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Government demands ‘immediate, mandatory’ housing plans from councils to build 1.5m homes | Politics News

The government is today demanding “immediate, mandatory” housing targets from councils as part of its plans to build 1.5 million houses by the next general election.

During its election campaign Labour promised to build swathes of new housing to address lack of affordability and supply.

And it will today release its latest version of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), setting out the government’s homebuilding plans.

Under the NPPF, councils will have just 12 weeks to commit to a timetable for providing new homes in their area.

And if they fail to do so, ministers will “not hesitate” to impose a plan upon them, the government said, after less than a third of local authorities accepted a plan in the past five years.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said: “Our Plan for Change will put builders not blockers first, overhaul the broken planning system and put roofs over the heads of working families and drive the growth that will put more money in people’s pockets.

“We’re taking immediate action to make the dream of homeownership a reality through delivering 1.5 million homes by the next parliament and rebuilding Britain to deliver for working people.”

Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary Angela Rayner said: “I will not hesitate to do what it takes to build 1.5 million new homes over five years and deliver the biggest boost in social and affordable housebuilding in a generation.

“We must all do our bit and we must all do more. We expect every local area to adopt a plan to meet their housing need. The question is where the homes and local services people expect are built, not whether they are built at all.”

Deputy prime minister Angela Rayner answers MPs questions.
Image:
Ms Rayner says she will do ‘what it takes’ to get Britain building

Labour’s plans involve an annual target of 370,000 new homes in England, in a bid to find living space for 1.3 million households on social housing waiting lists.

Councils with the most unaffordable housing and “greatest potential for growth” will have increased targets for building – and “stronger action” will be used to make sure plans are up to date.

What is the ‘grey belt’

Part of the plans also includes a presumption that building on brownfield land will be approved.

However, Labour is also looking to target building on the green belt – including on the so-called “grey belt”.

According to Ms Rayner, this includes “disused car parks, petrol stations and low quality green belt”.

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Councils will also be required to “review their green belt boundaries to meet targets, identifying and prioritising lower quality ‘grey belt’ land”.

Building on the green belt will have to abide by Labour’s so-called “golden rules”: Brownfield first, grey belt second, affordable homes, boost public services and infrastructure, improve genuine green spaces.

As part of the scheme, there will be an extra £100m available for local authorities to hire staff and consultants – and more resources to carry out studies and site assessments.

This comes on top of a previous increase in planning fees to cover extra planning officers.

Councillor Adam Hug, the housing spokesperson for the Local Government Association, said housebuilding must take a “collaborative approach”.

He called for “any national algorithms and formulas” to be “supplemented with local knowledge”.

Mr Hug added that housing reform needs to be supported with work to “tackle workforce challenges” as well as the costs of construction.

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Why hasn’t the UK built more houses?

Kevin Hollinrake, the Conservative’s shadow housing secretary, says Labour have “consistently failed to deliver on housebuilding”.

“Labour will bulldoze through the concerns of local communities,” he said.

“If Labour really want homes to be built where they are needed, they must think again.”

PwC fined £15m for not reporting suspected fraud at firm | Business News

The accounting giant PwC has been fined £15m by the financial conduct regulator in its first-ever financial penalty on an audit firm.

One of the so-called big four accounting firms, PwC was said by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) to have missed a number of audit red flags and failed to act immediately to report suspected fraud at a failed financial services firm.

PwC were the auditors of the firm, called London Capital & Finance (LCF), and were tasked with verifying company accounts.

But despite suspecting LCF was committing fraud and being obliged to report the suspicion to the regulator, PwC signed off on the accounts.

Money blog: Fines for parents taking children out of school to change

Even after it was satisfied that LCF’s 2016 accounts were accurate PwC still had a duty to report previous concerns, the FCA said.

PwC should instead have “acted immediately”, the FCA said. “Their failure to do so deprived the FCA of potentially vital information.”

LCF has been described as a Ponzi scheme by its former investors. It has also been condemned by the financial watchdog for its “unfair and misleading” promotion of a financial product called minibonds

Responding to the fine PwC said: “We have reached a settlement with the FCA to resolve an unintentional reporting breach.”

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Silicon Valley Bank UK arm hands out £15m in bonuses days after £1 rescue | Business News

The British arm of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB UK) has handed out millions of pounds in employee bonuses just days after its insolvency was averted through a Bank of England-orchestrated rescue deal.

Sky News has learnt that the payouts to staff including its senior executives were signed off by HSBC, SVB UK’s new owner, earlier this week.

Sources described the bonus pool as “modest”, and said it totalled between £15m and £20m.

It was unclear on Saturday how much had been awarded to Erin Platts, the UK bank’s chief executive or her senior colleagues.

One insider said the bonus payments were a signal of HSBC’s confidence in the talent base at its new subsidiary and that the buyer had been keen to honour previously agreed payments in order to help retain key staff.

Employing about 700 people in Britain, SVB UK is a profitable business but was brought to the brink of collapse last weekend by the travails of its American parent company.

Had it not been acquired solvently, the bonuses would not have been paid this week, according to insiders.

More on Silicon Valley Bank

One pointed out that stock held by senior executives and other employees had been rendered worthless by SVB UK’s near-collapse.

In the US, its banking arm has been taken into government ownership and its holding company, SVB Financial Group, has now filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection as it seeks buyers for its other assets.

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Bank rescue ‘to protect UK tech’

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Bonuses were also paid to its US staff just hours before the Santa Clara-based bank collapsed, according to reports last week.

An emergency auction in which Rishi Sunak, the prime minister, played a pivotal role drew interest from challenger banks including Oaknorth and The Bank of London.

HSBC, Europe’s biggest lender, struck a deal before markets opened in London on Monday to buy SVB UK for £1.

It was given a waiver from bank ring-fencing rules introduced after the 2008 financial crisis.

Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, said the rescue had been critical to preserving funding to some of the UK’s most promising start-up companies.

“The UK’s tech sector is genuinely world-leading and of huge importance to the British economy, supporting hundreds of thousands of jobs,” he said.

“We have worked urgently to deliver on that promise and find a solution that will provide SVB UK’s customers with confidence.

“[This] ensures customer deposits are protected and can bank as normal, with no taxpayer support.”

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Silicon Valley Bank – what happened?

The government had been lobbied intensively last weekend by hundreds of tech entrepreneurs about the parlous state of SVB UK.

They warned of “an existential threat to the UK tech sector”, adding: “The Bank of England’s assessment that SVB going into administration would have limited impact on the UK economy displays a dangerous lack of understanding of the sector and the role it plays in the wider economy, both today and in the future.”

The founders warned Mr Hunt that the collapse of SVB UK would “cripple the sector and set the ecosystem back 20 years”.

“Many businesses will be sent into involuntary liquidation overnight,” they wrote.

Sky News revealed this week that Ms Platts, who has worked in the lender’s British operations since 2007, would remain in her job following talks with Ian Stuart, the HSBC UK chief executive.

SVB UK’s independent directors, who include chairman Darren Pope, are also expected to stay on under HSBC’s ownership.

That indicates HSBC’s intention to enable the technology-focused lender to operate with some degree of autonomy on an ongoing basis.

However, the Silicon Valley Bank brand may disappear in the UK, depending upon its fate in the US, one insider said.

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The turmoil at SVB has threatened to escalate into a much broader banking crisis, with the Financial Times reporting on Friday evening that UBS is in talks to take over part or all of its Zurich-based peer, Credit Suisse.

In the US, a group of large lenders including Bank of American and JP Morgan provided a $30bn deposit lifeline to First Republic on Thursday.

However, its shares continued to slump on Friday, raising renewed fears for its health.

A spokesman for SVB UK declined to comment on the bonus payments handed out this week.