Sign the People's Housing Charter
The UK’s housing ‘crisis’ is the result of decades of government failure to meet people’s housing needs, while promoting ever greater inequality in access to land and property.
On any night in one of the richest countries in the world, more than 10,000 homeless families are living in a B&B while at least another 2500 people are sleeping on the street. These statistics are unlikely to be disconnected from the fact that the number of people in the notoriously insecure private rented sector has doubled in the last 20 years to nearly 20% of all households.
This lack of secure affordable homes is in large part the result of a mis-management of resources rather than lack of housing. Property speculators can profit from leaving hundreds of thousands of properties empty in the UK, and tax incentives promote the ownership of second-homes and AirB&Bs that divert hundreds of thousands more properties from becoming much needed homes.
Unequal access to housing has been exacerbated over recent decades by the transfer of housing and house-building from the public sector to private finance, and houses are increasingly seen as an investment vehicle rather than a fundamental human right. The failure of the ‘free market'’ to deliver the affordable houses that people need has also been facilitated by a lack of real local democracy over planning and development.
The government’s plan to further loosen democratic control over the planning process needs to be seen in this context of a country with extremely uneven distribution of wealth and power, racial inequality, and an unwillingness to tackle the biggest threat of all, which is the climate emergency.
Buildings produce no less than 40 percent of the UK’s total carbon emissions, and construction produces 63 percent of the UK’s 200million tonnes of rubbish a year. There is no way to reduce carbon emissions without radically overhauling the buildings we live in and what we build - but so long as there is profit in polluting there will be no change of course without drastic and dramatic government action. First and foremost in order to make far-reaching and rapid decisions about how we use land then we need to own it - so the sale of public land has to stop and the buying of private land for community use has to start.
In the process of implementing these changes we could also create a much richer physical and social environment that enhances all our lives.
We call on local and national governments to adopt the following principles:
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Housing is a right for all. Everyone should have a home that is affordable and in good repair, with enough living space and access to work, education and community amenities.
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Providing housing need not, and must not, contribute to the destruction of the environment on which we all depend.
To achieve these principles we need to adopt the following measures:
1. Convert long-term vacant properties to social housing
2. Refurbish and repurpose - rather than demolish - existing buildings, to provide homes or to revitalise empty high streets through community use.
3. Where new buildings are necessary they must be built with sustainable materials and be truly carbon neutral (without ‘carbon offset’ payments).
4. Introduce and enforce rent controls and secure tenancies for all renters.
5. Tax the increasing value of private land to fund public investment - a land tax.
6. Retrofit all buildings to the highest environmental and safety standards including insulation and affordable renewable energy schemes.
7. Introduce participatory democracy in all areas of planning and control over our homes. This could include planning juries, citizen assemblies, tenant associations and tenant co- operatives.
Sign The Charter : https://forms.gle/P7rW8E7imXzr75as9
Supported by
Radical Housing Network
Fuel Poverty Action
Social Housing Action Campaign (SHAC)
New Economics Foundation
Insulate Britain
Streets Kitchen
Rebel City Collective
Rainbow Collective
Greater Manchester Housing Action
Ledbury Action Group
Haringey Solidarity Group
Supported by (in an individual capacity):
Harpreet Aujla, Southwark Law Centre
Eileen Conn, Peckham Vision
Liz Davies, Housing rights barrister
Davida Dawkins, Save Our Community SE11 (Denby Court Warriors)
Cllr Pete Elliot, Lambeth Green Party
Jeanette Evans , Barnet Action Group and London Renters Union
Claudia Firth, Redwood Housing Co -op
Danielle Gregory, Tower Blocks UK
John Hamilton, Lewisham People Before Profit
Elle Kimberley, RHN Cornwall
Tamima Lerkins, Women Asylum Seeker Housing
Alexandra Lilley, Community Plan for Holloway
Dr Rex McKenzie, Department of Economics, Kingston University
Betiel Mahari, Guiness Trust AST
Will McMahon, Action on Empty Homes
Sabine Mairey, Save Central Hill
Pascale Mitchell, Yes to Fair Redevelopment
Luke Plowden, Refurbish Don't Demolish
Deirdre Quinn, Lambeth Task and Finish Group
Celia Scott, Dolphin Square Preservation Society
Tsiresy Domingos Tembwa, Engineer
Doug Thorpe, Left Unity
Franklin Thomas, Haringey Solidarity Group
Professor Paul Watt, Birbeck University of London
Ed Webb-ingall, The London Community Video Archive and ‘Forming a Residents Research Group’
Senaka Weeraman, Designer
Andy Worthington, Save Reginald, Save Tidemill campaign in Deptford