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Today the right to buy social housing ends in Scotland

(39 Posts)
GillT57 Sun 31-Jul-16 21:25:36

well done Scotland.

Jane10 Sun 31-Jul-16 21:25:02

But those houses haven't evaporated? They are still homes. The people who bought them would still have to live somewhere. Surely the problem is the relative unavailability of lower cost houses rather than that council housing has been sold off?

Nandalot Sun 31-Jul-16 20:59:07

Brilliant. Wish this would happen all over UK.

petra Sun 31-Jul-16 20:19:44

Brilliant. We have to start somewhere to stop this altogether.

J52 Sun 31-Jul-16 17:50:45

I wonder if those who buy their social housing, thus taking it out of the pool of available housing, remember their need for the support of social housing in the first place?

I was also very affected by Cathy Come Home, when it was first shown.

Eloethan Sun 31-Jul-16 17:43:53

I remember watching Cathy Come Home as a teenager and finding it gut-wrenchingly sad.

Tegan Sun 31-Jul-16 17:38:00

By the way, Cathy Come Home is on BBC 4 tonight. Some of it filmed on the street next to my childhood home.

gettingonabit Sun 31-Jul-16 16:57:13

Well done Scotland. Wales is set to follow suit. Hopefully.

Elegran Sun 31-Jul-16 16:20:46

Some tenants are there for life, but others decide to buy (perhaps the ones who would have bought their rented house?) or move to another town to work, or move in with their children, or into a care home. Even the ones who stay for life are not there into eternity, as life itself is not eternal - sooner or later they will need their home no longer.

Once a house is sold out of the social housing rental system, it is unavailable permanently (and often ends up after a few years as another house for sale, while its first owners trade up), replacements takes ages to build and are costly, and land elsewhere has to be bought on which to build them.

Meanwhile people who need houses wait on an endless list.

Grannyknot Sun 31-Jul-16 14:14:15

...but the opposite traps people for all time as Council tenants, and doesn't support social mobility. Forgive me if that seems naive or even polemical, just trying to understand the historical system.

We own an ex-local authority house, bought because as a previous poster said, it is very spacious. Most of my neighbours own their homes via the right-to-buy scheme and have lived in their homes since the 1970s. So not everyone is out to sell and make a profit.

Also, how will people on the waiting list get into the housing stock, if the houses are occupied by Council tenants who (in my experience) seem to stay put anyway? I don't understand the social housing system at all.

Riverwalk Sun 31-Jul-16 13:31:05

Yes, well done Scotland ... London should do the same.

Eloethan Sun 31-Jul-16 13:28:09

It's the same in the village where my Mum lives DaphneBroon. Really lovely houses sold well below market value and then sold on at a much higher price, thus pricing out those on below average incomes who are now forced to rely on insecure, expensive and often sub-standard private rentals. It is, in my view, a disgrace.

Well done to Scotland.

DaphneBroon Sun 31-Jul-16 12:55:16

Good. The council houses in our village have all been sold off to "tenants" over the last 30 years who have then sold them on and because they are actually nice houses with enormous gardens, and some have also been extended to provide another bedroom and bathroom etc they are changing hands for £400-500k these days.
Way out of reach for first time buyers.

Elegran Sun 31-Jul-16 12:37:11

From 1st August, no more social housing will be sold to in Scotland tenants (sales which are already in the pipeline will be completed. Over the next ten years this should keep 15,500 houses from vanishing from rental stock, helping the thousands of people on waiting lists to be homed.