten, who as John Patten served as education secretary in the 1990s, declared a shareholding in housebuilder Persimmon.
He said: 'The record sadly shows that no Conservative or Labour government since 1945 have ever met their stated aspirations or hopes or pledges to build this, or that particular number of homes in any one year or in any one decade.'
Tory peer Lord Lilley, who held ministerial positions under Mr Major and Margaret Thatcher said reforms to speed up the planning process were much-needed, as he decried sums spent on planning processes.
He said: 'Virtually every housing project in my old constituency, and in indeed parts of the country, has faced objections locally.
'We've created in effect, a 'vetocracy', objectors can impose such costs and delays on project developers that they can effectively veto those projects going ahead.
'We must find ways of reducing the power of that plutocracy and I welcome steps in this Bill to do that.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Britain must ‘actively prepare' for a war on home soil, major government review warns
Britain must ‘actively prepare' for a war on home soil, major government review warns

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Britain must ‘actively prepare' for a war on home soil, major government review warns

The UK must prepare for the possibility of a ' wartime scenario' on home soil, a major new government review has warned. The National Security Strategy, published on Tuesday, has issued the grim warning as events in the Middle East and Russia's war with Ukraine continue to add to international instability. It comes just 48 hours after Iran threatened to target UK bases following the US attack on its nuclear facilities, before a ceasefire was announced last night. The strategy also recommends that UK citizens undergo 'national resilience exercises' in preparation for attacks at home. 'For the first time in many years, we have to actively prepare for the possibility of the UK homeland coming under direct threat, potentially in a wartime scenario,' the strategy warns. It added: 'The years ahead will test the United Kingdom ... The direction it takes – and the decisions we take – will reverberate through the decades.' It said the UK will need 'agility and courage to succeed', but adds the country should be optimistic in part because of the 'determination of the British people themselves'. 'After all, we do not need to look too far into our history for an example of a whole-of-society effort, motivated by a collective will to keep each other safe. We can mobilise that spirit again and use it both for our national security and the building of our country.' Cabinet minister Pat McFadden told MPs that the whole country had to be 'clear-eyed and hard-edged' about the threats that it faces. Sir Keir Starmer has announced that he intends to commit the UK to 5 per cent of GDP spending on defence and national security, on a trip to a Nato summit. Just hours later, his government published the strategy, which warns that Russian cyberattacks and sabotage and Iranian 'hostile activity' are increasing in the UK. In the document, ministers also promise 'greater robustness and consistency' in the way it deals with China. The government also plans to carry out a cross-government exercise on how to deal with crises, such as a future pandemic, later this year. On resilience training, the strategy requires the public, as well as business and academia, to adopt good practices on cybersecurity. 'It means asking the private sector to engage with law enforcement to protect people from harmful and illegal content online, and ensuring that human security remains at the forefront of AI,' the document said. 'This is the task ahead of us: to mobilise the nation in the common cause of our national security.' The public will be informed about the preparedness for risks, while there will be 'annual national exercises' to test society's preparedness, although there is not detail on what these will include. There will also be training for 'all those across our society' who play a vital role in national resilience, while critical national infrastructure will be protected in an effort to counter sabotage. Countries across Europe are also stepping up their preparations for potential warfare. Late last year, millions of Swedes were sent a pamphlet advising them on how to prepare and cope in the event of war or another unexpected crisis, as Russia's war in Ukraine continued to escalate. Around the same time, Finland also published fresh advice on 'preparing for incidents and crises'. Shadow foreign secretary Dame Priti Patel accused the government of not being clear enough about how they would reach the core defence spending goal, claiming ministers had offered only 'smoke and mirrors'. She urged Mr McFadden to set out when he would 'actually deliver a plan to get to 2 per cent, and why won't he heed our calls to hit 3 per cent by the end of this parliament, which would be vital, and a vital stepping stone on the way to that higher defence spending that he is seeking'. Meanwhile, Mr Lammy has announced a £290m fund to reorientate the FCDO with 200 new data analysts as he cuts the number of diplomats. The foreign secretary wants a 'leaner and meaner' Foreign Office but is also using the money to invest in a new College of Diplomats. He told The Independent: "The National Security Strategy says that diplomacy allows us to achieve strength abroad and deliver security for the British people. 'I have committed to investing £290 million to make the FCDO the world's most tech-forward foreign ministry by 2030. Through this new fund, we will hire 200 more data and tech specialists and establish a College of British Diplomacy focused on the 21st century tools and tradecraft. 'These new tools and investment will liberate diplomats from their desks in Whitehall, putting them out into the world where they can make the biggest difference to the UK's growth and security.'

Ministers in talks over welfare concessions to head off growing Labour rebellion
Ministers in talks over welfare concessions to head off growing Labour rebellion

STV News

time30 minutes ago

  • STV News

Ministers in talks over welfare concessions to head off growing Labour rebellion

Ministers are discussing the prospect of further concessions to win over a growing list of Labour MPs poised to rebel against planned welfare reforms ahead of a crunch vote next week. Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said talks between backbenchers and government were 'ongoing' on Wednesday night as Downing Street seeks to head off what would be Sir Keir Starmer's first Commons defeat. It came as six more Labour MPs added their names to an amendment that would halt the legislation in its tracks, arguing disabled people have not been properly consulted and further scrutiny of the changes is needed. The new signatories include the Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee chairman Toby Perkins, Stoke-on-Trent Central MP Gareth Snell, Newcastle upon Tyne MP Mary Glindon and Tamworth MP Sarah Edwards. North Ayrshire and Arran MP Irene Campbell and Colchester MP Pam Cox, both of whom won their seats in the party's 2024 landslide election victory, have also added their names. The new names takes the total number of Labour backbenchers supporting the so-called 'reasoned amendment,' tabled by Treasury Select Committee chairwoman Dame Meg Hiller, to 126. The prime minister has insisted the reforms are set for a Commons vote on Tuesday as planned, but ministers are locked in talks with backbenchers about the possibility of making changes to soften the impact of the Bill as a major revolt looms. Asked what concessions could be offered to convince rebels to back the government, Ms Rayner sought to reassure backbenchers that they would not be expected to betray the party's traditional values. 'I'm not going to get into that on your show tonight,' she said in an interview on ITV's Peston programme. 'Those discussions are ongoing around making sure that the welfare reforms that we're bringing in support people into work who need that, and we're putting a huge amount of investment into doing that, but also protecting the most vulnerable.' She acknowledged that 'a lot of people are very scared about these changes' but added: 'I haven't changed my Labour values and we're not expecting our benches to do anything that isn't in check with them. 'What we want to do is support people, and that is the crucial bit around these reforms of what Labour are trying to achieve, and we're discussing that with our MPs.' The plans restrict eligibility for personal independence payment (Pip), the main disability payment in England, and limit the sickness-related element of universal credit. The government hopes the changes will get more people back into work and save up to £5 billion a year. Existing claimants will be given a 13-week phase-out period of financial support, a move seen as a bid to head off opposition by aiming to soften the impact of the changes. But the fact so many Labour MPs are prepared to put their names to the 'reasoned amendment' calling for a change of course shows how entrenched the opposition remains. According to the government's impact assessment, the welfare reforms as a whole could push an extra 250,000 people, including 50,000 children, into relative poverty. Asked whether she thought there were hundreds of thousands of people claiming disability benefits who were not disabled, Ms Rayner said: 'No, what we're saying though is that the welfare system has to be able to have longevity.' Earlier on Wednesday, Sir Keir defended his leadership against accusations he had misjudged the mood in his party, insisting he is 'comfortable with reading the room'. At a press conference at the Nato summit in The Hague, the prime minister said: 'Is it tough going? Are there plenty of people and noises off? Yes, of course, there always are, there always have been, there always will be. 'But the important thing is to focus on the change that we want to bring about.' Meanwhile, the Tories seem unlikely to lend the government their support, with leader Kemi Badenoch setting out conditions for doing so including a commitment to rule out tax rises in the autumn budget and further cut the benefits bill. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

MSPs pass legislation to scrap SQA for new Scottish exams body
MSPs pass legislation to scrap SQA for new Scottish exams body

STV News

timean hour ago

  • STV News

MSPs pass legislation to scrap SQA for new Scottish exams body

Holyrood has passed legislation that will abolish Scotland's exam body – despite claims from opposition parties that the replacement organisation is 'little more than a rebrand'. Both Labour and the Conservatives voted against the Bill, which will dissolve the Scottish Qualifications Authority, and set up a new organisation, to be called Qualifications Scotland to take its place. This is expected to be up and running in the autumn of 2025 – after this year's exams results come out. It comes almost five years after the 2020 exams scandal, where marks for more than 124,000 youngsters were downgraded after exams had to be scrapped as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. But Labour education spokesperson Pam Duncan-Glancy said: 'Instead of abolishing the SQA today the Bill allows the current leadership to transfer wholesale.' She insisted that 'on reform this is a job unfinished'. Similarly, Scottish Conservative education spokesperson said the changes, in the Education (Scotland) Bill would not deliver the 'meaningful reform for Scotland's education system which is urgently needed'. He argued that the new exams body was 'little more than a rebrand of the SQA'. Briggs said: 'The SQA needed an overhaul, not a cosmetic makeover, and the changes proposed fall way short of what is required to ensure the organisation can operate effectively and is properly accountable.' But speaking as the legislation was passed by 69 votes to 47, eeducation secretary Jenny Gilruth rejected those claims. Instead, she said, the Bill would 'fundamentally create a new and a different type of organisation which works with the teaching profession differently'. In addition it will establish a new chief inspector of education, who will be tasked with inspecting nurseries, schools and colleges across Scotland. Here she said there was a 'cast-iron guarantee' that the person who takes up this post would have 'suitable teaching and educational leadership experience'. The education secretary said: 'Through the creation of a new qualifications body and an independent inspectorate, the Bill enables a more responsive, trusted and effective national education infrastructure.' The legislation, passed after two nights of late sittings at Holyrood, will provide 'the scaffolding which supports the wider range of education reform', she added. Briggs, however, said: 'It does feel like the Bill has been rushed through Parliament in the last week of term.' He added that 'this Bill has not been the opportunity many of us had hoped it would be', claiming it was 'clear SNP ministers' policies and half-baked reforms are not delivering for our young people'. Duncan-Glancy was also critical, saying: 'We needed a qualifications system fit for the future, one that respects the efforts of learners, supports the judgment of teachers, and earns the trust of employers and universities. 'We needed a curriculum that is broad and inclusive, we needed an inspectorate that can challenge where necessary but also celebrate excellence. But on reform this is a job unfinished.' Gilrtuh said afterwards: 'The successful passage of this legislation shows this Government is serious about implementing the changes needed to drive improvement across Scotland's education and skills system. 'The creation of a new, national qualifications body is about building the right conditions for reform to flourish – the new body will ensure that knowledge and experience of pupils and teachers are at the heart of our national qualifications offering. 'The new inspectorate body will also have greater independence and the power to set the frequency and focus of inspections, moving this function away from ministers, to His Majesty's Chief Inspector.' She added: 'Taken together, our major programme of education and skills reform will bring about the changes needed to meet the needs of future generations of young people.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store