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London - Campaign to Protect Rural England

“Social hearted, commercially minded” housing association report

Crescent House. Golden Lane Estate, (c)RCallway Crescent House. Golden Lane Estate, (c)RCallway

Review by Steve Butters, CPRE London Trustee

The Smith Institute's report looking at the future of housing associations makes for sober reading. While chief executives and advisers seem clear that the housing associations must retain their central purpose of helping low-income families obtain decent homes, they also indicate a policy climate that favours dilution of these activities with commercial ventures. Genesis, a fast-growing mixed-tenure homes developer, commissioned Denise Chevin of the Smith Institute (named after John Smith, not Adam Smith) to produce the report on the future of housing associations. The report from this leading radical policy institute is a response to new government powers giving social housing providers opportunities to adopt new financing and developing strategies, prompting a rethink of the sector’s aims and methods.

Denise Chevin, used extended interviews with fifty housing association chiefs and other experts in London and the South East, produced the following findings:

The expert opinions presented in the report were not entirely convincing that the sector is well placed to sustain its historic mission of caring for the most hard-pressed families. It is also noteworthy that issues of design and place-making have been pushed into the background during the recent austerity-driven changes. Local campaigners will need to ensure that these social housing leaders continue to deliver sufficient & critically needed social homes across our capital. CPRE London’s Liveable Cities campaign will be looking at this and related London housing challenges over the year ahead.

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