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Huge 'post-war' style housebuilding programme needed to tackle homelessness, Salford's mayor says

Around a million homes were built in the aftermath of the Second World War to end homelessness in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Greater Manchester leaders have expressed concern over the impact of Right to Buy(Image: PA)

Salford Mayor Paul Dennett has issued an urgent call for a vast housebuilding programme, modelled on the great post-WWII reconstruction of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, to eradicate homelessness in Greater Manchester.

He said "another mobilisation of that size" is imperative to prevent families being forced onto the streets due to a critical shortage of housing.

In the period following World War II, approximately a million homes were built, most of which were social housing, to house those who lost their homes to aerial bombardment.

Greater Manchester has an ongoing severe homelessness crisis, exacerbated by the scarcity of affordable homes. Shelter in December highlighted that there were 16,500 individuals without homes during the festive season, half of them children.

Mr Dennett, also deputy mayor for Housing in Greater Manchester, told : "The huge post-war council house building projects rendered homelessness statistically insignificant. We urgently need government support for another mobilisation of that size to achieve the same again.

He added that simply building new homes would not solve the problem, as Salford has seen the loss of over 10,000 social homes to the Right to Buy scheme since 1980. Mr Dennett is calling for the suspension of this policy to halt the "decimation" of council housing stock.

He added: "Along with this, the government moving to end Section 21 'no fault' evictions is a positive step, but we need strong protections against landlords evicting tenants through unjustifiable rent hikes."

Other councils in Greater Manchester have also expressed concern about the Right to Buy scheme depleting social housing numbers, with Stockport council disclosing last year that it has lost half its council homes since the 1980s.