HC Deb 25 March 2003 vol 402 cc177-9W
Mr. Pickles

To ask the Deputy Prime Minister how many vacant local authority dwellings there are in England, broken down by(a) local authority area and (b) region; and if he will make a statement. [104175]

Mr. McNulty

Information on the number of vacant local authority dwellings at 1 April 2002 in England, broken down by local authority area has been placed in the Library of the House.

Numbers of vacant local authority dwellings at 1 April 2002 in England, broken down by region are tabled as follows.

Region Number of vacant LA dwellings at 1 April 2002
North East 8,400
North West 18,400
Yorkshire and Humberside 15,400

Region Number of vacant LA dwellings at 1 April 2002
East Midlands 6,200
West Midlands 10,800
East of England 3,500
London 10,000
South East 3,300
South West 2,200
England 78,100

Notes:

1. Figures rounded to nearest 100.

2. England total may not equal sum of regional components due to rounding.

3. Regional figures include estimates for numbers of vacant local authority dwellings owned outside a local authority's boundary.

Source:

ODPM's Housing Strategy Statistical Appendix completed by local authorities.

Mr. Pickles

To ask the Deputy Prime Minister what the housing stock is in each London borough in the(a) private rented, (b) council owned and (c) housing association sectors. [104180]

Mr. McNulty

Estimates of the number of housing stock in each London borough in the(a) private rented, (b) council owned and (c) housing association sectors as at April 2001, are shown in the following table:

Housing stock by rented sector by local authority in London at April 2001
Privately rented households1 LA dwelling stock2 RSL dwelling stock3
London4 520,900 532,200 271,100
Inner London4 271,900 329,700 149,900
Camden 25,400 27,000 8,200
City of London 1,300 2,100 200
Hackney 14,800 28,400 18,400
Hammersmith and Fulham 17,700 14,400 10,900
Haringey 22,000 19,800 8,900
Islington 15,300 31,400 10,600
Kensington and Chelsea 24,000 7,300 11,900
Lambeth 25,400 35,800 16,400
Lewisham 15,400 31,400 8,700
Newham 18,300 23,800 9,100
Southwark 15,900 49,000 11,800
Tower Hamlets 14,600 27,100 13,500
Wandsworth 28,900 18,600 9,200
Westminster 33,000 13,600 11,900
Outer London4 249,000 202,500 121,200
Barking and Dagenham 4,700 23,000 1,900
Barnet 23,500 12,100 5,300
Bexley 6,700 0 13,200
Brent 20,200 10,800 11,600
Bromley 12,200 0 17,400
Croydon 20,100 15,300 8,100
Ealing 21,400 14,900 8,000
Enfield 13,100 13,700 5,100
Greenwich 10,700 27,600 9,300
Harrow 10,800 5,900 2,300
Havering 6,100 12,000 1,600
Hillingdon 10,800 11,600 3,900
Hounslow 13,400 15,100 5,200
Kingston upon Thames 10,700 5,100 1,600
Merton 13,400 7,200 3,900
Redbridge 13,400 5,300 3,000
Richmond upon Thames 14,500 0 9,200
Sutton 7,900 9,000 3,000
Waltham Forest 15,500 13,800 7,500

1 Source: Census 2001 Key Statistics Table 18. Figures are number of households as at 29 April 2001. Dwelling figures from census not yet available but the difference is not expected to be significant.

2 Source: ODPM Housing Strategy Statistical Appendix 2001–02 return for stock at 1 April 2001.

3 Source: Housing Corporation's annual Regulatory and Statistical Return for stock as at 31 March 2001.

4 Figures may not add up due to rounding.

Mr. Edward Davey

To ask the Deputy Prime Minister what the administrative costs were of the Housing Corporation for each Government Office of the regions in each year since 1999–2000. [102681]

Mr. McNulty

In meetings its headquarters and field office administration costs, the Housing Corporation incurred expenditure as follows:

£ million
Year London South Central North HQ Total
1999–2000 3.825 3.303 2.997 3.627 16.195 29.947
2000–01 4.179 3.510 3.159 3.866 15.892 30.607
2001–02 4.372 3.913 3.379 4.150 18.287 34.100
2002–031 4.853 4.393 3.698 4.511 18.245 135.700
1 The 2002–03 costs are based on current estimates.