Skip to main content
Mayor of London logo London Assembly logo
Home

News from Unmesh Desai: 519 new affordable homes started in Newham by City Hall

Building council homes
Created on
18 May 2020

519 new affordable homes were started by City Hall in Newham between April 2019 and March 2020, according to new figures from the Greater London Authority (GLA). Across London, this number exceeded 17,000, marking the highest number since records began in 2002/03. Local London Assembly Member, Unmesh Desai AM, welcomed these figures as “very promising”, but warned of the “big obstacles that lie ahead” for affordable housing delivery due to the Covid-19 outbreak, in the absence of adequate Government support and funding.

26% of these newly started homes will be offered at social rent or London Affordable Rent (LAR) on completion, with the remainder at other affordable rates and tenures such as London Living Rent and Shared Ownership.

Mr Desai is also raising concerns about the Government’s plans to instruct local authorities to allow developers to defer affordable housing and infrastructure payments during the Covid-19 outbreak.

In the wake of the significant challenges being faced by housing market and construction industry, he is urging the Government to properly fund the Greater London Authority’s affordable housing programme as a matter of priority.

The Mayor of London has secured £4.8 billion of funding so far from the Government to support affordable housing projects in London. However, a report released by the GLA in June 2019, revealed that to meet the scale of housing demand in the capital, Government investment in this area would need to increase seven-fold.

According to analysis from the Resolution Foundation, Central Government funding for affordable housing has dropped across the last decade. After 2011, the national budget for social housing was reduced from £8.4bn for 3 years, to £4.5bn for 4 years. London’s allocation of funding was also significantly reduced, from £3.72 billion between 2008 and 2011 (£1.24 billion per year) to just £627 million from 2011-2015 (£157 million a year), representing an almost 90% reduction in yearly funding for all kinds of social and affordable housing.

Local London Assembly Member, Unmesh Desai AM, said:

“These new record-breaking figures are very promising, and show that City Hall is making strong progress in its efforts to turn the tide on our housing crisis.

“The Covid-19 outbreak has thrown our need for more genuinely affordable homes into even sharper relief, with too many in our community facing lockdown in wholly inadequate overcrowded or temporary accommodation, having to pay exorbitant rents, or whilst left out on our streets.

“Big obstacles lie ahead for our housing market and construction industry. As we begin to come out of the first wave of this pandemic, we need to be able to rely on the Government to make the right strategic choices about how we rebuild our society.

“This is why I am urging the Government to seize the initiative and properly invest in City Hall’s affordable housing schemes, which are still underfunded seven times over. Since 2016, City Hall has proved year after year that it is best placed to get to grips with the housing crisis, even in the midst of turmoil and uncertainty”.

Notes to editors

  • The latest figures on affordable housing starts from the Greater London Authority (GLA) can be found here;
  • Across London more than 17,000 affordable homes were started between April 2019 and March 2020, marking the highest number since records began in 2002/03;
  • It has been reported that the Government plans to instruct local authorities to allow developers to defer their Section 106 and Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) obligations in the wake of the Covid-19 outbreak;
  • The Mayor’s Housing Strategy can be read  here;
  • The Mayor of London has secured £4.8 billion of funding so far from the Government to support affordable housing projects in London;
  • A report released by the GLA in June 2019, revealed that to meet the scale of housing demand in the capital, Government investment in this area would need to increase seven-fold;
  • According to analysis conducted by the Resolution Foundation, Central Government funding for affordable housing has dropped across the last decade. After 2011, the national budget for social housing was reduced from £8.4bn for 3 years, to £4.5bn for 4 years.
  • A briefing from London Councils shows that, at the start of the decade, London’s allocation of funding for affordable housing was significantly reduced- from £3.72 billion between 2008 and 2011 (£1.24 billion per year) to just £627 million from 2011-2015 (£157 million a year). This represents an almost 90% reduction in yearly funding for all kinds of social and affordable housing. This briefing document can be found attached;
  • Unmesh Desai AM is the London Assembly Member for City & East London.

Need a document on this page in an accessible format?

If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of a PDF or other document on this page in a more accessible format, please get in touch via our online form and tell us which format you need.

It will also help us if you tell us which assistive technology you use. We’ll consider your request and get back to you in 5 working days.