Building of three new towns will start before election, Labour pledges

Before the next general election, the construction of three new towns will begin, the worker promised.
A task force proposed 12 locations for development in the UK, three areas – Bedpford, Bedpford, Leeds South Bank and Crews Hill in North London.
Housing Secretary Steve Reed’s plans are expected to announce Labour in a speech on the opening day of the annual party conference.
By promising to build 1.5 million new houses by 2029, the worker put homemade at the center of his vision on how to grow the economy.
“New generation new towns” was included in Labour’s election manifesto last year.
The proposed 12 developments extend from large -scale independent new communities to the expansion of existing towns and renewal plans in cities.
Cheshire, South Gloucestershire, East Devon, Plymouth and Manchester sites are among the recommendations for development.
The selected sites will be subject to environmental evaluations and consultations, the government has confirmed the last places and will provide next spring financing.
The worker said that every new town will have at least 10,000 houses and could lead to the construction of 300,000 houses throughout England in the next decades.
From the new Towns task force, the government welcomed a recommendation that at least 40% of these new houses should be classified as an affordable housing.
A new town unit will be assigned to bring millions of pounds of public and private sector finance to invest in GP operations, schools, green areas, libraries and transportation for new developments.
He proposed to be presented by the development companies that may have special planning authorities to invest in local services and to provide special planning authorities to invest in local services.
This follows the renewal of Stratford in East London during and after the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said: “Many families are hosting a remote dream.
“My workers’ government will put aside the blockers to build new generation new towns and build houses.”
In his speech, the housing secretary will promise “building baby -making” while the post -war workers’ government takes lessons from the housing explosion.
“After the war, this party has built new towns to meet our promises of home to the heroes.
After the Second World War, Clement Attend’s government planned to carry the first new town wave, including Stevenage, Crawley and Welwyn Garden City, to carry people from poor or bombed houses and gave responsibility to build them.
The announcement comes with the meeting of the workers’ members at Liverpool for the annual conference of the party.
Reed will be the first big speech of Reed because he took over from Angela Rayner as a housing secretary. After resigning because he did not pay enough taxes in a fixed purchasing process.
It has been a few weeks for Sir Keir, who faced questions about the leadership and the direction of his party.
Reform in the surveys accelerated the attacks on Nigel Farage’s party with the labor force behind Britain.
He said that the reform that came to Liverpool on Saturday would “disintegrate this country” and said the conference would have an opportunity to determine the “toxic division and decline” alternative presented by the party.




