
As North Yorkshire Council votes to build new council homes, Yorkshire Coast Councillors call for the number to be increased.
North Yorkshire Council is to build 500 council homes.
The authority's new housing strategy received rare unanimous support from councillors at a meeting last week.
The homes will be built over the next five years.
Whitby councillor Phil Trumper, said the strategy would go a long way towards addressing housing issues in the resort.
But not everyone was happy with the five year timescale for the building work.
Eastfield Councillor - Tony Randerson - thinks the targets should be much higher.
In a rare display of harmony at North Yorkshire Council, councillors unanimously approved the Conservative-led authority’s housing strategy until 2029 after Tory councillor Tom Jones proposed its aim to build 500 council homes should be changed to being a minimum baseline.
A full meeting of the authority at County Hall in Northallerton heard elected members call for the county to become “a beacon for social housing”.
The council’s executive member for housing, Councillor Simon Myers, underlined the strategy was designed to provide a holistic response, rather than just housebuilding, to the “huge” housing challenge facing the county.
He said the lack of suitable housing was serving as a drag on economic growth, preventing skilled workers from living in the county and leading to the depopulation of the county’s national parks and an increasingly ageing population in the county.
Councillor Myers added while a “considerable number “of council houses would be built over the coming five years, the authority would seize opportunities to increase the volume of social housing.
He said:
“We all know the results of this are damage to people’s wellbeing and mental health where their housing provision is poor or they are in temporary accommodation or substandard private accommodation.”
The meeting heard although the introduction of a council tax premium for second homes in the county showed the council’s commitment to increasing housing provision, the authority’s planning committees continued to approve the change of use of large numbers of homes to holiday lets and land for tourist accommodation which could otherwise be used for housing.
Filey Councillor, Sam Cross, welcomed the plan for the 500 homes but would like to see the plan go further.
Councillor Randerson called on the executive member for Housing to reconsider the target of building 500 council homes over five years and to increase it to 500 per year.
A number of councillors said housing officially defined as affordable had become unaffordable for many people and social housing, such as council houses, were desperately needed.
Councillor Kevin Foster, who represents Colburn, questioned whether the authority should stop allowing tenants to buy its social housing as the stock was depleted and many people were facing becoming homeless over “no fault evictions”.
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