Thursday 11 March 2010

Do the Conservative Party have a new spokesman on HIPs?

Ex-banker James Duddridge, Member of Parliament for Rochford and Southend East, in questions to the Secretary of State for Communities, asked the Minister if will make it his policy to suspend or abolish home information packs.


Hardly a novel question and one which Mr Duddridge has clearly stolen from Grant Shapps top 5 questions to ask Government.


In answering ‘No’ Ian Austin, (Minister of State (the West Midlands), Regional Affairs; Dudley North, Labour) responding on behalf of the Government told Mr Duddridge:


‘Despite the difficulties in the housing market, HIPs are helping to speed up the process. A survey of 37,000 transactions showed that when a HIP is available, exchanges were completed more quickly. I accept that HIPs were criticised following their introduction in 2007, but we listened to those criticisms and have made major changes to improve the system, introducing the new property information questionnaire containing basic information that buyers said that they wanted; improving the quality of searches; binding in the practice of using insurance; and providing that HIPs must be available when marketing starts’.


Not happy with this Mr Duddridge commented:


‘Home Information Packs have been a total failure and yet the Government refuses to listen to the industry professionals and home-buyers and sellers who believe that they restrict the supply of houses to the market and slow down the process of buying or selling a property.


It is unfortunate that the Minister has not looked at the case of Northern Ireland, which has shown that Energy Performance Certificates can be introduced without the need for a Home Information Pack. If elected to government we would scrap the Home Information Pack to remove this costly and damaging barrier to the housing market.’



Mr Duddridge as being a newcomer to the issue of HIPs, and who was clearly doing his best to help the besieged and overworked Grant Shapps, clearly had not undertaken his homework before commenting. If he had taken the trouble so to do he would have found that there is a major problem with compliance within Northern Ireland where one out of every two properties is marketed without a HIP. Research would have also disclosed to him that the HIP has not caused extra cost and is not, as is now recognised by the NAEA, a ‘damaging’ barrier to the housing market.


Perhaps Mr Duddridge should stick to banking and commenting on environment, food and rural affair issues ( he is a member of the EFRA's Committee ) unless of course David Cameron is lining him up to replace Grant Shapps as the next housing minister?

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