In April, we visited three regions beginning their struggle to meet John Prescott's vision for sustainable communities: one considering ways to meet the decent homes standard, a village in the centre of a Southern growth area and a Northern pathfinder project tackling low demand. Now Mark Beveridge, Chloe Stothart and Joey Gardiner return to Poole, Cambourne and Newcastle Gateshead to find out how they are delivering on the plan's promise.
Newcastle Gateshead: a pathfinding pace-setter
It鈥檚 been a hard slog since Newcastle Gateshead was given pathfinder status in February. The project has been handed 拢4m of ODPM cash for its initial projects and been promised much more, but this hasn鈥檛 exactly been a ticket to easy street. It has, however, got further than most. At the end of September, it became the second of the nine regional partnerships to submit its full funding bid to the ODPM. It has asked for 拢93.4m of the 拢500m available in the first three years. It is still one of only three 鈥 Manchester Salford and Merseyside (New Heartlands) are the other two 鈥 to have submitted its full prospectus, and the scale of this task should not be underestimated. Newcastle Gateshead鈥檚 prospectus runs to 500 pages, with four supporting area development frameworks (detailed plans of action), an executive summary and 鈥渢echnical appendices鈥. It took a van-load of large boxes just to deliver one copy of the documentation to the ODPM. John Robinson, director of development and enterprise at Gateshead council, is managing the effort from the south side of the Tyne. He says: 鈥淚t was a very complex process; aligning transport, education, crime, planning 鈥 an endless list. It requires a huge amount of work and it鈥檚 ongoing.鈥 And this is not all the pathfinder has done. The 拢4m of 鈥渆arly wins鈥 money, awarded by the ODPM in July, has allowed it to start work on a number of schemes. Its successful private sector project in Newcastle鈥檚 West End, which released void properties by working with private landlords, has been rolled out across the city, costing 拢20,000. Gateshead council used some of the money to speed up its programme to clear 350 鈥淭yneside flats鈥, antiquated housing built for miners more than a century ago. They will be replaced with 120 new houses, but the process has not been straightforward. Despite securing widespread community support for the clearances, some landlords and homeowners are holding on, forcing the council into a public inquiry on compulsory purchase early next year. Robinson says: 鈥淚t鈥檚 typical of the kinds of problems pathfinders face. We鈥檙e working with local people, but it鈥檚 not easy because of the negative equity people have on these houses.鈥 Housing associations, too, are starting to play their part. Local registered social landlords have been working together to coordinate their response to the pathfinder鈥檚 aims, leading to what one described as 鈥渁n absolutely unprecedented level of cooperation鈥. This will start to deal with the sticky issue of stock rationalisation. All that is for the future, though. For now, the priority is working with the ODPM and the auditors to formulate the detailed strategy for the 拢93.4m. Government sign-off is hoped for, but not expected, before the end of the year. As Leo Finn, chair of the pathfinder and the ex-chief executive of Northern Rock bank, puts it: 鈥淭he ODPM could give us a very nice Christmas present. However, at my age, you don鈥檛 get many presents.鈥Cambourne: resident power
Poole: banking on ALMO
The plan unfolds
February 2003- Communities Plan announced
- Deputy prime minister reiterates commitment to stock transfer, arm鈥檚-length management and the private finance initiative for councils trying to meet the decent homes standard
- Cambourne finds itself in the middle of the London-Stansted-Cambridge growth area, where 拢250,000 and 拢500,000-worth of homes are to be built.
- Nine market renewal pathfinders promised 拢500m for three years
- Newcastle Gateshead receives 拢4m 鈥榚arly wins鈥 money
- Poole鈥檚 ALMO bid is accepted, initial allocation of 拢17.4m agreed if it satisfies inspection criteria
- The housing inspectorate makes pre-inspection visits to Poole
- Poole tenants鈥 conference, part of the ALMO consultation
- Newcastle Gateshead submits full 拢93.4m prospectus to ODPM October 2003
- South Cambridgeshire District Council refuses planning permission for 1744 houses in Cambourne. Cambourne鈥檚 consortium of RSLs receives 拢1.4m of transitional local authority strategic housing grant
- Poole launches IT system that allows tenants to check on the status of their repairs online
- Poole鈥檚 housing condition survey updated (ongoing)
- In Newcastle Gateshead, work starts on demolishing antiquated houses in the Sunderland Road area
Source
Housing Today
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