Andy Burnham plans to suspend Right to Buy scheme

Andy Burnham
Andy Burnham wants to build 10,000 new social homes across Greater Manchester [PA]
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Labour's Andy Burnham wants to press pause on the Right to Buy scheme after he has claimed it is making the housing crisis "worse every year".

He said he wanted to "suspend" but "not end" the Right to Buy housing scheme to allow for more social homes to be built across the county.

Mr Burnham was laying out his policies after he was elected for a third-term in the mayoral elections as part of "ambitious" new plans for Greater Manchester.

Right to Buy allows most council tenants to buy their council home at a discount and supporters have said the scheme has helped people climb the housing ladder and secure their families' financial futures.

'Getting worse'

But Mr Burnham said the housing crisis was "getting worse every year" because of it.

Speaking on BBC Breakfast, he said: "We lose social homes every year, and across Greater Manchester for the last year 500 social homes were lost.

"I'm saying to Whitehall and Westminster - you need to allow us to suspend Right to Buy from the new homes that we are building because if we don't, trying to solve the housing crisis is like trying to fill a bath but with the plug out because you try and build new homes but you lose them at the other end."

Mr Burnham hoped to solve the housing crisis in Greater Manchester within a decade by suspending, "not ending" Right to Buy.

It formed part of his pledge to build 10,000 homes across the county, with at least 1,000 in every borough.

By working with public bodies to "release brown field land", he said the social homes would be a "new generation of council homes which will be cheaper to run".

"There is no solution to the housing crisis without building homes that people can truly afford," he added.

As part of his four-year term as mayor, Mr Burnham also wants to bring in a Greater Manchester Good Landlord charter to improve standards in the private rented sector.

He said: "We are going to give our residents the right to request a property check if they are concerned their home is unfit or unsafe."

The mayor of Greater Manchester has the most powers of any elected mayor outside London and oversees decisions in relation to areas including public transport, strategic planning and housing, productivity and skills, economy and innovation, and the environment.

They also fulfil the role of police and crime commissioner as well as hold responsibility for Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service.

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