1 / 23

Community Land Trusts (CLTs) Qualities of & How To set Up

Community Land Trusts (CLTs) Qualities of & How To set Up. Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust Part of the Investing In Communities Initiative & ‘Under One Roof’ Project Contributing partners: Lake District National Park Authority; South Lakeland District Council; Eden Housing Association.

kalyca
Download Presentation

Community Land Trusts (CLTs) Qualities of & How To set Up

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Community Land Trusts (CLTs) Qualities of & How To set Up Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust Part of the Investing In Communities Initiative & ‘Under One Roof’ Project Contributing partners: Lake District National Park Authority;South Lakeland District Council; Eden Housing Association

  2. What are CLTs? • Another option for affordable housing delivery • Owning assets on behalf of a community not for profit based in and run by the community focus on permanence & long term benefit (alms house trusts still provide housing after hundreds of years) • Common legal forms Charitable Company or Industrial & Provident Society Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  3. They can be • Based in existing organisations, or formed as new ones • Referred to as ‘land’, ‘property’ or ‘development’ trusts • And are versatile affordable Housing to rent or part buy & retail, work & community spaces & farms Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  4. Advantages offered? Focus on getting results for your community Involvement & permanence • increasing community & landowner confidence – that homes will remain locally affordable • better partnerships between communities & Local Authorities • reinforcing planning agreements – constitution & trustees Long term regeneration • through diversity & permanence Sustainable design • what people need – living space & low running costs Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  5. A potted history 1678 Brabins Trust, Lancs - Alms house trust now expanding as a CLT supported by Great Places HA 1903 Letchworth Garden City - Trust based housing, none sold off, permanent re-investment income for community 1923 Isle of Lewis put into community ownership by Lord Leverhulme. Still going strong. 1950’s India ‘village trusteeship’ launched by Ghandi 1967 USA CLT farms established through work of Martin Luther king 1983 UK Stonesfield Trust, Oxfordshire -11 rented homes. More planned 1994 Threlkeld HA (a local trust) 14 part ownership homes v successful 1997 Community Land Unit, Scotland - case studies at www.hie.co.uk/community-case-studies.html 2008 America – more than 220 CLTs, large urban to small rural. Federal assistance. CLT academy 2009 England & Wales 1st 100 CLT homes coming through Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  6. Experience in the US Anchoring communities during difficult timesMichael Brown, Burlington CLT, August 2008 • Very safe loan to income multiples (say 2.5 x income) • Resale values linked to wage inflation • Training & support • Consequently very low CLT default rate of 0.6% • American banks support CLT mortgages Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  7. Government support? • Community Empowerment White Paper – ‘Real People Real Power’ • CLT definition in 2008 Housing & Regeneration Act • CLT Consultation due to report Housing Grant? • Can’t do affordable homes without subsidy! • Homes & Communities Agency (HCA) recognises ‘community friendly’ application process needed • Holy Island CLT piloting the new process • Supported by the Development Trust Association • NE Regional Office supporting bid • 3 Rivers Housing Association as partner Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  8. Support for Cumbrian communities? CLT Community Support Officer January 2008 • Advice & support • Info’ & resources at crht.org.uk • Funded by LDNPA, SLDC, Eden DC, Eden HA Housing Association partners • Advice & support • Project development & management • Low cost finance • Partners to acquire HCA grant The Development Trust Association www.dta.org.uk • Advice & support • 450 community trusts with £490m of assets Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  9. for Cumbria continued.. The national CLT Facilitation Fund • Technical support grants • Preliminary development costs grants and loans • Capital development match funding • www.esmeefairbairn.org.uk/significant-cltdf.html • Cumbria CLT workshops planned Revolving Loan Fund • Low cost loans towards preliminary costs • For LDNPA & SLDC areas so far Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  10. Scheme examplesWitherslack, Cumbria • Dispersed but vibrant settlement • Community saved village pub and set up a community shop • High local housing need • Self built housing planned • Land gifted by local landowner Shop before & after Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  11. Threlkeld, Cumbria • 14 homes built in 1994, also workshops • Land donated by ARC Ltd • The company provided manager for one year to set the scheme up • Homes jointly owned by the occupants and the trust • Support provided by • Eden Housing Association Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  12. Glendale Gateway Trust, Wooler, Northumberland Visiting 25th February 09 • Renovated community and workspace building • Revitalised town center acquiring unoccupied shops and flats • Acquired and turned around towns Youth Hostel • Enabled development of social housing Wooller town centre • Now master-plan to identify opportunities long term GGTs thriving youth hostel Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  13. Holy Island of Lindisfarne Community Development Trust Built 5 energy-efficient houses & 2 flats held in perpetuity • Priority to local young people • All but one of the tenants work on the island 4 more homes in planning: A pilot for HCA grant • £250k bank loan, £200k Tudor Trust, £200 needed due to archaeology • NE HCA keen to help with grant • DTA consultant leading discussions on behalf of Trust • 3 Rivers Housing Association partnering grant application Also • Harbour Management Plan • Lifeboat Heritage Museum & wildlife visitor centre Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  14. Buckland Newton, West Dorset Arco2 architects – prefab’ local timber / straw bale insulation - £1,050m2 Magna Housing Association - advice and scrutiny Land £5,000 per plot – landowner as a trustee 8 shared ownership 2 rent £160,000 of subsidy from the HCA £16,000 grant per unit District Council providing £800,000 development phase finance Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  15. Chipping CLT, Lancs • Extension of Brabins medieval alms house trust • Has land and financial assets • And 330 years’ housing experience • Wants future resale value of homes linked to local wage inflation • Development partner Great Places Housing Group Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  16. St Minver, N Cornwall • Developed by Cornwall Rural HA • On behalf of local CLT • Managed self build Do it yourself: Charlie Hibbert helps put his own home together • Part ownership tenure • Subsidy provided by North Cornwall District Council Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  17. Scotland - Isle of Gigha • First local homes for 25 years built • Three dairy farms double in size • Another farm developed • Business units built and allocated • Community-owned wind farm • Facilitated by the Community Land Unit Mr Chisholm with Mr and Mrs Gillies, whose home was funded with a rural home ownership grant Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  18. Funding affordable homes All in cost of developing an affordable home Around £120,000 Income from occupants from low rent £50,000 + (could be higher through part buying) Shortfall met through subsidy around £70,000 Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  19. Subsidy options • Social Housing Grant – available in near future • Fundraising / share issues Communities often have considerable resources & want to help • Where planning allows – ‘cross subsidy’ Plot or house sold by the CLT could subsidise affordable units Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  20. Typical process: • Form a CLT steering group: Motivated local people • Invite support: CLT Officer, Planners & Housing Officers, Local Housing Association • Check local need: Parish / town survey (LA / Rural Enabler CRHT) • Research sites: New land? Modest value? Pragmatism from planners? Publicly owned land or buildings suitable for transfer at low or nil value? (Quirk) • Consult the community: Support for trust approach? • Confirm need: Invite people to register direct with steering group • Formalise trust: Contract with development partner (HA?). Do business plan / planning application Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  21. Site opportunities Existing charitably owned land Private gifts & legacies Renovation of existing buildings - May not need planning permission Rural exception sites • For communities under 3,000 population where need is proved • Usually a natural extension to the existing settlement. • Prioritises local need. Must be all affordable Transfer of publicly owned assets • Making sites and buildings available at nominal cost • Long term social & economic instead of simple cash value • Recommended by the Quirk Review / Power of Wellbeing / Disposal of Consents Act • From LAs & public utilities Affordable housing quotas on residential developments • Could be developed by CLTs Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  22. Tips from Chipping CLT • Make it clear your scheme is for the benefit of your own community. This will help get local people on board • You will need someone to drive ideas forward and move from contemplation to achievement • Draw on the experiences of others and make use of experts to inform the process • Involve Housing Associations. They have expertise and services and may be able to access funding that others cannot • If the parish council submits the planning applications they only pay half the fees! • An existing Trust may be a firm foundation on which to build. • A small committed local builder may deliver a lower build cost Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

  23. Contact CRHT resources available on web site • Short guide to CLTs • CLT Handbook • Project development flow chart • Example business plan • Example allocations policy • Guide to sustainable construction Andy Lloyd Community Land Trust Project Officer Cumbria Rural Housing Trust RedhillsHouse, Redhills Penrith, Cumbria, CA11 0DT Tel. 01768 210265 Mobile: 07525688662 andy@crht.org.uk www.crht.org.uk Andy Lloyd Cumbria Rural Housing Trust www.crht.org.uk

More Related