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As a result of Swindon?s Housing ballot result, when 72% of tenants voted against selling off our homes, the Council maintained ownership of its housing stock and was thus one of the local authorities included in the new Housing Finance system ? ?self-financing?. The government closed down the national Housing Revenue Account and shared out the national ?housing debt? amongst all the local authorities that still own their housing. Swindon?s share of that ?debt? was deemed to be ?138.6 million. The Council had to pay it off in one lump sum on March 28th of this year. In order for it to be able to so, the government?s Public Works Loan Board (PWLB) lent the Council that sum so it could pay the government. Having handed over this money to the government the Council is in debt to the PWLB. However, the money it borrowed from the PWLB was not one loan. It borrowed 22 of them, of varying sizes, for varying periods (see attached document). The debt structure determines what interest you pay and when the loans themselves fall due for payment. This has an impact on what money is available and when, for maintaining and improving tenants? homes. Yet despite the importance of this decision the Council did not consult tenants at all on the structuring of the debt.
Then they decided on the amount of debt to ?pay? at the end of the first year of the new system. Once again there was no discussion with tenants. As we shall see the amount of debt they decided to ?pay? means that tenants will suffer an insufficient level of renewals of some of the key components of their homes. The Council has been making decisions which impact upon us, behind our backs and without our involvement.
A Despite the new system being introduced in April of this year there has been no serious discussion about it, what it means on a practical level and how the interests of tenants can be best served in the new circumstances. Tenants have been kept in the dark. It?s time to try and throw some light on the situation.
The debt structure which the Council decided on, without consulting us, appears to have been determined not by the interests of tenants but according to the interests of the Council and its General Fund. For instance, none of the 22 loans borrowed from the PWLB is payable until Year 11 (2023). The reason they decided that there would be no debt payable to the PWLB for the first 10 years was so that the Council could ?take advantage? of the cheaper loans the PWLB gave them for the ?one-off (housing) debt settlement?. The advantage for the Council is that instead of borrowing new money direct from the government they are proposing to transfer money from the Housing Revenue Account (HRA) to the General Fund (GF). Can they do that when the HRA is ?ring-fenced?, supposedly to stop our rents being used for non-housing purposes? Good question.
In order to ?take advantage? of our rent they decided (no discussion with us) that despite the fact that no debt repayment has to take place until 2023, the HRA would make a ?debt repayment? by way of an internal transfer between the HRA and the GF. By the use of an accountancy procedure the money would be shifted into the GF and deemed to be a ?debt repayment?. A ?minimum revenue payment? is registered, which would mark it down as a debt payment which would actually be paid at some unspecified date in the future. A Finance Manager described it as ?a set aside of cash to repay debt at some point?. The GF would take on responsibility for the debt and would pay the interest rate on the part of the debt which was transferred over from the HRA.
So, in the first year they decided (no discussion with us) that an ?8 million ?debt payment? would be transferred into the GF. This would save the HRA interest payments of ?250,000 a year. So the tenants? benefit out of this accountancy procedure then? Yes and no. Yes, insofar as the HRA has to pay ?250,000 interest a year less than it would otherwise do. However, the high level of ?debt repayment? means that tenants lose out big style.
To understand why we have to look at how the new system operates. When it is called ?self-financing? it means it literally. The end of the national Housing Finance system meant that all the Councils have been set adrift on their own. There are no more grants like the Major Repairs Allowance. We have only the money which is collected in from tenants? rents, service charges and one or two minor items.
Having been given the ?138.6 million debt we have to pay the interest on these loans and the loans themselves from the surplus which the Housing Revenue Account makes each year ? the income from rents etc, minus the expenditure on repairs and maintenance, management costs and so on. The surplus this year is expected to be ?19.1 million.
The interest we pay on the ?138.6 million is just over ?4.5 million a year. Housing debt which predated this has an interest payment of ?477,900. Added together this is as near as matters ?5 million a year. How much debt you pay off and when, is a question for discussion (or it should be). The Council decided that ?8 million ?debt repayment? would be made in the first year, leave aside the fact that this isn?t a real debt repayment for the moment, so that has to come out of the surplus as well as the interest payment.
The amount of debt ?paid? will determine how much money you have for the upkeep of the housing stock. This is graphically shown when we look at the amount of work projected for next year. Take the example of bathroom and kitchen renewals. The Council is proposing a miserable 150 renewals of each in 2013/14. You may recall that at the time of the ballot tenants were told that so dire was the situation because of the debt which the Council was going to be given by the government that they could ?only afford? to do 150 bathroom and kitchen renewals a year, for the first ten years. Swindon Tenants Campaign Group never believed this to be true. But we were never given the 30 year ?business plan? which was the Council?s projections for continued ownership if the tenants voted against transfer, so we had no idea about the ?debt payments?.
Now we discover that the reason why they can only ?afford? to do 150 bathrooms and 150 kitchens is precisely because they are proposing to ?pay? ?8 million debt (in reality an internal transfer). If, on the other hand ?5 million was ?paid?, that would mean there would be ?3 million extra for our homes. So for 2013/14 the budget for Kitchen modernisation is ?672,000 and for Bathroom modernisation is ?465,000. If you scaled those up to 450 of each the budgets would be ?2,016,000 and ?1,395,000. The increase in spending for the kitchens would be ?1,344,000 and ?930,000 for bathrooms, or ?2,274,000 and you would still have ?726,000 to spend on other things from the extra ?3 million. It would also be possible to pay no debt and this would mean an extra ?8 million was available for work on our homes. There is in fact no need to pay the loans in the early years though whether or not you do is a matter of judgement which requires a discussion on the various elements of the finances.
So the Council is proposing a ?debt repayment? which is counter to the interests of tenants and would inevitably lead to a deterioration in the stock , building up a backlog of work. A lower level of renewals will mean a higher number of repairs, wasting money. So the ?debt management strategy? which they have decided on without any discussion whatsoever with tenants means that the interests of tenants are being sacrificed in the interests of the Council?s administration for the benefit of the General Fund.
Although the decision on the ?8 million ?debt repayment? was made earlier in the year, in fact it does not fall due until the end of this financial year. Since it has not yet been made then there is time for the decision to be reversed or amended. The Council has an obligation to consult with tenants and it did not. This unilateral decision was out of order, completely unacceptable.
Another curious thing about the debt structure is that at the time of the ballot we were told that the debt had to be paid off over 30 years. In fact there is no obligation to pay off the debt at all. As a Finance Manager said to me, you could decide not to pay it off so long as you were happy to carry on paying the interest. Whether that would be wise is another matter. As it happens the Council has actually borrowed money for 40 years (no discussion with us). Some ?29 million falls due after 30 years. We don?t know why they decided to borrow it for that long. Whatever the reason their decision means that tenants will have to pay more money through their rent than they would have if the loans were over 30 years because the longer the borrowing is for then the higher the rate of interest.
How you manage this debt is infinitely variable. You might decide to pay it off in 30 years or 40 years. If you were to pay it off in equal instalments it would require ?5 million a year over 30 years (the overall debt is ?150 million since there was nearly ?12 million ?outstanding debt?), or it could be paid off over ?40 years which would be an equal payment of ?3.75 million a year, which would leave even more money for work on the stock. As you can see there are any number of variants of how you deal with this debt. The key question for us is what is in the best interests of existing and future tenants. However, this is a question which the Council has ignored because it has made a decision on the basis of its interests and not ours.
Whatever the technicalities involved in this discussion there is a very simple principle on which it must be based. It is the responsibility of the Council to maintain and improve the housing stock . It should not be determining ?debt management strategy? such that the stock deteriorates.
Certainly the Council should be neither deciding on debt structure nor debt repayment without the involvement of tenants in meaningful discussion. What this sorry situation underlines is the need for a Housing Finance Committee to? set up to discuss debt management strategy and to have an oversight of the finances as they develop through the course of each year, so that, for instance, any money programmed but not spent is utilised elsewhere. For instance, because of the welfare ?reforms? an extra 120 voids have been added into the programme, in the expectation of more people asking for moves. However, evidence is that barely any of those facing the ?bedroom tax? are requesting to move. If this remains the case throughout the year then this money can be used for other things.
We also need to discuss the relationship between the ?ring-fenced? HRA and the GF. One of the intentions of the ?self-financing? system was to move to a situation where all housing debt was kept in the? HRA so that there was transparency and it was clear that no rent money was used for non-housing purposes and visa versa. Whilst there is no illegality in relation to the transfer of money from the HRA for the purposes of ?debt payment?, it is highly dubious because as currently proposed the action is directed at benefiting the GF to the detriment of the tenants and the housing stock. The GF is saving money at our expense.
One final thing which needs emphasising is this. The housing debt will be paid for by the tenants, not by the GF or the Council Tax. It was the price we paid for being able to keep all the rent which our tenants pay when the old Housing Revenue system was ended. Whatever ?debt repayments? are made, be they to the PWLB, or internal transfers to the GF, they only have any legitimacy if the strategy serves the interests of tenants and helps to improve our housing stock. Our rent is for the benefit of tenants it is not for the convenience of the Council or the GF. Moreover the Council should not be deciding how to use it without discussing with tenants. It is after all our living conditions that are positively or adversely affected by ?debt management strategy?.
Martin Wicks
Secretary, Swindon Tenants Campaign Group
January 20th 2013
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