Issue - meetings

Draft Housing Strategy 2025 - 2030

Meeting: 17/07/2025 - Cabinet (Item 12)

12 Draft Housing Strategy 2025 - 2030 pdf icon PDF 705 KB

To receive the draft Housing Strategy for 2025 – 2030.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member: Highways, Housing & Enforcement presented the Draft Housing Strategy 2025–2030.

 

The draft Strategy set out the Council’s vision for delivering high-quality, sustainable and affordable housing across the Borough over the next five years.

 

Since the adoption of the Council’s last strategy, and in line with national trends, the Council had seen a number of changes in the Borough’s population including a 13.5% population increase between 2013 and 2023. Residents had faced a number of challenges include the cost of living crisis and a rise in energy prices, which had disproportionately affected lower-earning households. There had also been a significant increase in the number of people presenting to the Council as homeless and requiring housing support and a noticeable trend in the number of landlords exiting the housing market due to financial pressures and anticipated policy reforms.

 

Developed in conjunction with partners, housing providers and community organisations and building on the achievements of the previous Strategy, the draft Strategy maintained its core objectives to create sustainable and inclusive communities, making best use of existing homes and supporting the most vulnerable residents whilst responding to new challenges such as rising energy costs and increased housing demand.

 

The draft Strategy also outlined an emphasis on the importance of partnership working, detailing plans to tackle homelessness, improve housing standards and support climate action through low-carbon housing initiatives. The Council would continue to bring long-term empty homes back into use, supporting landlords and tenants through the Better Homes for All Programme and investing in energy efficiency and retrofitting to help residents reduce bills and carbon usage. Through the Local Plan, the Council would look to deliver 20,000 new sustainable and accessible homes by 2040 and efforts would also be made to address stalled sites and drive estate regeneration where it was most needed. The draft Strategy would also continue to provide homes that supported and empowered the Borough’s most vulnerable residents, including care leavers, veterans, people with disabilities and those fleeing domestic abuse.

 

Subject to approval by the Cabinet, the draft Strategy would proceed to public consultation for a period of 6 weeks. Engagement would be undertaken during this period with key lived experience groups such as care leavers before being brought back for final approval and adoption.

 

Cabinet Members welcomed the report highlighting how a good quality and secure home is fundamental to residents’ wellbeing. Members praised the Council’s increasingly proactive role in housing, noting the significant achievements made since the adoption of the previous strategy, including bringing over 300 empty homes back into use, improving energy efficiency and addressing issues such as damp and mould. Members commended the creative reuse of historic buildings and high street spaces for housing, as well as the preventable measures put in place for over 4,000 people at risk of homelessness.

 

The Conservative Group Leader expressed his support for providing residents with access to a secure and affordable home. He welcomed the strategy’s focus on making better use of existing housing stock and  ...  view the full minutes text for item 12