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Shapps promises more help for housebuilders

20 May 11 Housing minister Grant Shapps welcomed new figures that show the country is starting to build more homes again and said that the industry can expect more help.

Increasing the rate of housebuilding is a top priority for the government, he said, pointing incentives that have been introduced through the New Homes Bonus.

This week’s figures show that there were just over 29,000 housebuilding starts in the first quarter of 2011, an increase of 26% compared with the previous quarter, and the highest quarterly figure for almost three years. Annual housing starts have also increased, with a rise of 22% compared with the 12 months to March 2010.

Shapps said the results show reasons for optimism in the construction sector, but that there would be no room for complacency in the drive to build more homes.

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"When this Government came to power last year we surveyed the smoking wreckage of the construction sector and made a promise - that we would take swift and bold action to get Britain building again,” he said. "Today's figures are welcome, but they are only the start of the story. I'm determined that there should be no slowing down on the road to recovery, so we will continue dismantling the failed Regional Strategies and their legacy of animosity between developers and communities, and return powers to the local level so communities can drive economic growth and create new jobs in their area.

"The construction industry that builds the homes this country desperately needs can also expect more help. We will work closely with housebuilders and listen to their suggestions about how we can improve, and continue to strip away the bureaucracy and red tape that for so long has piled unfair costs on this vital sector of our economy.

"The first cash payments under the New Homes Bonus have been made, so communities can experience the benefits that growth brings. Totalling almost £200m, these payments are a significant amount of funding at a time when public finances are tight, and it's now crucial that councils talk to their communities about how they would like to spend this money, and what growth they would like to see in future."

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