Right to Buy for housing associations
What might reality look like for housing associations when it comes to the Right to Buy? Jonathan Cox explains.
- Details
Imagine you are the Prime Minister; polls not going in the right direction; what to do? Everyone loves the Right to Buy (RTB) right? Some might say the final decision to put five lines in the Conservative manifesto was a purely political decision. Parking whether, if so, the Housing Association RTB was ever needed to boost votes; what might happen next?
Pre-election the HA RTB was included in the list of promises that would be turned into action within the first 100 days. If the Conservatives were anticipating a minority Government they might have taken the view that such a proposal would be voted down and that would be the end of it; but now they have to deliver on their promise – and soon.
The manifesto promise did make clear that housing associations would be “compensated”; though some commentators have pointed out the promise didn’t state fully compensated; when the Conservatives introduced the Right to Acquire (RTA) they did just that; so they have form in returning the discount in cash to housing associations.
And with the RTA careful thought was given to asset cover; the “net and peak debt” exclusion was an attempt to provide a solution for entities who had entered financial arrangements with no thought that their assets might be compulsorily sold. The “peak debt” part is an exclusion where the amount of the sale price less the discount doesn’t cover “the maximum amount which the landlord may borrow under a loan agreement which is attributable to the dwelling-house”.
The RTA legislation also picked up the anomalies such as rural housing developments.
So if we were the civil servants trying to implement this we would propose:
- Renaming the Right to Acquire the HA Right to Buy
- Increasing the discounts to the same as the RTB
All well and good (almost?) for housing associations? Not too good for local authorities though nor people waiting for social housing generally…
Jonathan Cox is a partner at Anthony Collins Solicitors. He can be contacted on 0121 212 7453.