A high proportion of homeowners who were bailed out by the government’s mortgage rescue scheme in the north of England bought their homes under the right to buy. Figures from housing associations that run the scheme, which launched in 2009, reveal a major north-south divide, with some areas seeing as many as 50 per cent of all mortgage rescue applications for right to buy properties. The revelation has prompted fears that the move to reinvigorate the 1980s policy could lead to a fresh round of financial problems as up to 100,000 tenants attempt to capitalise on increased discounts of up to 70 per cent. Read more on Inside Housing.
John Judge obituary
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As chief quantity surveyor at Manchester city council, my father, John
Judge, who has died aged 91, was part of a team that led the city’s
housebuilding ...
21 hours ago
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