Seems that you can't comment on anything in the Telegraph these days.
Could somebody assume the role of Ms Samual please? Not that she'd have read my comments but she had me spluttering into my cornflakes this morning...
None of these things? So, the extra 300,000 or so extra people that come here every year all move into garden sheds? How can you make a statement like this and then not provide any evidence to back up your assertion?
forgetting all the attendant environmental impact of the infrastructure needed for for such new developments, you've ignored the most valuable resource of all in this increasingly crowded country - Space (or the illusion thereof) and we all need it (well, I do) for our own sanity.
When I drive out of Bath, you go from urbal -> rural in an instant with none of the rural/urban sprawl that would maybe otherwise have sprung up.
I like that.
And as for the economy, well, sometimes there are more important things.
Finally -
To use St Ives, the ONE place in the country where you can say with 100% confidence that high house prices are caused by second home ownership has to be verging on ludicrous?
Very poor journalism. I'm sticking with my Time subscription for the foreseeable.....
Could somebody assume the role of Ms Samual please? Not that she'd have read my comments but she had me spluttering into my cornflakes this morning...
The whole country is suffering from a chronic shortage of houses. England has been building about 100,000 to 170,000 houses a year for over two decades. Its estimated need is for 250,000 to 300,000 a year – and that’s just to keep prices steady....
...prices keep rising. Home ownership peaked more than a decade ago. In much of the south, simply getting planning permission to build houses on a patch of farmland increases its value a thousand-fold. Something is deeply wrong.
We’re been good blaming bogeymen for these facts – voracious developers, ghastly second home owners, immigrants. But it’s none of these things
...prices keep rising. Home ownership peaked more than a decade ago. In much of the south, simply getting planning permission to build houses on a patch of farmland increases its value a thousand-fold. Something is deeply wrong.
We’re been good blaming bogeymen for these facts – voracious developers, ghastly second home owners, immigrants. But it’s none of these things
....Unwillingness of any serious political leader to tackle the holy cow of housing development: the green belt.
The green belt has brought many positives to British cities, preventing urban sprawl and preserving at least some open spaces, but its benefits are massively overstated and it is slowly strangling the economy
The green belt has brought many positives to British cities, preventing urban sprawl and preserving at least some open spaces, but its benefits are massively overstated and it is slowly strangling the economy
When I drive out of Bath, you go from urbal -> rural in an instant with none of the rural/urban sprawl that would maybe otherwise have sprung up.
I like that.
And as for the economy, well, sometimes there are more important things.
Finally -
In St Ives, Cornwall, residents blame second home owners for high prices. But Britain has not been building enough homes for decades
Very poor journalism. I'm sticking with my Time subscription for the foreseeable.....
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