A new deal for social housing
In August 2018, the government published a new green paper titled ‘A new deal for social housing’. The aim of the paper is to rebalance the relationship between landlords and residents, and to launch a consultation allowing the submission of views on the future of social housing.
The green paper sets out the following core themes:
- Tackling stigma and celebrating thriving communities;
- Expanding supply and supporting home ownership;
- Effective resolution of complaints;
- Empowering residents and strengthening the regulator, and
- Ensuring homes are safe and decent.
Building on the new borrowing capacity granted to local authorities, the paper sets out plans to ‘explore new flexibilities’ for how authorities can spend revenue from housing that is sold off under Right to Buy. In addition, the paper proposes that the supply of new affordable homes will be boosted by building on partnerships with housing associations and providing funding certainty over a longer period.
The paper also recommends the introduction of new performance indicators and league tables of housing providers to ‘rebalance the landlord/tenant relationship to hold bad practice to account’, in an effort at empowering social housing tenants to take on rogue landlords.
Another pledge is to offer all social housing tenants a ‘springboard’ into ownership, with new shared ownership schemes allowing residents to purchase as little as 1% of their homes each year.
Secretary of State for Communities, Rt Hon James Brokenshire MP, said:
“Providing quality and fair social housing is a priority for this government. Our green paper offers a landmark opportunity for major reform to improve fairness, quality and safety to residents living in social housing across the country.
“Regardless of whether you own your home or rent in the social sector, residents deserve security, dignity and the opportunities to build a better life.”
The green paper drew some criticism from housing campaigners such as Shelter and the Joseph Rowntree Foundation who claimed that the reforms would prove ineffective without providing council housebuilding with substantial new funding.
Shelter’s chief executive, Polly Neate, said the green paper was “full of warm words but doesn’t commit a single extra penny towards building the social homes needed by the 1.2 million people on the waiting list.”
David Orr, chief executive of the National Housing Federation (NHF) said:
“Without significant new investment in the building of more social housing, it is very hard to see how it can be a safety net and springboard for all the people who desperately need it. Our ambition for the Green Paper is that it sets a course for a future where everyone can access a quality home they can afford. To do that, we need to build 90,000 new social rent homes every year.”
Labour’s shadow Housing Secretary, John Healey, called the proposals “pitiful” and said “the number of new social rented homes is at a record low but there is no new money to increase supply and ministers are still preventing local authorities run by all parties from building the council homes their communities need.”
[edit] Feedback
The consultation ran from August 14, 2018 to November 6, 2018. The Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government is currently analysing the feedback it has received. Future announcements will be made here.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings Wiki
Featured articles and news
An engaging and lively review of his professional life.
Sustainable heating for listed buildings
A problem that needs to be approached intelligently.
50th Golden anniversary ECA Edmundson apprentice award
Deadline for entries has been extended to Friday 27 June, so don't miss out!
CIAT at the London Festival of Architecture
Designing for Everyone: Breaking Barriers in Inclusive Architecture.
Mixed reactions to apprenticeship and skills reform 2025
A 'welcome shift' for some and a 'backwards step' for others.
Licensing construction in the UK
As the latest report and proposal to licence builders reaches Parliament.
Building Safety Alliance golden thread guidance
Extensive excel checklist of information with guidance document freely accessible.
Fair Payment Code and other payment initiatives
For fair and late payments, need to work together to add value.
Pre-planning delivery programmes and delay penalties
Proposed for housebuilders in government reform: Speeding Up Build Out.
High street health: converting a building for healthcare uses
The benefits of health centres acting as new anchor sites in the high street.
The Remarkable Pinwill Sisters: from ‘lady woodcarvers’ to professionals. Book review.
Skills gap and investment returns on apprenticeships
ECA welcomes new reports from JTL Training and The Electrotechnical Skills Partnership.
Committee report criticises UK retrofit schemes
CIOB responds to UK’s Energy Security and Net Zero Committee report.
Design and construction industry podcasts
Professional development, practice, the pandemic, platforms and podcasts. Have we missed anything?
C20 Society; Buildings at Risk List 2025
10 more buildings published with updates on the past decade of buildings featured.
Boiler Upgrade Scheme and certifications consultation
Summary of government consultation, closing 11 June 2025.
Deputy editor of AT, Tim Fraser, discusses the newly formed society with its current chair, Chris Halligan MCIAT.