London Assembly Housing Committee report recommends funding and support for CLTs and Housing Cooperatives

Home K Policy and Campaigning K London Assembly Housing Committee report recommends funding and support for CLTs and Housing Cooperatives

The London Assembly Housing Committee has published a new report calling for more support for London’s CLTs and housing cooperatives. This includes recommendations to increase the number of community-led housing groups run by and for groups underrepresented in the sector, such as Black and Global Majority Londoners. 

Our CEO, Tom Chance, shares reflections on this report and its recommendations. 

Feature image: London CLT

 

Today the London Assembly Housing Committee has published a new report calling for more financial support and help accessing land for London’s community land trusts and housing cooperatives.
 
Key recommendations include:
  • In the Government’s upcoming spending review, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) should engage with the GLA to identify new funds for housing cooperatives and community land trusts to deliver housing schemes in London.
  • The Mayor should identify and provide additional revenue funding to the London Community Led-Housing Hub to enable the Hub to continue to provide support to housing cooperatives and community land trusts.
  • The Mayor should direct the further release of Greater London Authority (GLA) Group land for community land trusts and housing cooperatives through the Mayor’s Small Sites Small Builders programme.
  • Through the London Community-Led Housing Hub, the GLA’s Housing and Land directorate should work with partners to develop a strategy by the end of 2025-26 to increase the number of community land trusts and housing cooperatives run by and for groups underrepresented in the sector, such as Black and Global Majority Londoners.
Read the full report here.
 
 
We are grateful to the London Assembly Housing Committee for this supportive report and for bringing together many voices from the community-led housing sector.
 
Among other contributors, this report drew on the experiences and feedback of London CLTs including Brent CLT, Community Assets for Society & Housing, London CLT, London Trades Guild CLT, NW3 CLT, the RUSS, and Walterton and Elgin Community Homes, as well as Community Led Housing London and the Community Land Trust Network team.
 
Community Land Trust Network CEO, Tom Chance commented:

“We welcome the London Assembly’s support for community led housing and their recognition that these approaches are far more common elsewhere in Europe. Our movement has successfully lobbied for funding and land disposals in recent years that have helped the sector to grow. London CLT, WECH and RUSS have recently built 90 permanently and genuinely affordable homes, and NW3 CLT will soon start building 8 more, but these scratch the surface of appetite from London’s communities to build a better future through community land trusts.

 
“Further funding and land is essential, so we support the committee’s call for more action on both. We would like to work with the GLA, CLH London and our members to look at how this could be designed to bring about a step change, rather than this very slow growth based on bespoke projects on difficult sites. As a movement we have learned a lot about giving communities more of a say over their housing. Focusing on making replicable models work at a much greater scale would see more affordable homes built, and more diverse and inclusive projects to help London’s most marginalised communities.
 
“We also welcome the focus on diversity, equity and inclusion. These are core values for our movement, and some of our recent work and research we commissioned and co-funded informed the committee’s work. We would welcome working with the GLA and CLH London to better capture data on diversity and inclusion within community led housing organisations in London. Leadership and membership within CLTs can be fluid and so challenging to track, and is something we all need to work on together. This work should also inform where we prioritise funding and land to ensure community led housing meets the needs of those most marginalised by London’s inequitable housing system.”