Showing posts with label Public ownership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public ownership. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 June 2026

Why Housing Associations Must Be Brought Back Into Public Ownership

 

Housing Associations: Why They Need to Be Taken Back Into Public Ownership for the Sake of Accountability



If you’ve ever dealt with a housing association, you’ll know the truth: when accountability disappears, people get hurt.

Housing associations were created to protect people. They were meant to be the safety net when councils couldn’t build enough homes. They were supposed to be rooted in communities, run by local people, and focused on tenants — not balance sheets. Their origins go back to 19th‑century Victorian philanthropy, when charitable trusts were set up to tackle poverty, overcrowding, and slum conditions. What began as small, community‑minded organisations built to serve the public good has since grown into a national system — one that has drifted far from its original purpose.

But somewhere along the way, the mission changed.

Today, too many housing associations behave less like social landlords and more like private corporations with charity status. And when you remove accountability from housing, people suffer. I’ve seen it as a worker. I’ve lived it as a tenant. I’ve watched the system fail people who had nowhere else to turn.

This is why I believe housing associations need to be brought back into public ownership — not as a slogan, but as a matter of basic accountability and human dignity.


From Philanthropy to Thatcher’s Experiment

For most of the last century, housing associations were a small part of the picture, sitting alongside large council housebuilding programmes. Their purpose was simple: provide safe, affordable homes and remain accountable to tenants and communities.

Thatcherism changed that.

Right to Buy stripped councils of millions of homes. Councils were blocked from building replacements. Then the 1988 Housing Act pushed councils to transfer their stock to housing associations and opened the door to private finance. Housing associations went from local social landlords to key players in a market‑driven system — with far less democratic control.


This Wasn’t Just Policy — It Was Ideology

Thatcher’s government believed the state should step back and the market should step in. Council housing was sold off, councils were prevented from replacing what was lost, and housing associations were pushed forward as the new landlords.

But they weren’t funded like public services — they were pushed into private finance, mergers, and corporate structures. Accountability moved from elected councils to un-elected boards.

And who benefited from that shift?

Not tenants.
Not communities.
Not frontline workers.

It benefited the banks and lenders who now hold billions in housing association debt. It benefited the executives of large associations who built empires, not homes. The people who needed the system most were the ones pushed furthest away from power.

That shift still shapes the system today.


What Housing Associations Have Become

Over the years, many housing associations have drifted far from their original purpose:

  • Corporate drift — huge mergers, CEO culture, PR teams

  • Weak oversight — regulators with no teeth

  • Tenants ignored — repairs delayed, complaints dismissed

  • Frontline reality — people treated like problems, not human beings

I’ve sat with people who were scared to complain because they knew nothing would change. I’ve seen families left in damp, mouldy homes while the association sent out glossy newsletters about “community investment.”

When landlords become unaccountable, tenants become invisible.


The Human Cost

This isn’t theory. It’s not a policy debate. It’s real lives.

  • Unsafe homes — mould, leaks, fire risks

  • Families stuck in limbo — temporary accommodation for years

  • No accountability — complaints going nowhere

  • People reduced to numbers — the dehumanisation I’ve seen again and again

When a housing association fails, there is nowhere else to go. That’s the difference between a public service and a private landlord with a charity badge.


Why Public Ownership Matters

Bringing housing associations back into public ownership isn’t about ideology. It’s about accountability.

Public ownership means:

  • Democratic control — decisions made by elected bodies, not CEOs

  • Transparency — open budgets, public scrutiny

  • Real tenant power — rights that can be enforced

  • Reinvestment — money going back into homes, not executive pay

Housing is a public good. It should be run for people, not profit.

“Accountability isn’t optional — it’s the foundation of a decent society.”


A Better Way Is Possible

I’ve spent decades on the frontline. I’ve seen the worst of the system — and the best of people. I know change is possible because I’ve seen what happens when communities stand together and refuse to be ignored.

We can build a system where:

  • Tenants are heard

  • Homes are safe

  • Complaints lead to action

  • Housing is treated as a right, not a business model

One voice in the darkness can join another — and shine a light.

Peace, love and happiness — Norbert Lawrie