Office of the Deputy Prime Minister – in the House of Commons at 11:30 am on 8 June 2005.
Alan Beith
Chair, Constitutional Affairs Committee
11:30,
8 June 2005
What plans he has for affordable housing in rural areas.
Jim Fitzpatrick
Minister (Office of the Deputy Prime Minister) (London)
We have already put in place policies to protect supply and achieve a higher proportion of affordable homes in rural areas, partly through the planning system, but mainly because we have doubled overall funding for affordable homes since 1997 and supported the creation of 230,000 new homes.
Alan Beith
Chair, Constitutional Affairs Committee
Assuming that the Government recognise, as I take to be the implication of the Minister's reply, that young families on low rural wages are completely priced out of the market for very expensive housing in rural areas, how does he believe that the arbitrary restriction, proposed by the unelected regional assembly, to about 70 houses a year for each of the Berwick and Alnwick areas will allow for the building of small groups of affordable homes in rural communities?
Jim Fitzpatrick
Minister (Office of the Deputy Prime Minister) (London)
The right hon. Gentleman obviously raises a concern about Berwick, but I hope that he accepts that investment in affordable housing there has risen to £2 million per year since 2003 and that resources are finite. As he suggests, the North East Housing Board is now looking into how to allocate its resources for the period from 2006 to 2008. Berwick has the opportunity to submit an application that I am sure will be looked at carefully.
Angela Smith
Labour, Sheffield, Hillsborough
Does the Minister agree that, while it is important to provide affordable housing in rural areas, it is equally important to ensure that that housing is decent and of high quality?
Jim Fitzpatrick
Minister (Office of the Deputy Prime Minister) (London)
Since 1997, the Government have doubled the funding for affordable housing and, as I mentioned, supported the creation of 230,000 new homes. Overall, the capital spending allocation for housing between 1993 and 1997 was halved, whereas we have tripled it to £5 billion. We recently published the document "HomeBuy: Expanding the Opportunity to Own", which is targeted at the lower end of the market. I commend that document to the House.
Elfyn Llwyd
Shadow PC Spokesperson (Home Affairs), Shadow Spokesperson (Business, Innovation and Skills), Shadow Spokesperson (Communities and Local Government), Shadow Spokesperson (Culture, Media and Sport), Shadow Spokesperson (Defence), Shadow Spokesperson (Environment, Food and Rural Affairs), Shadow Spokesperson (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs), Shadow Spokesperson (Justice)
The question of affordable housing has been a massive issue in Wales over the past 10 years. Will the Minister say what consequential payments from the funds to which he has referred were made to Wales?
Jim Fitzpatrick
Minister (Office of the Deputy Prime Minister) (London)
I am sorry, but I cannot answer that question at the Dispatch Box today. I shall write to the hon. Gentleman, but I remind him that many of these matters have been devolved to Wales.
Mark Todd
Labour, South Derbyshire
Just before the General Election, I met a woman in Etwall in my Constituency who told me that her daughter works in the NHS and has found it impossible to get on the first rung of the housing ladder. What can my hon. Friend do to facilitate shared ownership in rural areas so that people can remain in their communities and serve them by working in the public service?
Jim Fitzpatrick
Minister (Office of the Deputy Prime Minister) (London)
I thank my hon. Friend for that question. The starter home initiative has already provided more than 10,000 homes for first-time buyers. The key worker housing budget is £725 million, and regional housing boards are considering the problem that he has highlighted. In due course, we hope to be able to help 110,000 key workers with accommodation.
Anne McIntosh
Shadow Minister (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs), Shadow Minister (Environment, Food and Rural Affairs), Shadow Minister (Transport)
If he will make a statement on affordable homes in north Yorkshire.
Phil Woolas
Minister of State, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
The Government have allocated funding of £30.5 million for the provision of affordable housing in North Yorkshire through the Housing Corporation's approved development programme in 2004–05 and 2005–06 to provide more than 740 affordable homes.
Anne McIntosh
Shadow Minister (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs), Shadow Minister (Environment, Food and Rural Affairs), Shadow Minister (Transport)
I thank the Minister for that answer, and take this opportunity to congratulate him on his new appointment. Does he accept that the shortage of affordable homes in north Yorkshire has reached acute levels? Nationally, there are 400,000 first-time house buyers in any one year. However, the shared equity scheme will help only 100,000 such people over five years. How can he say that the provisions go far enough in areas such as mine?
Phil Woolas
Minister of State, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
I thank the hon. Lady for her kind remarks. I can reassure her that, in preparation for this Question Time, the pressures on her Constituency were brought fully to my attention. Those pressures are a serious problem in her part of Yorkshire. In addition to the money being made available, consultation is being held throughout the region about what should happen in the region in future. Moreover, I remind her that other affordable homes are being made available by the market under the provisions of section 106 of the Planning and Compensation Act 1991. However, we acknowledge the pressures in her part of the world—which, I may say, is a particularly beautiful one.
Ann Cryer
Labour, Keighley
Is the Minister aware that, in my Constituency, we suffer from many of the same problems that affect more northern areas of the county? Ilkley is in a very beautiful part of my constituency, but the economic boom in Leeds and the excellent train service along the Wharf valley mean that there is a grave shortage of affordable homes for first-time buyers. Would he agree also—
Michael Martin
Chair, Speaker's Committee on the Electoral Commission, Speaker of the House of Commons, Chair, Speaker's Committee on the Electoral Commission
Order. I think that the Minister has enough to deal with.
Phil Woolas
Minister of State, Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
I can confirm that the Ilkley area is also a beautiful part of Yorkshire. The problems to which my hon. Friend refers are due to the success of the Government's economic and transport policies. However, I assure her that my right hon. Friend the Deputy prime minister and my Front-Bench colleagues are fully aware of the pressures that she has described. That is why we have adopted our policies in respect of affordable homes and first-time buyers.
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