·
4,174 homes in the Kirklees area are empty, which
represents 1 in 45 homes.
·
2,426 of those have been empty for more than six
months and are worth £431million.
·
Why are those properties standing empty and
deteriorating and why could that become an issue for the whole of Huddersfield?
A couple of weeks ago was National Empty Homes Week,
so I thought I would find out how many homes are empty in the Huddersfield area
– the numbers surprised me, so I wanted to share my thoughts about them with
you.
The
latest Government statistics show that 2,426 properties
in
Kirklees have been empty for more than six months.
Homes that are left empty for an extended period can
affect our locality and occasionally invite anti-social behaviour.
With a shortage of housing in the Huddersfield area,
these empty homes must be brought back into use to generate much-needed housing
for local people.
As you can see in the first bullet point, some homes
are only empty for a short period of time. Yet, those local properties that
stand empty for more than six months and then deteriorate become a problem for
our local community.
I appreciate there can be many genuine explanations
why a property may be left empty for a long time. However, with council house
waiting lists at high levels and the shortage of both properties to buy and
rent in Huddersfield, we must ask what is being done about this at Government
level and how this could affect the Huddersfield property market?
The collective value of these 2,426 long-term (6 months or more)
empty houses in Kirklees are worth £431million.
This impacts the Huddersfield housing market with a
lack of properties coming onto the market for sale and rent. This results in
house prices being pushed up, making it less affordable for first-time buyers
to get on the first step of the housing ladder.
It’s a real shame that many local properties are
empty for over six months when there is an increasing demand for accommodation,
at a time when there’s such a competitive housing market.
So, one might ask if this issue of long-term empty
properties is a new problem? Well, not really.
There were 3,696 homes long-term empty in Kirklees in 2010.
I know our local authority likes to work with property
owners of empty homes to bring them back into housing stock as it helps with
the housing shortage, even with the help of grants if improvement work is
needed for the empty home. Yet, they could use enforcement action where a
homeowner is incapable or unwilling to bring their property back into use.
So, what is the Government doing nationally? Homeowners are
charged a 50% premium on top of their Council Tax if their home has been empty
for two years or more. This can rise to a 300% premium if the property has been
empty for ten years or more.
However,
the bigger question is, why are all these homes in the Huddersfield and Kirklees
area being left empty?
The real answer is - they are not.
A handful of the properties belong to the local
authority and are in poor condition because the tenant trashed the
property.
Probate (where the person's estate is put in order
and passed onto the beneficiaries of the will) takes between six and twelve
months. Most of these long-term properties are being modernised and renovated,
whilst other Huddersfield properties are part of a deceased estate. In other
circumstances, some Huddersfield homes have been left empty after the owner has
been placed into a care home, yet there is no Power of Attorney to put the home
onto the market.
There is no 'one fix all' to the empty home syndrome
in Huddersfield.
Empty properties in Huddersfield is not an issue that will
sort the housing crisis we are suffering from.
The simple fact is the population is growing faster than the
number of houses being built. We need to build more homes.
Whether that means council properties, housing association
homes, private landlords or even owner-occupation housing the masses - that's a
massive question we could all talk about, day in day out until the cows come
home.
So, tell me, what are your thoughts on the matter?
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