Climate Change Minister Julie James has today introduced a new Welsh Housing Quality Standard (WHQS) which will see the biggest changes to social housing standards in more than 20 years.
The minister said the new WHQS will replace the existing Standard to ‘better reflect changes in the way people live, work and feel about their homes’.
The original Standard was introduced in 2002 and since then Welsh Government, together with social landlord delivery partners, has invested billions of pounds to significantly improve and maintain the quality of social homes across Wales.
A formal public consultation of WHQS 2023 was undertaken last year and more than 200 responses were received.
Responses were analysed and informed the final Standard.
Climate Change Minister Julie James said:
This is a bold and progressive Standard that sets ambitious targets to make a difference to the overall quality of people’s lives, raises the bar for social housing and reflects the voice of tenants in Wales.
The Standard will address decarbonisation in the social housing stock, ensure that homes are of a higher quality, affordable to heat and fit for the 21st century and beyond.
It is vital that we continue to lead the way in decarbonisation of housing and learn how to upgrade social housing effectively and efficiently, in ways which reduce carbon emissions, and energy bills for tenants.
What we learn from upgrading the 230,000 social homes in Wales will drive how we as a nation tackle decarbonising the 1.2 million privately owned homes in Wales.
The challenge of retrofitting the existing housing stock is vast. Every single house has a different history and therefore, our mission is to reduce carbon emissions home by home, and street by street.
WHQS 2023 sets out a new and challenging set of standards for social landlords to meet. Funding, in the region of £270 million over this term of government, is already available through the Optimised Retrofit Programme to help social landlords with meeting new elements relating to Affordable Warmth and Decarbonisation.
This financial year £70 million has been indicatively allocated to landlords on a formula funding basis and there is a commitment for a further £70 million next year.
As well focusing on affordable heat and decarbonisation, the Standard also looks to improve homes in a variety of other important ways, for example under the new Standard, all habitable rooms, staircases and landings located within the home should have suitable floor coverings at the change of tenancy and social justice issues such as improvement to the damp and mould element, broadband access and building safety.
The minister continued:
I am confident that this is the right Standard at the right time, but implementation will not be without its challenges.
As a government we will continue to work collaboratively with the sector, in the same way we have developed the Standard. One of the key areas will be finding suitable long-term funding solutions in partnerships with social landlords.
It would be easy to be overwhelmed by the scale of the challenge of upgrading social housing.
We have done it before, and together we can do it again.
We need to be pragmatic, rise to the challenge – Welsh tenants are counting on us.