More than 500 on waiting list for social housing in Kettering

More than 500 households are stuck on the waiting list for social housing in Kettering, new figures reveal.

Housing charity Shelter said the figures are “chilling” and called for the Government to increase the funding for new social homes.

The latest Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government data shows that in March 2018 there were 606 households on the housing waiting list in Kettering.

That is 15% higher than two years earlier.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Of those, 113 were households with some medical necessity, while a further 111 were living in unhygienic or overcrowded housing.

In Kettering, there were 83 vacant homes by the end of March 2018, all of them owned by the council.

Across England, more than 1.1 million families were on council waiting lists - 6% fewer than in 2016.

However, only 23,000 council homes were available in 2017-18.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Polly Neate, Shelter chief executive, said: “When you compare the number of households waiting with the tiny number of available homes, and the trickle of new social homes being built, you understand how chilling today’s housing crisis is.

“It’s not just those in greatest need crying out for the chance of a stable home either, hundreds of thousands of older people and young families are also desperate to escape the private renting trap.”

Councillor Martin Tett, housing spokesman at the Local Government Association, said: “A genuine renaissance in council housebuilding is the only way to boost housing supply and tackle the housing waiting lists many councils have.”

Over the last years, Kettering’s social housing stock has risen.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

By the end of March 2017, there were 6,030 social and council homes , up from 5,630 in 2012.

A spokesman for the MHCLG said: “For the last 30 years, governments of all stripes and types have failed to build enough homes.

“We still need to deliver more, better, faster so we have given councils the freedom to build a new generation of council houses and are investing £9 billion in affordable housing, up until March 2022.

“The accuracy of the list also depends on the extent to which housing authorities keep the register up-to-date, as some people might already have found housing, yet remain on the list.”