Housing and Planning Act 2016 explained

Short Title:Housing and Planning Act 2016
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of the United Kingdom
Long Title:An Act to make provision about housing, estate agents, rentcharges, planning and compulsory purchase.
Year:2016
Citation:2016 c. 22
Territorial Extent:England and Wales
Royal Assent:12 May 2016[1]
Commencement:12 May 2016 and 12 July 2016 (different sections had different commencement dates)
Original Text:https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2016/22/contents/enacted
Legislation History:https://services.parliament.uk/Bills/2015-16/housingandplanning.html
Revised Text:https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2016/22/contents

The Housing and Planning Act 2016 (c. 22) is Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom that makes widespread changes to housing policy and the planning system. It introduces legislation to allow the sale of higher value local authority homes, introduce starter homes and "Pay to Stay" and other measures intended to promote home ownership and boost levels of housebuilding. The Act has been subject to a number of criticisms by those opposed to the loss of social housing promoted, the extension of right-to-buy to housing associations and possible work disincentives under "Pay to Stay".

Background

When the Bill was announced the Government stated that it would kick-start a "national crusade to get 1 million homes built by 2020" and transform "generation rent into generation buy".[2]

The Housing and Planning Bill was introduced on 13 October 2015 by Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, the Rt Hon Greg Clark MP.[3]

Changes

The Act introduces numerous changes to housing law and planning law:

Criticism

The Housing and Planning Act was subject to a number of criticisms during its passage.

Loss of social housing

The housing charity Shelter have criticised the proposal to sell off higher value social housing. John Bibby argues that to raise £4.5b "they [the Government] have to sell off homes in some areas that are relatively cheap – homes that are 'higher value' in name only".[7]

Right to buy

The Public Accounts Committee have criticised the lack of detail on the policy of extending right-to-buy to housing association tenants.[8]

Abandonment law

The Act introduces a law of abandonment allowing a landlord to take possession of property where a tenant has abandoned possession. Usually a section 21 notice would need to be served on a tenant in order to take control of a property. Giles Peaker, a partner at Anthony Gold solicitors has argued that the "proposed clauses on tenure and on abandonment are badly drafted and in legal terms, a mess".[5]

Work disincentives

The "Pay to stay" policy has been criticised as potentially discouraging work if it means that council tenants will pay higher rents by increasing their earnings.[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Housing and Planning Act 2016 — UK Parliament . Services.parliament.uk . 2016-05-14.
  2. Web site: The Housing and Planning Bill 2015-16 and related issues. apse.org.uk. February 2016. Phil. Brennan.
  3. Web site: Local Government Association Summary Housing and Planning Act 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20170316091239/http://www.local.gov.uk/documents/10180/5533246/051316+LGA+Briefing+-+Housing+and+Planning+Bill+-+summary+at+Royal+Assent.pdf/669c7385-376a-45ea-b83b-2764c56a1d00. 16 March 2017. dead.
  4. Web site: The Housing and Planning Bill 2015. PDF. Bpf.org.uk. 21 July 2019. Ghislaine. Halpenny.
  5. News: Dawn Foster . Experts say housing bill signals end of the road for affordable housing | Housing Network . . 2016-05-14.
  6. Web site: Housing and Planning Bill gains royal assent. Planningresource.co.uk.
  7. Web site: Forced council sales: looking at the homes that may actually be sold off | Shelter blog . Blog.shelter.org.uk . 2016-05-10 . 2016-05-14.
  8. Web site: Housing Bill: Government should be 'embarrassed' by Right to Buy plan for housing associations . Ibtimes.co.uk . 2016-04-29 . 2016-05-14.