Charity warns supply of affordable housing in Derbyshire is not increasing fast enough

The overall pool of social and affordable homes for rent in Derbyshire grew slightly last year, new figures reveal.
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But think tank the Smith Institute says the national supply of affordable properties across England is increasing nowhere near quickly enough.

And it warns renters are being pushed into the pricier and more insecure private market while the Covid-19 pandemic is making many people’s lives more precarious.

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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) data shows that overall there were 53,384 social and affordable homes in Derbyshire in April last year – up 0.9 per cent from 12 months earlier.

The amount of available social and affordable housing in Derbyshire has risen slightly. Photo: Matt Cardy/Getty ImagesThe amount of available social and affordable housing in Derbyshire has risen slightly. Photo: Matt Cardy/Getty Images
The amount of available social and affordable housing in Derbyshire has risen slightly. Photo: Matt Cardy/Getty Images

This was slightly higher than the rise across England as a whole, where the figure rose by just 0.4 per cent to 4.15 million – an extra 17,000 homes.

Across the Derbyshire districts, the overall rise was generally reflected as the number of affordable houses grew by 1.6 per cent to 5,294 in High Peak, 1.3 per cent to 4,094 in Derbyshire Dales, 0.2 per cent to 6.596 in Erewash and one per cent to 7,245 in Amber Valley.

However, the numbers dropped by 77 to 10,522 in Chesterfield.

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The Smith Institute, which set up the Affordable Housing Commission to review housing affordability across the country, said the overall increases fell far short of what was required.

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It added that the MHCLG data does not distinguish between affordable rent – set at up to 80 per cent of market value – and cheaper social rent, which is pegged to local incomes.

The group estimates the Government needs to build 90,000 social rent homes a year to meet demand.

Paul Hunter, the institute’s deputy director, said: “With the loss of stock due to right to buy, demolitions and the conversion of homes to more expensive but so-called affordable rent, the supply of social rented housing is actually in decline.

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“The current economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic looks set to demonstrate the cost of this failure.

“The lack of social housing means low-income households are now more reliant on the private rented sector, where rents are higher and tenancies less secure.”

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In Nottinghamshire, 13 per cent of homes were social or affordable in 2019 – below the national average of 17 per cent.

Separate MHCLG figures show that the percentage of England’s homes which were social or affordable dropped from 20 per cent in 2001 to 17 per cent last year, while the share of the market occupied by the private rent sector almost doubled over the period.

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Polly Neate, chief executive of the housing charity Shelter, said: "Thousands of families have spent the lockdown in shoddy, overcrowded temporary accommodation.

"And many more are in expensive, insecure private rentals desperately worried about paying the rent as incomes are hit.

"The pandemic has shown, more than ever, the importance of a safe, stable home."

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An MHCLG spokesman said: “We’ve delivered more than 460,000 affordable homes since 2010, including over 331,800 affordable homes for rent, and we’re investing £12 billion to build affordable homes in the next five years – the biggest cash investment in affordable housing for a decade."