Former PwC boss will lead review into public body
The government has today announced a review of Homes England to ensure it is 鈥渄elivering for the taxpayer鈥.
The non-departmental public body that funds new affordable housing in England is among 40 bodies chosen for 鈥渞outine review鈥 as part of the .
Department for Transport board non-executive Tony Poulter, a former boss of consulting at PwC, has been asked to lead the review.
He said: 鈥淚 hope to [鈥 come to recommendations that will help the Department for Levelling Up, Homes and Communities (DLUHC) and Homes England to be as effective as possible in meeting their objectives.
鈥淚 am very happy to have been asked to lead this review. Homes England has huge responsibilities for delivering housing and regenerating places throughout the country.鈥
Homes England was last fully reviewed in 2016 when it was known as the Homes and Communities Agency.
Three separate internal reviews were held in 2020, each of which recommended improvements in how the DLUHC and Homes England work together in partnership, as well as in governance structures, accountability and purpose.
The review comes shortly after , which it said would see it re-align itself around regeneration, rather than just pure housing delivery.
The latest review will assess 鈥渨hether the current powers, legal form and delivery model of Homes England are appropriate to the functions it is expected to perform.鈥
It will also examine 鈥渨hether the way the agency and its programmes are assessed allows it to deliver social and economic value.鈥
The efficiency, governance and accountability of Homes England, and how it operates with the DLUHC, will also be in the remit of the review.
Poulter and his team will consult a broad range of stakeholders including UK government departments, consumers, businesses, and representative bodies, as well as with Homes England鈥檚 own board, staff and senior management.
The announcement of the review comes as it was revealed that Homes England delivered 36,478 new home starts on-site and 32,990 completions between 1 April 2022 and 31 March 2023 - both sharp drops on the figures for the previous year. Chief executive Peter Denton said the numbers reflected 鈥渢he delivery challenges faced by the housebuilding sector over the past year.鈥
Homes England has a portfolio of over 9,000 hectares of land and around 拢16bn of combined capital spend (loan, grant, equity, and guarantees) to deploy by 2027/28.
In its delivery of the Help to Buy programme, it is the sixth largest mortgage lender in England. It has a range of statutory powers, including compulsory purchase, that it can use to deliver its objectives.
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