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£2 million to be spent on West Devon homes for refugees

Thursday, 1 February 2024 17:14

By Alison Stephenson, local democracy reporter

West Devon Borough Council's office in Tavistock will accommodate homeless people (image courtesy: WDBC)

Help for Afghans and Ukrainians as well as local people

Nearly two million pounds spent on buying properties to house Afghan and Ukrainian refugees in West Devon will help the local housing crisis.

Three of the eight homes in Okehampton and Tavistock purchased with money from the government’s Local Authority Housing Fund (LAHF), Homes for Ukraine scheme and Devon County Council are expected to be used to address wider housing pressures in the borough which is suffering from a shortage of properties to buy and rent.

Members of the council’s ‘hub’ committee were told that £412,000 from the council’s £1.5 million Section 106 pot – the cash the council receives from developers towards infrastructure projects – was match funding what it received in the latest round of LAHF funding.

A report for councillors said the purchase of the five properties in Okehampton was the largest part of the council’s expenditure in the first seven months of the 2023/24 financial year, amounting to £1.2 million.

One of the properties is temporarily occupied by a Ukrainian family and another three have been allocated to families from Afghanistan who are expected to arrive in the country this week. The remaining property is vacant and the council has been given permission for a change of use so it can be occupied by a local family.

Two of the remaining three homes in Tavistock will be for local households and will be available by the end of March.

The council is also repurposing one of its properties in Plymouth Road to create three flats for temporary housing at the cost of £650,000.

Other capital projects coming up include replacing vehicles and a second railway station at Okehampton.

Members approved using £180,000 from reserves to finance replacement refuge vehicles and were told they had to be diesel not electric as they are “too expensive”

They heard that the first payment had been received from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities for the new railway station and integrated transport hub on the eastern edge of Okehampton after the council’s successful bid for £13.4 million.

Together with a large car park, the station will be easily accessible from the A30, and built at the bottom of Devon County Council’s business park off Exeter Road.

The borough council will be accountable for the capital project over the next three years, but it will be delivered in partnership with the county council and Network Rail.

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