Wednesday 3 June 2009

Margaret Backett's latest press conference

From the Building News website....

Housing minister Margaret Beckett said today it was possible that no eco-towns will end up being built if the government decides not to take forward any proposals.

At a joint press conference this morning with Yvette Cooper, chief secretary of the Treasury, Beckett said that work on eco-towns was progressing, with an announcement expected by the summer.

She would not say how many she expected there to be, but said: “I will say this: that if no schemes meet the standards required then there will not be any names coming forward.

“But, I would be very disappointed, and somewhat surprised, if that was the case.”

She said they had deliberately slowed down the consultation due to the court challenge that was brought by opponents to the scheme, and that “much had been read into that”.

However, Beckett said: “I am sorry in one sense that there are some proposals that have already been judged to be unlikely to reach the standards that we expect.

“But it’s got to meet high environmental standards, and I don’t regret the process.”

The two ministers said they believed the gap between the economic policies of the two parties was “bigger now than at any point since before the Thatcher years”.

Beckett said the Homes and Communities Agency was in the process of deciding which regeneration schemes would receive funding from the £400m Kickstart Housing Delivery Programme announced in the Budget in April.

Bids will be accepted until 8 June, with the successful bidders announced in July.

More than 30,000 people have registered their interest in the government’s HomeBuy Direct scheme, which aims to help first-time buyers by giving them an equity loan of 30% of the purchase price, which is funded between the government and the developer.

Speaking ahead of this week’s European elections, the pair said the measures taken by Labour to kickstart stalled regeneration schemes, boost the economy and help stave off repossessions would help Britain come through the recession “sooner and stronger”.

Cooper accused the Conservative approach to the credit crunch as being “Thatcherism with a smoother sales pitch”.

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