Khan launched Right to Buy-back in July last year to boost Londonâs supply of council homes. It gives boroughs the funds to purchase former council homes that have been sold into the private market through the governmentâs Right to Buy programme.
Since then 14 London boroughs have been given ÂŁ152 million to purchase 1,577 market homes that have been or will be converted to social rent or to house homeless families. A total of 1,756 council homes in London were sold through Right to Buy in 2021.
According to the New Economics Foundation, the scheme has led to an average net loss of 24,000 social homes a year since 1991.
The mayorâs office says it has already exceeded his previous target of starting 10,000 new council homes this year. Khan now aims to start a further 10,000 homes in a significantly shorter time â a total of 20,000 new council homes by 2024.
Mentions Sadiq Khan
Council housing, once the bedrock of the housing system â providing secure and cheap tenure â is in shockingly short supply. According to the National Housing Federation, 1.6 million households are languishing on the waiting list â more than the number of households in the North-East â while all of England only managed to deliver a pitiful 8,900 council homes in 2021-22. Only 2,500 of these were for social rent, the traditional rent level for social housing, with the remainder at higher-cost tenures.
In the same period, the UK also sold off or demolished around 20,000 social homes, with 14,000 council homes sold off under the Right to Buy scheme. Over the years, Right to Buy has led to some 3 million homes being lost from the social housing stock. With millions in need of secure and affordable homes, rebuilding the council stock is a vital step â perhaps the most vital â in confronting the housing emergency. Council housing offers secure, lifelong tenancies and rent levels far below that of the private sector and most Housing Association properties, with the homes remaining in public hands, owned by us.
Amid this backdrop of depleted social housing, Sadiq Khan unveiled his âRight to Buy Backâ scheme in 2021, which has subsidised London councils to purchase homes from the private sector for use as council housing. This has allowed for former private sector homes to be added to the council housing stock, so long as the homes meet or are brought up to the Decent Homes Standard. In its first year, the scheme managed to facilitate the purchase of 1500 homes â a long way from what is needed to meet the cityâs social housing needs, but almost as many council homes as were built across the rest of England last year.
On its surface, Khanâs clean air zone is hardly the stuff of revolution. Called the London Ultra Low Emission Zone (ULEZ), it imposed a daily charge of ÂŁ12.50 (about $15) on highly polluting vehicles traversing the central parts of the capital and enforced the sanctions with roadside cameras. Yet its expansion in late August has distorted U.K. national politics and Khanâs political prospects, and would even come to pose a threat to his personal safety.
The new pollution charge has been met with a seething public backlash â one I would later encounter firsthand in a village on Londonâs furthest reaches.
According to a person close to the mayor â who, like others in this article, was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive matters â anti-ULEZ protesters have regularly turned up at Khanâs South London home, including when his two daughters were there alone. For several days, a caravan was chained outside his house bearing slogans and artwork that included swastikas. Protesters targeted his family for abuse at public events.
A town hall meeting in early November had to be moved to City Hall for security reasons. During the meeting, a man yelled that, centuries ago, Khan would have been hung from the âgallows.â Police have regularly searched the mayorâs house and car in response to written notes claiming explosive devices had been planted. In October, a letter came in the mail, addressed to him, with a bullet inside.
London mayor Sadiq Khan signalled a move away from demolition not backed by residents in 2018, declaring that estate regeneration schemes need to obtain support through mandatory ballots. Since then, high profile plans to demolish architecturally acclaimed estates Cressingham Gardens and Central Hill have been "paused" by Lambeth Council after an independent review by the late crossbench peer Bob Kerslake recommended a "fundamental reset" to the council's handling of the redevelopments.
Sentiment is also moving sharply against what is known as the "cross-subsidy" approach to regeneration that has dominated in the past two decades, in which council estates are demolished to make way for expensive for-sale properties that in turn fund building a proportion of more affordable homes. The model was declared "bust" by housing association leaders as far back as 2019, before the economic downturn left thousands of apartments unsold across developments in London.
While plans for demolition come under scrutiny, more emphasis is being placed on infill development, such as Camden's rejuvenation of the post-war Kiln Place social housing estate. Working with the London Borough of Camden, Peter Barber Architects upgraded the whole estate and increased its density without demolishing any existing homes.