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SNP’s £30m rural housing cash being spent ‘far too slowly’

Housing Secretary Shona Robison. Image: PA
Housing Secretary Shona Robison. Image: PA

SNP and Green ministers are under fire after failing to deliver on promises to spend £30 million tackling the nation’s rural housing crisis.

New figures show the Holyrood government has invested less than £18m from the Rural Housing Fund and Island Housing Fund since 2016-17, which includes Perth & Kinross.

It falls short of the £25m ministers pledged to spend on mainland home-building projects through the Rural Housing Fund by 2021, while another £5m was earmarked for island schemes.

Conservative MSP Miles Briggs is concerned about the spending levels. Image: Scottish Parliament.

In answer to Tory parliamentary questions, Housing Secretary Shona Robison revealed that £10.455m has been spent to date from the Rural Housing Fund, less than half the original budget.

However, £7.215m has been invested on the islands, which is more than the £5m originally anticipated.

About 300 homes had been built or approved under the funds by the end of 2021.

They were in the Perth & Kinross, Highland, Moray, Argyll and Bute, and Western Isles council areas.

New housing in Mull
New housing in Mull. Image: Community Land Scotland

The cash is used to offer capital support grants and loans for new affordable housing, refurbishment of existing empty homes, as well as feasibility studies.

The recent spending emerged as the Conservatives prepared to lead a Holyrood debate on the nation’s housing shortage on Wednesday.

‘Pull out all the stops’

Conservative housing spokesman Miles Briggs said: “The SNP-Green government are presiding over a housing crisis in Scotland and that is particularly acute in our rural communities.

“It is yet another prime example of the SNP overpromising and under-delivering.

“Funding is being distributed far too slowly to meet the housing needs in rural communities, which SNP and Green ministers have consistently ignored during their time in office.

“They should be pulling out all the stops to attract people to come and live in these communities and a supposedly dedicated rural housing fund should be at the heart of that.

“Instead, they have short-changed them year after year since launching this fund.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said it had delivered more than 6,000 homes in these areas over the course of the previous parliament.

“We have committed to delivering 110,000 affordable homes across Scotland by 2032, with at least 10% of these in our remote, rural and island areas, including through our £30m demand led Rural Housing Fund which is in addition to our overall housing supply budget,” he said

“We are also developing a Remote, Rural and Islands Housing Action Plan to bolster this work.”

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