Posts with tag: London housing

London Council Accused of Social Cleansing

Published On: May 7, 2015 at 9:41 am

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A council in London has been accused of social cleansing after sending a letter to their tenants suggesting they move to Birmingham.

The letter, sent by Wandsworth Council, has been shared on social media and states that the Council has a number of private rental sector homes “within the areas either directly within or near the surrounding areas of Birmingham.”

Recipients are told that the Council will pay for any “bedrooms given up”, as well as aiding with the cost of moving.

It is thought that the Council are targeting pensioners in particular, as they are exempt from bedroom tax.

Labour’s parliamentary candidate for Battersea, Will Martindale, posted a photograph of the letter on Twitter, and said that the person who received it felt “not wanted” in her local area.

Martindale says: “It’s just wrong to pressure local families to leave Battersea and move to Birmingham. The real answer is to build more homes that local people can afford to rent and buy.

“This Tory council is out of control. First, they moved local homeless families to Leicester and Portsmouth. Now they offer some of our most vulnerable residents cash to move 100 miles away from their jobs, friends and schools.”1

The Housing and Community Services have conducted a report on the proposed Wandsworth Moves and Mobility Scheme. It claims that the Council hope to move 600 “under occupiers”1 – tenants who live in homes where not all bedrooms are occupied – in the next three years.

A Wandsworth Council spokesperson says: “This is a scheme that has been in place in Wandsworth for many years. Every other London borough has a similar policy.

“What is does is provide choices and incentives for tenants in larger properties to hand them back so that they can be used to provide new social rented homes for families on waiting lists who may be living in overcrowded conditions and need a bigger property.

“Offering a financial incentive is one of the ways in which tenants who don’t need such big homes can be encouraged to give them up.

“As the letter makes crystal clear, it is not compulsory and no one is forced to leave, but some residents are quite happy to move out of London because they may have family connections in other parts of the country or are looking to make a fresh start outside the capital.”1 

The Independent recently undertook a study that found over 50,000 households have been moved out of London in the past three years.1

This figure indicates that a huge amount of families cannot afford homes in their area and are therefore being relocated out of their communities to places away from the capital.

1 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/generalelection/general-election-2015-council-letter-encouraging-tenants-to-move-from-london-to-birmingham-accused-of-social-cleansing-10228380.html

 

 

Which City is Better than London for Young People?

Published On: May 6, 2015 at 11:01 am

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London has risen from seventh to second place in the Youthful Cities Index, but one city still beats it.

The British capital is the most popular place in Europe for young people to live, but New York City is the global winner for youth desirability. NYC rose two places in this year’s survey.

The index was introduced last year, in which London ranked seventh. This year, the capital came first in the areas of safety, health and travel, pushing Berlin down to third. 2014’s winner Toronto fell below San Francisco and Paris to sixth place. But London did not compare to NYC in the music, film and fashion categories.

Which City is Better than London for Young People?

Which City is Better than London for Young People?

London is also the second most sustainable city in the world, behind Frankfurt, due to high house prices.1

In the Youthful Cities Affordability Index from October London came sixth, behind Paris, Toronto, Los Angeles, Chicago and Berlin, because of expensive rent, pricey public transport and high sales tax. NYC, however, came tenth.

Toronto-based strategic consultancy Decode conducts the index by surveying over 10,000 young people in 55 countries on topics such as safety, affordability, diversity and food.

Nine cities in North America, five from Europe and three in Asia came in the top 20, with Tokyo in 12th place.

Mexico City is the highest ranking of Latin American cities, in ninth place, with Tel Aviv in the Middle East in 14th place. Africa was included at 35th place with Johannesburg.

Cofounder of Youthful Cities, Sonja Miokovic, says: “Half of the world’s population is under 30-years-old and half now live in cities. Youth and cities, especially the largest ones, will together shape the future of the planet. That’s why it is essential for cities to appeal to youth and actively find ways to unlock their potential.

“We are at a time of unprecedented opportunity to transform the places we live, work and play by engaging the world’s largest untapped resource: youth!”1

Data revealed that Tehran is the most affordable city to live, followed by Detroit. San Francisco and Mexico City have the best employment prospects, and San Francisco is also the best place for environment and entrepreneurship. Toronto is the best city for diversity, Madrid for digital access, Warsaw for education, and Tokyo for food and nightlife.

Moscow won in three areas: public space, sports and financial services.

The city with the highest youth population, the percentage of the total population aged between 15-29, is Dar es Salaam in Tanzania.

1 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11574377/Only-one-city-in-the-world-is-better-than-London-for-young-people-to-live.html