housing the “big society” phillip blond director, respublica 1

30
Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

Post on 19-Dec-2015

220 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

1

Housing the “Big Society”Phillip Blond

Director, ResPublica

Page 2: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

2

The Core Problems• The ECONOMIC problem

• The SOCIAL problem

• The CIVIC problem

• The POWER problem

Page 3: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

3

The Economic ProblemAssets have become concentrated

• The wealthiest half of households hold 91% of the UK’s total wealth

Source: ONS, Wealth in Great Britain – Main Results from the Wealth and Assets Survey 2006/08 (2009)

Page 4: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

4

The Economic ProblemGrowing income inequality (UK)

Index of rise in gross weekly earnings, full time males (1978-2008)Source: Stewart Lansley, “How Rising Inequality contributed to the crash”, Soundings, Spring 2010

Page 5: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

5

The Economic ProblemWages won’t deliver (US)

Over the long-term, US wages have stagnated in a time of growth

Page 6: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

6

The Economic ProblemWarning signs of a UK decoupling?

Male median wages have fallen behind GDP growth since the early 1970s

Page 7: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

7

The Economic ProblemLow-earners have seen less growth, and even decline, in wages (UK)

Page 8: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

8

The Social ProblemSocial capital is declining

• 97% of communities have become more socially fragmented over the past 30 years

Source: Changing UK (Dec 2008), BBC Report

Page 9: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

9

The Social ProblemFear of crime (UK)

Fear has a strong relationship with social trust

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

0 20 40 60 80

Social trust (%)Es

timat

e of

bur

glar

y (%

)

Page 10: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

10

The Civic ProblemCivic engagement has decreased

• Only 31% of Britons now provide nearly 90% of all volunteer hours

Source: Third Sector Research Centre (2010)

Page 11: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

11

The Civic ProblemDecrease in civic participation (UK)

Page 12: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

12

The Power ProblemPower has pooled in the state

• Nearly three out of four Britons agree that “the state intervenes too much”

Source, David Halpern, “The Wealth of Nations” (2007)

Page 13: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

13

The Power Problem

Page 14: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

14

The DiagnosisProblems with the ‘left’ and ‘right’

• Both welfarism and the ‘monopolised market’ have encouraged bureaucracy and asset concentration

• The state and the market have squeezed out the ‘civic middle’, stripping it of capital and capacity

Page 15: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

15

Housing: Potential Issues• Retreat of the state from funding and regulation.

• The need for new solutions

• Meeting government policies and reflecting local communities

Page 16: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

16

Housing: Opportunities• In delivering the localism agenda: enablers and

investors

• As platforms for opening, extending and devolving public services

• As mutual models

Page 17: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

17

Localism• Local connection is essential

• Housing associations can work on behalf of communities: e.g. neighbourhood planning, economic development – Green Deal

• Support those with limited capacity and capital

Page 18: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

18

Localism

Tübingen User-Led Housing: a self-commissioned neighbourhood

Page 19: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

19

LocalismTübingen User-Led Housing• Self-commissioned, self-designed plot by plot

neighbourhood development • Working in labour and design partnership• Active participation in delivering solutions rather

than ‘top-down’ standardised delivery

Page 20: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

20

• Housing providers are well placed for broader public service delivery

• Platform the ‘right to challenge’: ‘right to buy’

• Offer platform for community-based enterprise and investment: Skill Generating :-Work Programme

Association led Investment

Page 21: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

21

Active Citizen Developers

Hørsholm Waste-to-Energy: a neighbourhood clean-tech incinerator

Page 22: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

22

Hørsholm Waste-to-Energy• Community not-for-profit asset – shared wins

• Incinerator waste-to-energy plant heats 10,000 homes: cuts heating bills by 30%

• Energy cost savings raise house valuations

Bottom up Procurement

Page 23: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

23

Opening Public Services

Page 24: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

24

Opening Public ServicesPoplar HARCA• Big business, but relevance through local governance

• Asset transfer of underused facilities: community centres now used for youth groups, health clinics, etc

• Managed by HA but input by and for locals

Page 25: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

25

Mutual Models• Does community-ownership and mutualism have a

role to play in housing?

• Increase accountability and transparency – and safeguard social mission through a “social dividend”

• Community empowerment

Page 26: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

26

Mutual Models

Page 27: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

27

Mutual Models• Anticipated ownership model: membership drawn

from tenants and staff – Rochdale Borough Wide Housing

• Developing new accountability membership framework

• Working together to reduce costs

Page 28: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

28

Housing the Big Society• Appeal to the local: be a platform for the Localism

Bill and encourage investment• Platform provision: open public services and offer

alternatives for delivery local platform for statutory services – Hubs : -St Georges - Birmingham

• Ground in the social: devolution of governance and assets

Page 29: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

29

The Future • Social housing as Social Enterprise• If its Public money has to be for the Public

Good• Housing no longer enough – that’s the base

not the high bar

Page 30: Housing the “Big Society” Phillip Blond Director, ResPublica 1

30

The New Standard • Economic – self and community build –

plaform for mass bottom up enterprise• Social – associate to create capital and skills• Civic – begin where people are - foster

relationships and fraternity• Power – change governance – go bottom up