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The Conservatives Start Selling Council HousesThe Tories and the Right to BuyThe Right to Buy as enshrined in the 1980 Housing Act was one of the biggest factors in changing Harold Hill after it was built in the 1950s. The change has been irreversible, although whether that it is beneficial or detrimental to the community is a debate that still continues today. Harold Hill started as a completely council-owned housing estate, that is, the landlord was the municipal government which was initially the London County Council (LCC), then the Greater London Council (GLC) and then later the London Borough of Havering. From 1967, but particularly from 1980, tenants have bought their own homes leaving council-owned properties now in a minority in Harold Hill. The effects have made a fundamental difference, as former Labour councillors Dennis Cook and Del Smith note:
Del Smith’s comment about giving money away is a reference to the massive discounts that were made available to tenants. From 1980 onwards tenants could expect to receive generous double-digit percentage discounts off the market value of their property. Conservatism and Home OwnershipThere were attempts by various Conservative local authorities since the end of the Second World War to sell council houses. Hornchurch County Council had attempted to sell their council homes in the early fifties, but had only managed to hive off six. Beyond Havering, in 1967 Francis Frederick Griffin, the leader of the Tory council in Birmingham, published a hugely influential pamphlet called Selling Council Houses. Based on the experiences of Conservative rule in Birmingham, it was reprinted several times and eagerly read by a generation of Tory Town Hall activists. As Griffin wrote, their policy was based upon the belief that government, both local and national, should have as little to do with peoples lives as possible:
After seven months in power they had sold 2,101 homes, which included a reduction of up to 10 percent for long-term residents. Tories take Control of the LCCWhen the Tories gained control of the Greater London Council in 1967 they cut subsidies to council houses forcing rents to dramatically increase, but they also embarked on a path of allowing tenants to buy the homes they rented. The first person to buy their council house in London was 44 year-old James Regan of Sheffield Drive, Harold Hill. He had moved to the estate from Stepney in 1953 and had lived in Sheffield Drive since 1958. Earning £1,500 a year working for the London Electricity Board, he bought his house for £3,060 having earned a 10 percent discount because of the years spent living there. Instead of paying the inclusive rent of £3 12s, he put down a £60 deposit and was prepared to pay £4 7s. per week. After spending £1,000 on modifications to the house since he lived there, Mr Regan considered it a worthwhile purchase. Desmond Plummer, the leader of the GLC, ceremoniously handed over a golden key to the new owner on October 4, 1967. James Regan gladly excepted and furthermore resigned his membership of the Labour Party at the same time:
Also in attendance on that day was Horace Cutler, the Tory Chair of
the GLC Housing Committee, who had previously stated: Obviously Horace Cutler saw James Regan as a part of his vision. By 1970 the then Conservative national government allowed local authorities to give discounts of up to 20 percent for selling their houses. But with all these schemes there were restrictions. For instance, Birmingham council never allowed more than 10 percent of their housing stock in any particular area to be sold. Margaret Thatcher and the Patterson FamilyBy the time of Margaret Thatcher’s 1980 Conservative government all such restrictions were removed and massive discounts off the market value were instituted in law. No council could now refuse to sell a property to its sitting tenant, hence, the Right to Buy. By the time of the 1983 general election over 500,000 tenants had brought their own home. The Right to Buy brought a fundamental change to local society, not least in fracturing the community. Previously, every tenant had one enemy – the council. Now people’s problems were more personalised – everybody was seemingly fighting their own battles rather than the one big collective threat. Brenda Dreyer, a former vice-chair of the Harold Hill Tenants’ Association, views this change negatively:
On August 10, 1980 the Tory Prime Minister, nicknamed the Iron Lady, visited Harold Hill. Her purpose was to visit the Patterson family who were the 12,000th household to buy their council home under her new legislation. For an in-depth account of the life and views of Margaret Thatcher and an account of her visit to Harold Hill read [Margaret Thatcher: Reggae, Royalty and Riots] |
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