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PPRuNeUser0211
27th Jan 2022, 16:17
Guardian (https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2022/jan/27/guy-hands-terra-firma-annington-homes-mod-ministry-defence)

Mod has decided that leasing homes long term is a terrible idea....

Ninthace
27th Jan 2022, 16:26
No argument from me on that score. Always was a bad idea. Wasn't it one of Portaloo''s ideas?

MPN11
27th Jan 2022, 18:06
So was PFI. Contracting-out to assorted sharks and consultants was never a good idea.

Make your own decisions, and live with the consequences.

Ninthace
27th Jan 2022, 18:29
My wife was involved in a new PFI contract. Hired from the existing unit to show them how to do what the MoD had always done, but in a bright shiny new building. Then she found out she was the lowest paid person there even though she was training the rest. She threatened to walk unless she got the proper rate. They agreed as they knew she was a service wife and would disappear once I was posted.

NutLoose
2nd Feb 2022, 10:42
It all seems very underhand.

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/newslondon/mod-has-two-weeks-to-avoid-legal-action-warns-army-homes-firm-annington/ar-AATotVQ

Bosses at Annington Homes have told the Ministry of Defence (https://www.standard.co.uk/topic/ministry-of-defence) they have “two weeks” to avoid legal action as it seeks to unwind one of the Government’s biggest ever privatisation deals.Annington, a portfolio of 57,400 military properties, was sold off by the MoD in 1996 in a move valued at £1.7 billion at the time.

However, the company said the MoD and UK Government (https://www.standard.co.uk/topic/government) Investments, the state’s investing arm, are seeking to forcibly buy back the business, where it still has leasehold and maintenance agreements on around 38,000 homes.

Last week, defence procurement minister Jeremy Quin said the government would explore whether leasehold enfranchisement deals, designed for individual tenants to buy properties off their landlords, could be used to buy back the homes.

In a letter to Defence Secretary Ben Wallace (https://www.standard.co.uk/topic/ben-wallace) Annington chair Baroness Helen Liddell said she was “shocked” by the Government’s approach.

She accused the MoD of serving the company enfranchise notices on two houses in Cranwell, Lincolnshire (https://www.standard.co.uk/topic/lincolnshire) and then forcing the sale of both properties to newly formed company Defence Infrastructure Holdings for £1.

Annington said the Government is “seeking without notice to tear up a long-standing agreement, which sends a dreadful signal to businesses which rely upon the good word and good faith of Government”.

The company, which is now partly owned by Guy Hands-led private equity firm Terra Firma, said it would come to the table to discuss selling the business to the Government, considering a valuation by real estate firm CBRE (https://www.standard.co.uk/topic/cbre) of almost £8 billion.

In the letter, the Annington chair also criticised the state of the properties – which are maintained by the Government as part of the initial sale agreement – as “unacceptable” for service personnel.

Baroness Liddell also criticised the Government for spending £36.6 million in rent per year on around 7,230 vacant properties in the estate.“It makes no sense at all for the MoD either to spend these vast sums renting homes with no occupants, or to deprive would-be homeowners/buyers of a proper home of their own,” she wrote.

“It also makes no sense that DIO (the Defence Infrastructure Organisation) is now taking steps to use enfranchisement legislation to buy these houses back at considerable public expense, when it has no need for them.”

On Wednesday, Annington added that it is offering a £105 million fund to improve and modernise service personnel homes.

It told the MoD that the cash made available for the fund will instead need to be used for legal costs if an agreement is not found in the next two weeks and a litigation process begins.

ZH875
2nd Feb 2022, 17:34
I wonder if this is the real reason behind it.

UK hotel bill for 37,000 migrants is £1.2m a day, MPs told

By Jennifer Meierhans
BBC News
8 mins ago UK

Some 37,000 asylum seekers and Afghan refugees are living in UK hotels at a cost of £1.2m per day, MPs were told.

The Home Office was developing better ways of working with local authorities to find permanent homes, MPs heard.

Ms Patel said: "We do not want people in hotels, we are looking at dispersed accommodation."

She said there were efforts under way to use Ministry of Defence buildings for more asylum accommodation.

ASRAAMTOO
3rd Feb 2022, 14:45
I wonder if this is the real reason behind it.

UK hotel bill for 37,000 migrants is £1.2m a day, MPs told

By Jennifer Meierhans
BBC News
8 mins ago UK

Some 37,000 asylum seekers and Afghan refugees are living in UK hotels at a cost of £1.2m per day, MPs were told.

The Home Office was developing better ways of working with local authorities to find permanent homes, MPs heard.

Ms Patel said: "We do not want people in hotels, we are looking at dispersed accommodation."

She said there were efforts under way to use Ministry of Defence buildings for more asylum accommodation.

Cant see the government getting away with using surplus MOD accommodation for refugees. There would be photos in the press of "The appaling conditions they are expected to live in " within days!

Nil_Drift
3rd Feb 2022, 17:09
Civil Servants trying to do quick maths without making it obvious they're using their fingers. "Did I say £1.2m, Minister? Sorry, I meant £5 million"
That is per DAY! :ugh:

Scamp
3rd Feb 2022, 20:09
My last "annington" home in wilts cost me a pricely £35 a month ........ it was that good. But there are a large amount at that location empty since 2011, doubt they have had money spent on them since then, a quick fix to a "problem" that will spiral out of all control.