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Liverpool City Council launches consultation on housing vision to 2030
LIVERPOOL City Council on:- Wednesday, 10 July 2024, has launched a public consultation on the Xity’s housing plans.
The Council has set out a vision to 2030 with a commitment to support 2,000 new homes a year, reduce the number of empty properties and tackle homelessness in its new draft housing strategy, which once implemented will shape a £1 billion plus building programme. In line with the aims of the new Government, the Council has also set out a commitment to develop brownfield sites, and is currently working on schemes including:- Festival Gardens, Liverpool Waters, King’s Dock and Paddington Village. Liverpool is forecasted to grow by 40,000 households in the next 20 years, and the Council intends to use the strategy to address the fact that 52% of people in the city currently live in either privately rented; or social rented homes; 1 of the highest ratios in the country. The Council has also made a commitment to double the number of affordable homes to ensure the housing market works for first-time buyers. Of the 10,700 new homes built in the past five years, just 11 per cent are classed as affordable homes. The draft housing strategy consultation runs until Friday, 6 September and features an online survey, which is available online at:- Liverpool.Gov.UK. People can also email feedback to:- Housing.Strategy@Liverpool.Gov.UK. Councillor Liam Robinson, Leader of Liverpool City Council, said:- "The new Government has set out its mission to change the housing landscape of this country; and Liverpool stands ready to play its part. The Council recognises the challenges people face to get on the property ladder, which is why our new draft housing strategy has set out a target for 2,000 new homes a year, with a fifth being affordable. The underlying problem of supply and demand is also at the heart of our mission; which is why we are working with a range of partners to unlock key brownfield sites and to systematically reduce the number of empty properties. Together this will help kickstart a £1 billion boom in housebuilding across the City, which will have a huge impact on our economy and workforce. Housing is the foundation for building a better quality of life which is why we want to focus on retrofitting poorly insulated homes to help reduce mould and energy bills and at the same time improve our carbon footprint. Good quality, suitab le housing is also a major contributor to ensuing people access the services they need and helps the Council better address the needs of our most vulnerable residents. This draft strategy outlines our ambitions for improving Liverpool’s housing offer as well as helping to reduce homelessness. Achieving these ambitions will be reliant on the Council securing strong support from residents and stakeholders for this vision. Delivering the plan will also require intelligent collaboration with our partners, including the Combined Authority, the Government and its agencies, developers, investors and housing providers. I’m confident Liverpool can get the country moving in launching a new era of quality, affordable homes." There will also be 3 community feedback days where residents can come and talk to community researchers and officers about the strategy and get assistance in completing the survey:-
In addition, the Council’s consultants on the draft strategy, Campbell Tickell, will host focus groups to target communities who are typically underrepresented in resident surveys. There will also be a workshop for the Council’s Registered Provider Partners and a webinar for providers in the private rented sector. The draft housing strategy, which highlights that 20 per cent (44,000) of properties in the city do not meet the:- “decent homes” definition, will be underpinned by four key themes designed to improve people’s health and support the Council’s net-zero ambitions:-
Housing is recognised as one of the key factors affecting people’s health and wellbeing and the Council has set out to address the issue in both its Council Plan, which was agreed in 2023, and the recent State of Health in the City of Liverpool 2024 report. Another key focus of the draft strategy is to set out a major retrofitting programme to improve insulation and heating sustainability standards as new data shows 18% of households are living in fuel poverty. The programme would also reduce the carbon footprint of the city’s housing stock, which currently accounts for 33% of the City’s carbon emissions. The Council has announced it is to carry out a review of empty homes within the City to support a drive to tackle a shortfall in housing, by writing to landlords of more than 8,000 empty properties. Following the public consultation, the Council will develop a detailed action plan for the housing strategy, with specific Key Performance Indicators to be monitored and measured. Councillor Sam East, Cabinet member for Housing at Liverpool City Council, said:- "Housing provides the cornerstone of peoples’ lives; shaping the social fabric of the places we live, our health and wellbeing, and the opportunities we have to learn, work and play. Whilst the recent homelessness crisis in Liverpool has necessitated emergency action, we want this strategy to provide a longer term framework to ensure individuals and families can always access homely and sustainable living in the future. This draft strategy reflects feedback we’ve already gathered which highlighted overwhelming support for providing more homes for social rent, improving energy efficiency and insulation on homes, and tackling homelessness and rough sleeping. We now want to hear views on the specific proposals within this draft strategy so we can improve and sharpen these proposals. Everyone’s view is crucial because we cannot deliver this strategy without the support of our citizens and partners. We can only have success if partners are all bought into a shared housing vision which drives the change required.” The final Liverpool Housing Strategy is scheduled to be approved by Cabinet in autumn 2024. This strategy will also inform the new Local Plan, which the Council is working on to replace the 2022 Local Plan. It will provide the statutory planning policy framework for the growth and regeneration of the city and will be underpinned by a Strategic Housing Market Needs Assessment. Based on an extensive evidence base it will include policies and land use allocations in respect of matters such as housing, the economy, open space, heritage, design and climate change. The Council intends to submit the plan to the Government for independent examination in late 2025 and to adopt it by December 2026. COMMENTS (0)
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