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NewsG15: Government must preserve regulatory independence The G15, the group of London’s largest housing associations, has called for the government to ensure the independence of social housing regulation is preserved. As the government prepares to review the framework for regulating social housing, the G15 has urged that regulation must be kept independent of both central and local government. A loss of regulatory independence could threaten private funders’ confidence and the private body status of housing associations, and add further debt to the government’s balance sheet, it warns. It is important that regulation is independent of government. This was the argument put forward by Professor Martin Cave when he carried out his independent review of social housing in 2007. As a result, the regulatory and investment functions of the Housing Corporation were split and the Tenant Services Authority and the Homes and Communities Agency were set up on 1 December 2008. Stephen Howlett, chair of the G15 and chief executive of Peabody, said: “The existence of independent regulation has given lenders who invest in housing associations confidence, which has improved the availability of funds and the price that has to be paid for lending. “The loss of independence would not only be a matter of concern to funders; it would also risk the private body status of housing associations. This is very important because it gives them independence and flexibility, and it means that housing association borrowing, and it is in excess of £50 billion, is not counted as part of the government’s debt. “To put this money into the government’s balance sheet would further weaken the country’s position beyond the £155 billion debt the government already acknowledges.” Stephen Howlett added: For more information contact: Peabody media relations officer Neil Young on neil.young@peabody.org.uk or 020 7021 4210/077 5960 3638. Note to editors: G15 is a group of London housing associations and includes: A2 Dominion Group
G15 makes a significant contribution to London life. Collectively, G15 associations house around one in ten Londoners and manage around 410,000 homes. We build approximately 10,000 new homes every year. We invest over £25m annually in economic and community development to create thriving, sustainable neighbourhoods across the capital – in areas such as employment, skills, education, health and well-being, volunteering, financial inclusion, family intervention, welfare benefits support, supporting older and vulnerable people and engaging younger people. www.g15.org.uk
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