Nigel wrote:Tim
Your supposition that resources follow head of population is risible - can you name one public service that is not set to shrink in the next 12 months?
The issue is whether resources are allocated equally - per head - which seems a different question from whether the amount per head goes up or down. Some services - the long established universal benefits - clearly are allocated per head - e.g. old age pensions and child benefit, albeit not for long. Other services are in principle redistributive i.e. more goes to poorer people, e.g. all those which are means tested. OTOH - which is the point you make later, there are many which we'd like to think are universal, but are taken up much more by the wealthy, such as subsidised university education, and most state support for the arts, which I find hard to justify. We both know all this - I can't see why you are getting annoyed with me about it.
Nigel wrote:I do not for one minute think you believe this, I am sure nobody else does, and I can only assume it is yet more attempts to explain how building more social housing, housing more people with more profound and complex needs , will ultimately lead to a better outcome for Sydenham.
I don't think this, which is why I asked why you raised the question of whether the housing was social or not. I don't actually want to get into the question of whether having a higher or lower social housing mix is a good thing or not. I think most people would accept that higher levels of social housing do bring problems - as I do - so I think it reasonable in principle that the Localism Act has provisions to give more money for local authorities which accept more social housing. How can there be any dispute about that, other than how much ought to be given?
Nigel wrote:
I am more than miffed at your portrayal of me as "disgusted of SE26"
Well don't rise to the tease
Nigel wrote:
If one has need to use the services of Job Centre Plus, the one thing you don't wish for are more jobseekers , chasing fewer jobs. Similarly, if one is in dire housing need one would not be reading your recent post and hoping that more people flood into Sydenham to be housed before your own acute need is met.
If I was in dire housing need, in Sydenham, I think I'd mainly just want more houses to be built, and preferably in Sydenham so that I wouldn't have to move away from my friends.
Nigel wrote: I would like to see the burden, and it is a burden, of building more social housing move to the most affluent boroughs and neighbourhoods. That way , we would achieve a better and more varied social mix , instead of boroughs like Lewisham absorbing more and more people with fewer and fewer resources.
I suspect the Tory voting residents of Tory boroughs think that it's their generally higher taxes which pay for the net transfers which poorer boroughs such as Lewisham receive, and so are to some extent sharing the burden; forcing them to accept more social housing in their own areas would require massively more central control of what local authorities do. There's not much appetite for that - in fact I think I'm the only person on this Forum who's
argued for less borough or 'neighbourhood' localism (I'd prefer more London-wide control). And electorally, I don't suppose Labour controlled boroughs are any keener on middle-class incomers who are more likely to vote Conservative than Tory boroughs are keen on social housing tenants more likely to vote Labour.
Nigel wrote:
Your final point about removing planning control is probably the most elitist comment so far - essentially "rules are for the little people" . I sincerely believe that in TimTopia it would work out very nicely but in the real world it would result in more and more high-density , poorly sited/constructed building and / or conversions of an equally unsuitable nature.
Nigel
Rules with no emprical evidence of doing any good are for people who like rules for their own sake. Rather than say what
would happen in the real world, why not address what actually happens in Sydenham and Forest Hill? I don't in general have a view on whether there should be more or fewer rules - just better ones.
As for being "a highly educated person", I wonder what your evidence is. As is generally known, I'm a mathematician by background, which is hardly relevant to this discussion, so if I come across as highly educated, that says something about self-education, which does not depend on any kind of privileged background. I like to think of myself as carrying on the tradition of my Rochdale grandfather, leaving school at 14 but going on to study at Manchester University.