SOCIAL WORKERS SET TO EARN CHEAPER HOUSING

    Social workers will be eligible for low cost home ownership
    under the government’s new starter homes initiative, health
    minister John Hutton has revealed, writes Ruth
    Winchester.

    Initial target groups were nurses, police and teachers. But the
    department of health has confirmed that social workers will soon
    also be eligible for help.

    In a letter to Association of Directors of Social Services
    president Moira Gibb, Hutton said that bids for funding would be
    considered from areas where recruitment of social workers was a
    problem. Evidence of high housing demand and prices would also be
    required.

    The starter home initiative will invest £250 million
    between 2001 and 2004, and around 10,000 key workers are expected
    to benefit. Local authorities will play a key role in bidding for
    the cash, and successful authorities will be able to use the funds
    according to local priorities.

    Hutton said: “It is for the bidders to agree which are the key
    workers whose services are essential for the community and who
    should be targeted for assistance. The SHI scheme will give
    priority to teachers, nurses and the police, but bids may be
    submitted for other key professional groups, such as social
    workers, if the bidder considers that there are severe difficulties
    in recruitment and retention amongst these groups.”

    Assistance for social workers might take the form of an interest
    free loan to help with buying a home or a cash grant. Shared
    ownership, where 25 or 50 per cent of the home is bought with a
    mortgage while the remainder is rented, may also be an option. Some
    forms of assistance will have to be repaid when a home is sold, but
    help will only be available to first time buyers.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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