HC Deb 28 January 1986 vol 90 cc467-9W
Mr. Rooker

asked the Secretary of State for the Environment what information he has as to the numbers of employees of housing authorities who are housing authority tenants.

Mr. John Patten

This information is not collected by the Department.

Mr. Rooker

asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list the 50 housing authorities owning the highest numbers of empty dwellings, giving the figures and an indication of how many of these dwellings have been empty for more than one year.

Mr. John Patten

The 50 English local authorities which, in their housing investment programme returns, reported owning the largest numbers of vacant dwellings, including those which were closed, at 1 April 1985, are as follows:

Total vacant Vacant more than 1 year
Number Percentage of stock Number
1 Liverpool 6,547 10.3 3,588
2 Manchester 4,950 6.1 1,505
3 Hackney 3,379 7.4 1,319
4 Southwark 3,203 5.1 1,581
5 Sheffield 2,858 3.1 637
6 Birmingham 2,805 2.3 261
7 Islington 2,586 6.3 547
8 Sandwell 2,375 4.2 350
9 Lewisham 2,228 5.3 690
10 Newham 2,190 7.0 672
11 Bradford 1,952 5.2 710
12 Wolverhampton 1,929 4.8 338
13 Wandsworth *1,887 4.8 687
14 Salford 1,822 4.3 465
15 Lambeth 1,811 3.7 460
16 Newcastle upon Tyne 1,788 3.8 277
17 Gateshead 1,706 4.7 385
18 Tower Hamlets 1,534 8.2 790
19 Greater London Council 1,524 3.5
20 Sunderland 1,477 3.2 814
21 Oldham 1,339 5.1 479
22 Camden 1,247 3.7 529
23 Leeds 1,207 1.3 417
24 North Tyneside 1,076 3.7 317
25 Nottingham 1,069 2.3 31
26 Greenwich 1,058 2.9 137
27 Kingston upon Hull 1,056 2.3 16
28 Rochdale 1,034 4.7 160
29 Coventry 1,028 4.0 296
30 Leicester 988 2.9 138
31 Haringey 971 4.0 335
32 Kirklees 952 2.6 38
33 Dudley 906 2.5 192
34 Walsall 851 2.2 65
35 Westminster, City of 839 3.6 392
36 Brent 825 3.8 319
37 Calderdale 786 4.9 260
38 Easington 776 4.1 54
39 Rotherham 743 2.1 160
40 Preston 700 6.1 172
41 Wirral 694 2.8 3
42 Hammersmith and Fulham 679 3.6 150
43 Barnsley 663 2.1 102
44 Wakefield 654 1.5 27
45 Norwich 628 2.7 50
46 Hillingdon 627 3.3 26
47 Rochester upon Medway 621 5.6 11
48 Burnley 600 8.2 284
49 Tameside 592 2.8 25
50 Derby 579 2.7 57

*Total including closed dwellings, if any, is not available.

Mr. Rooker

asked the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list the housing authorities which underspent their housing investment programme allocation in the latest year for which figures are available.

Mr. John Patten

The following authorities' prescribed capital expenditure on housing in 1984–85, as reported in their 1985 HIP2 submissions, was less than their HIP allocations:

£ thousands
HIP allocation incl. Homes Insulation Scheme Gross expenditure on HIP's
Teesdale 1,116 983
Wear Valley 2,160 2,137
East Yorkshire 1,290 1,264
Blaby 774 579
Rochford 1,860 1,624
Tower Hamlets 12,311 11,321
Rother 1,542 1,415
Epsom & Ewell 1,230 957
Mole Valley 1,870 1,664
Surrey Heath 1,315 1,270
Isles of Scilly 205 196
Torridge 1,874 1,547
Nuneaton & Bedworth 2,470 1,717
South Lakeland 2,090 1,917
Hyndburn 3,675 3,644
Wigan 9,345 9,180