by Rene Lavanchy
SUPPORTERS of council housing have met at Parliament to increase pressure on the Government to provide more of the so-called “fourth option”.
Defend Council Housing says the Housing and Regeneration Bill – which a House of Commons committee is currently considering – does not allow councils to build and invest directly in enough housing.
The bill is meant to deliver Gordon Brown’s promised three million new homes by 2020, but opponents complain that the housing will be privately built and largely unaffordable.
Council tenants, trade unionists and councillors packed a Commons committee room this week to provide evidence supporting amendments to the bill proposed by Labour MP Austin Mitchell, chair of the Commons council housing group.
Mr Mitchell said he was “horrified” by the bill, calling it “a ragbag of all the things that have been mouldering in the basement of that department [Communities and Local Government] for so long”.
DCH chair Alan Walters told Tribune he was confident of support for the changes. “MPs, from their caseload and listening to the debate we’ve conducted, realise that council housing has to play a major role in solving the housing crisis”.
The Government’s bill changes the law to allow councils to keep 100 per cent of revenue from rent and sale of council housing, but only on newly built homes.
DCH says this will result in only 2,500 new homes a year. Mr Mitchell’s amendment extends the terms to cover existing as well as new housing.
Council tenants complained they were being coerced by councils into agreeing to accept privatisation.
One Milton Keynes tenant said: “You talk to a lot of shared homeowners: they’ve been pushed into it.”

