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Posted by : Unknown Friday 1 August 2014

Bedroom tax impact on grant allocations

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Housing providers have warned that the government is ‘storing up future problems’ because more than three-quarters of its grant funding programme will be used for the development of one and two-bedroom homes.
Of the 62,000 homes to be developed with the 2015-18 affordable housing grant allocation, 77% will be one and two-bedroom properties after the government requested that providers focus on smaller-sized properties.
For use on lead story, 1 August 2014
The allocation has been widely interpreted as a reaction to under-occupying tenants needing to downsize to avoid the bedroom tax.
Melanie Rees, policy and practice officer at the Chartered Institute of Housing, said: ‘It is quite short-termist, and a response to a policy that may not be around in eight months’ time, depending on the outcome of the election.’
Karen Buck, the parliamentary private secretary to Labour leader Ed Miliband and a member of the work and pensions select committee that scrutinised the bedroom tax before it was passed, said: ‘[The government] should be trying to provide for housing need in all parts of the country, not floundering around with a knee-jerk reaction to one specific policy.’
‘It was warned that there weren’t enough small houses for the policy to work during the passage of the bill, but the warning was rejected.’
Housing providers told Inside Housing that civil servants from the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) had contacted them to scrutinise why they had included bids for funding to build family-sized homes.
For more click here for Inside Housing: 

Bedroom tax impact on grant allocations

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