The Mayor of London is making an extra £200 million available to help counter the impact of uncertainty over affordable home market sales caused by Brexit.
According to Sadiq Khan London’s affordable homes funding is reaching its limit, and he is calling on Ministers to step up as the current level of funding from Government means housing associations rely heavily on sales to subsidise new affordable homes.
The funds aim to ensure the continued building of affordable housing despite the impact of Brexit as the political impasse is already affecting the housing market, with falling sales and uncertainty over house prices which is having a knock-on effect on housing associations.
Faced with a slowdown of new home sales, the Mayor will help housing associations by offering extra funding to switch homes from market sale or shared ownership to homes for rent at social or intermediate rent levels which are lower than market rent. This extra funding will enable them to commit to their future plans, sign construction contracts, and begin development without further delay.
The Mayor believes the impact of Brexit uncertainty makes this extra funding essential, though he has warned it will stretch City Hall’s affordable homes funding to its limit. The Mayor will explore all options for further funding, and is calling on Government at the very least to match this funding by providing extra investment for housing associations to deliver their planned schemes.
‘At City Hall we are building record numbers of new social rented and other genuinely affordable homes. We must not let the Government’s chaotic mishandling of Brexit undermine our plans,’ said Khan.
‘That’s why it is right we push our funding to its very limits to keep housing associations building more affordable housing through the ongoing uncertainty and it’s even more important given the Government totally failed to address my concerns when I recently raised them,’ he pointed out.
‘Whatever happens with Brexit, Ministers must at the very least match my support, and ensure we can keep building the homes Londoners need over the coming years,’ he added.
The support received by individual housing associations will depend on the schemes in their pipeline and those underway. Given the strains already on the Mayor’s affordable housing delivery budget, and the importance of targeting it effectively, this funding is only available for homes starting in this calendar year.
The Mayor’s investment comes after he wrote to the Secretary of State last month along with Paul Hackett, Chair of the ‘G15’ largest housing associations in London, and Councillor Darren Rodwell, executive member for housing and planning at London Councils, outlining the immediate emergency support which would be needed from Government if the UK leaves the European Union with no deal.
‘The current market uncertainty limits our ability to generate cross subsidy to reinvest in affordable homes, so this strong, positive action to address that is welcome. If enough additional funding is made available we will be able to continue to commit to new developments and increase the levels of affordable homes we are building. We look forward to engaging with the GLA to secure this,’ said Helen Evans, chief executive officer of Network Homes and vice-chair of G15.