Election Feature


Housing for need not profit

SO FEW houses are being built at affordable prices in Britain that even
workers in jobs where there are chronic shortages cannot get on the ‘property
ladder’.
Chris Flood, one of two Socialist Party councillors in Lewisham, south
London, says only public-sector housing, especially council housing, can
provide the homes needed at an affordable price.

Ian Page addresses Socialism 2004THE
LACK of affordable quality housing is one of the most important issues of our
time.

Ian Page addresses Socialism 2004

New homebuilding is at its lowest level since 1924 and this pushes up
prices. 57% of 18-24 year olds still live with their parents. Spiralling
housing costs, with student debt and benefit cuts, are putting independent
housing out of people’s reach.

Britain’s housing crisis will only be solved by a radical change in current
government policy. You can see the social neglect caused by the lack of a
proper housing programme in every major city.

Since 1979, successive governments’ assault on council spending together
with their ‘right-to-buy’ policy forced the sell-off of many council houses
and slapped restrictions on how councils could spend the cash. This put tens
of thousands of homes out of reach for poor working-class families and even of
many on a moderate income.

A Commons committee estimates that renovating homes through stock transfers
costs £1,300 more per property than spending money through councils.

Blair’s government, however, insists that councils can only bring in extra
investment by hiving off their homes under one of three options: Transfers to
housing associations, Private Finance Initiatives (PFIs) or arm’s-length
management organisations (ALMOs).

Council tenants

Council tenants are blackmailed into choosing between privately-run
tenancies, stock transfer – where control would pass to a private board – or
ALMOs where the council keeps some minimal input. If tenants want to remain
with the council, they won’t in future get money for repairs and
refurbishment.

All these options would mean an end to council housing. They ignore an 8-1
vote against housing transfers and for a ‘fourth option’ of public-sector
housing at Labour’s last conference. But New Labour’s obsessive pro-market
approach to housing won’t allow tenants to remain with councils and also give
councils the cash for repairs and modernisation.

Tenants in some areas – Birmingham, Camden etc. – have turned down transfer
of homes from council ownership. Camden tenants voted massively against
transfer to an ALMO, even though £283 million was promised for refurbishment
if the vote went in favour.

However, all the ballots are skewed heavily in favour of the government’s
agenda. As Frank Dobson said, "Local referendums on whether tenants would
accept new management" threatened: "Vote for the ALMO and you’ll get your
house done up – don’t vote for the ALMO and you’ll live in a shit-heap forever
more."

Save Lewisham Housing Campaign

In Lewisham after the Save Lewisham Housing Campaign convinced tenants to
oppose transfer, the New Labour council merely transferred the management of
the stock over to housing associations (HAs) which didn’t require a vote!

Housing Associations cost more. Rents average £6.18 a week more than
councils charge but the government want to raise council rents to HA levels.
And HAs face real financial problems; 698 out of 2,100 HAs failed to submit
accounts on time while 13 HAs have been taken over to avoid formal bankruptcy.

And as for the housing workers, only the fat cats benefit. Housing
Association chief executives get pay rises three times the inflation rate!

Lewisham council is now trying to transfer all its stock and has brought in
PriceWaterhouseCoopers to cut Housing Department jobs and services. Meanwhile
over 16,000 people are on the housing list and far fewer are getting re-housed
every year.

The government could easily bring council housing stock up to the standard
it has set for 2010 if it invests in repairs and maintains local council
control.

The campaign for a fourth option will continue, as will the call for the
government to use existing revenue and funding – which it refuses to spend –
in a way that could allow repairs to all council-owned housing.

But turning the tide on run-down council stock, poor housing conditions and
growing homelessness needs real sustained investment in public-sector housing.

  • The Socialist Party campaigns for:
  • An end to housing privatisation!
  • High quality council housing for all – decent, affordable, secure and
    accountable.
  • Do the repairs, renovate our homes with no strings attached.
  • A tenants’ vote on any changes – honest debate and equal funding for
    tenants’ organisations and campaigns.
  • A massive building programme of public housing to meet need.
  • Democratic public ownership of the giant construction corporations, banks and finance companies. Cancel all local authority debts and give mortgage holders low-interest loans.


Socialist Alternative wins the student vote

FED UP with the policies and lies of the three major parties, students at
Monoux College in Walthamstow, northeast London, gave resounding support to
Socialist Alternative at a ballot held at the college gates last Thursday.

Sarah Sachs-Eldridge

The main issues were the war and occupation of Iraq, education and low pay.
The ballot gave us an opportunity to discuss with many first time voters. Many
of those who voted socialist will also do so on 5 May. It was the best
activity we have done at the college in ages. We actually got people really
talking about what they thought about politics and the world in general.

The Lib Dems have made some impact by giving the impression that they
opposed the war in Iraq and top-up fees. Many students were definitely
considering voting for them both in the mock ballot and the general election.

However, when we made the point that the Lib Dems had actually supported
the troops going into Iraq and would be in favour of more privatisation while
planning to ban public-sector workers from striking, many switched their
preference to Socialist Alternative.

Most of the students had been thinking about the election but were totally
turned off by the main parties. Many of those who voted Labour only did so for
fear of the Tories getting elected.

Many people said that they did not intend to vote as none of the major
parties represented them. We explained that that is why we are standing.

Young people and workers need political representation – that means a party
that would spend the £5 billion that Labour has spent on war and occupation on
education and health; that means a party that is opposed to privatisation and
cuts.

This was not just a resounding vote for a socialist alternative but proof
that it is not apathy with politics that is causing low turn-outs in elections
– there were plenty of issues that students felt strongly about – but apathy
with the main political parties who offer nothing to most people.


What’s your MP worth?

Mark DonnellSheffield Socialist Party members held a city centre ballot last Saturday
to publicise the commitment of our candidate, Mark Dunnell, to only accept the
average worker’s wage.

Alistair Tice, Sheffield

Most people agreed with us, over a third ticking the £20-25,000 box and
more than half saying it was a good idea. Only six agreed with the £60,000
salary that backbenchers do get and none thought they should be higher paid.

A tram-worker wrote "£6.24 an hour – if it’s good enough for me, it’s good
enough for them." Others commented: "It should be more in ratio with the
general working-class public, extras should be means-tested." "They shouldn’t
do it for the money, but the good of the community."

It was a successful day – engaging hundreds of people, stimulating a lot of
discussions, 23 socialists sold and four people interested in joining the
Socialist Party.

And the press didn’t turn up. Again! No wonder they’re finding the election
boring!