Date: 29th June 2022
Subject: Rural Affordable Housing
Chair: Kerry Booth, Deputy Chief Executive, Rural Services Network
– To download the Agenda for this seminar click here
– To view the introduction from the RSN click here
– To download the Learning Outcomes from this seminar click here

Speakers:
Learning Outcomes

Examples of Good Practice/Reports/Information

“Carbon costs and comfort”

“Levelling up or letting down rural communities”

“Affordable rural housing during the cost-of-living crisis”

Open Forum Discussion

Air Source Heat Pumps – question posed about the high costs associated in running electric pumps. It was agreed that developers and consumers need to understand that air source heat pumps are not a direct replacement for a boiler.  A house needs to be heat pump ready (well insulated and airtight) and the pump properly installed and set up for a heat pump to work efficiently.

Increased Electricity Demand – debate about whether the increased electricity demand caused by adding EV chargers, air source heat pumps etc., had any implications on network approval for new schemes. It was highlighted that there was an assumption that additional sub stations are needed (often making small rural schemes financially inviable) but if houses are built efficiently this needn’t be the case.

Skills Gaps – are there skills gaps in rural areas due to a lack of affordable rural housing? It was agreed that yes there were, we know for example there is a shortage in health and care worker staff in rural areas particularly in tourist hot spots.

Average incomes – how appropriate is it to use average incomes as the measure of affordability when the average can be seriously skewed by the dominance of well-off households? A really good point and an important issue that’s needs to be understood. The RSN’s position is that average local earnings is a much better metric to use as a true measure of local pay, rather than commuter pay or income derived from share dividends, pensions, etc.

Accessing Funding – small rural housing associations find it difficult to access grant funding as they have limited capacity. It was highlighted that Homes England are looking at this issue and that Lord Benyon is keen to see more but smaller developments across rural communities, policy however hasn’t caught up with this thinking yet.  That said Wave 2 of Social Housing Decarbonisation Funds will be easier for smaller housing associations to bid into.

Useful links to share

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