Easy problems should have easy solutions - shouldn’t they?
Problems like Bingham’s housing crisis, where we have a rudimentary numerical
problem of too few homes for too many people ... the answer is clearly to build more property in Bingham -
but that, unfortunately for those desperately seeking to purchase or let a property,
takes a lot of time and huge amounts of money. So what of other solutions?
The most recent set of figures from 2015 state there are 1,147 empty
homes in the Rushcliffe Borough Council area. So it begs the question ... why
not put them back onto the system and help ease the Bingham housing crisis? Whilst
they stand empty, 533 Rushcliffe households (not people – households) are on the
Council House Waiting List for council houses. Surely,
we can undoubtedly all agree that property left empty for years and
years isn’t morally right with the burgeoning Council House Waiting List, not
to also mention the issue of homelessness.
But a different story emerges when you look deeper into the
numbers. Of those 1,147 homes lying empty, only 369 properties were empty for
more than six months. The local authority has to report a property being empty,
even if its for a week. So many of the Bingham properties are either awaiting
new homeowners or, in the case of rental properties, new tenants. Also most certainly,
some properties are being refurbished and renovated, while others properties
have homeowners who are anxious to sell but cannot find a buyer.
The fact is that the number of genuinely long term empty properties
is only a tiny drop in the ocean of the 45,835 properties in the area covered
by Rushcliffe Borough Council and, even if every one of those empty homes were
filled with happy cheerful tenants tomorrow, it would only meet a small
fraction of Bingham housing needs.
So what does this mean for all the homeowners and landlords of Bingham?
Well it means with demand being so high, especially for rental properties, the
certainty of the rental market growing is an inevitability because young people
cannot buy and councils don’t have the money to build new council houses. This
in turn bolsters property prices as landlords continue to buy at the lower end
of the market (starter homes, etc), which in turn sustains the rest of the
market as those sellers move up the property ladder, releasing others in turn
to buy on again.
These are interesting times in the Bingham property market!
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