Agenda for Strategic Planning Committee Tuesday, 27 November 2018, 10am
Future Housing Needs and Requirements in East Devon
(pages 10-26)
This report provides an overview of work, including Government policy and a recently published report from the Campaign to Protect Rural England, on future house building needs and levels.
Agenda item: 7 Subject: Future housing needs and requirements in East Devon
Purpose of report:
This report provides an overview of work, including Government policy and a recently published report from the Campaign to Protect Rural England, on future house building needs and levels.
Recommendation:
1. Members to note the motion on future housing provision in East Devon from the Council meeting of 24th October 2018.
2. That an independent study be commissioned to consider the specific housing needs of all groups within the community and how these needs make up the overall housing need for the area.
a. That the committee recommend to Council that a budget of up to £30,000 be set aside to meet the costs of the study.
b. That a Member workshop be set up in the new year to consider the housing needs study and the overall housing need.
3. Approve the proposed responses to the Government consultation on a proposed revised approach to determining housing numbers contained in Appendix 1 to this report.
Reason for recommendation:
To ensure members note current thinking on and possible future choices in respect of future housing development levels and also respond to Government consultation.
271118strategicplanningcombinedagenda.pdf
The Neighbourhood Plan steering group for the Sid Valley has already commissioned a Housing Needs report:
Futures Forum: The emerging Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan > boosting affordable housing > protecting green spaces
NeighbourHood Plan - Sidmouth Town Council
Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan – Shaping our Future Together
The East Devon Watch blog provides an overview of the issues for the District - and beyond:
EAST DEVON HOUSING NUMBERS – AND DO THEY MATTER ANYWAY GIVEN THAT DEVELOPERS RULE OK?
18 November 2018
Owl says: does it REALLY matter just how many houses East Devon NEEDS when developers take no notice whatsoever and just build what they want where it is most profitable – knowing that the council will just be penalised by being told to … build more houses … anywhere? Time to stop this fantasy numbers game?
“East Devon Housing numbers, the debate continues!
The debate regarding the number of homes required to be built in East Devon and the enormous gap between the district low earnings but high house prices will be discussed shortly at a meeting at East Devon District Council
Following a meeting in October held by the Devon branch of the CPRE, (the Campaign for the protection of Rural England,) when they published a document:
“Devon Housing Needs Evidence”
This document questioned the excessive amount of house building within the county which is driven by the Government desire to build over 300,000 Houses per year.
Following the meeting of the CPRE a motion was put forward by the Independent group of councillors at last month’s Full Council meeting which expressed their deep reservations at the government`s requirements for future excessive housing delivery within East Devon.
It was agreed that Councillors will be debate the issue at theirStrategic Development Committee on Tuesday 27th Nov at the Knowle Sidmouth at 10am.
The committee will be considering the Independents groups proposal for setting up a “Member workshop” and an independent study to consider the specific housing needs of all groups within the community and how these needs make up the overall housing need for the area.
They are also being asked to approve a draft for a proposed response to the Government consultation on housing needs suggesting a revised approach to determine housing numbers.
The latest East Devon requirement for homes to be built in 2018, using the Government`s current methodology, is 698 “household projections” with a “workplace affordability ratio” of 9.84 and an “affordability uplift” of 37% to show an estimated housing needed of 953.
The uplifts are added to the base figure known as a “Workplace Affordability” to cover the districts aspirations of future workplace/commercial provisions, plus a percentage increase of 37% known as the “affordability gap” Whilst in some UK locations the employment or commercial growth is expected to diminish East Devon economy is expected to grow.
The affordability percentage figure is used to inflate house building projections where there is a substantial gap between the areas average earnings and the house prices in the locality. The ratio in East Devon between average house prices and isover 9 times against the local average household income. The theory behind this government thinking is the more houses built in areas of high unaffordability, will result in a reduction in house prices and therefore reduce the affordable gap, thus helping the younger generations now unable to purchase their first homes.
The report to Council says there is no apparent statistical or financial assessment behind these uplifting percentages toindicate any impact they may have on house prices. They appear be numbers that have no clear or articulated logic behind them.
The report also explains that Government own calculations on the national “need assessment numbers” fell from 269,000 in 2017 homes per year to 213,000 in 2018 but this outcome is clearly at odds with the Government`s stated requirement ofmore than 300,000 homes per year by the mid-2020s!
The report also proposes a response to the Government regarding these uplift figures.
“We express concerns around the robustness and more importantly the justification that underlies the affordability uplift calculation that also features in the standard methodology. We would accept that there is a need to uplift numbers to address affordable housing needs but the basis for the current uplift calculator is unclear.”
“We would reiterate that the critical issue in any needs assessment is that any housing needs figure generated is done so through a process of logical assessment and evaluation and can be justified by robust evidence.”
The report to Council full recommendations are:
1. Members to note the motion on future housing provision in East Devon from the Council meeting of 24th October 2018.
2. That an independent study be commissioned to consider the specific housing needs of all groups within the community and how these needs make up the overall housing need for the area.
a. That the committee recommend to Council that a budget of up to £30,000 be set aside to meet the costs of the study.
b. That a Member workshop be set up in the new year to consider the housing needs study and the overall housing need.
2. Approve the proposed responses to the Government consultation on a proposed revised approach to determining housing numbers.
The full agenda can be seen on the EDDC website.
East Devon housing numbers – and do they matter anyway given that developers rule OK? | East Devon Watch
Indeed, the Campaign to Protect Rural England also has its views:
Futures Forum: “The current local plans are planning far too many homes.” >>> CPRE's Devon Housing Needs Evidence Report
Futures Forum: “The current local plans are planning far too many homes.” >>> Devon CPRE to challenge Devon’s planning authorities' housing requirement figures
Futures Forum: How to increase the number of affordable homes in rural England
Futures Forum: The new National Policy Planning Framework: the response from Devon
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