Section: Right to Buy

UCATT Critical of Government Right To Buy Plans

Construction union UCATT have claimed there are fundamental flaws in the Government's flagship policy designed to reinvigorate the Right to Buy.

The flaws are detailed in UCATT's submission to the Department of Communities and Local Government's consultation - Reinvigorating the Right To Buy.

The Government's principal proposals are that they will reinvigorate the housing market and the Right to Buy scheme by increasing the discounts available when tenants buy their properties. The money will then be used to build replacement homes.

However, the replacement pledge only covers additional homes sold under the Right to Buy scheme and not the nearly 12,700 properties the Government had already estimated would be sold under the current arrangements between 2011-15. The receipts generated from these sales will not be used to build replacement homes.

Steve Murphy, General Secretary of UCATT, said:

"The Government's claims that they will replace existing homes being sold under Right to Buy with new properties has been exposed as a shoddy scam.

"At a time when housing need is at crisis levels, nearly 13,000 homes will be sold before a single additional property is built."

UCATT's consultation response is also highly critical of the fact that there will be no guarantee that councils who are forced to sell council properties under the revised Right to Buy scheme will be able to use those receipts to build new homes. Instead the money is likely to be placed in a central pot and then allocated to councils best placed to bid for additional funding.

Steve Murphy, added:

"If councils are forced to sell off their housing stock, the very least they can expect is to be given those funds to provide new homes for local residents in housing need.

"We have legitimate concerns that these proposals will lead to gerrymandering, social engineering and herald the return of the rigged housing rules of the 1980's and 90's ."

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Reporting on February 2012

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