Sunday, May 21, 2006
Stop the holiday home ghost towns
The explosion of
holiday homes
in
rural Britain
has led to some communities being in danger of becoming winter ghost towns. At least this is the conclusion of ministers looking at plans on how to tackle this growing problem. The plans being considered aim to reduce the numbers of properties being sold to
holidaymakers
as
second homes
and encourage a steady supply for local people.
Home owners
in some of
Britain's beauty spots
will have to apply for planning permission should they want to sell them to
holiday home buyers
. The change will be mainly applied to places where the
second home
ownership reaches 40-50%, transforming them into ghost towns in the
off-peak season
.
Holiday home owners
will also face extra taxes to help pay for public services and social housing. Sir Michael Lyons was left in charge of finding the right mechanism for applying this new taxes. One option is the introduction of an
absenteeism tax
on the length of time a house is unoccupied and the household is not contributing to the local economy.
The Goverment needs to find new ways of identifying
second homes
or
holiday homes
. According to official data, there are only 100,000
second homes in England
. However, consumer surveys reveal the real number being around 300,000.
One possibility here would be to extract information from the self-certification process for income tax, in addition to perhaps fining people for providing false information.
As said, the full problem is not shown in big cities like London, where
second home ownership
is not a problem, but in places such as
Cornwall
and the
Lake District
where any dead period can be catastrophic for the local economy.
Holiday homes owners
are not sending their kids to local schools, they are not buying in local shops, not using local services which raises the probability of these services disappearing slowly. This is a serious problem for local people.
Measures to restrict sales of new houses to local people are already to be introduced in parts of the
Highlands
. Similar measures are already in place in the
Brecon Beacons
,
Dartmoor
,
Snowdonia
,
Exmoor
, the
North Yorkshire Moors
, the
Yorkshire Dales
and the
Peak District
. Times Online reveals that the cost of a
rural home
is now £200,000, 19 per cent more than an
urban property
. It also compiles a list of most popular
second home places in England
. Below you can see the percentage of
second homes
in these areas.
City of London
: 27.2%
Isles of Scilly
: 21.5%
South Hams
,
Devon
: 10.9%
North Norfolk
: 10.0%
North Cornwall
: 9.9%
Berwick-upon-Tweed
,
Northumberland
: 9.5%
Westminster
: 9.1%
Kensington & Chelsea
: 8.7%
Penwith
,
Cornwall
: 8.6%
South Lakeland
,
Cumbria
: 7.6%
Holiday Homes
5/21/2006 7:49:51 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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