A South London council has officially abandoned plans to increase rents for temporary tenants in empty council homes.

The initiative was approved in 2018 under Kingston Council’s old Conservative administration but councillors have been told no progress was made as the housing department’s priorities changed.

Kingston Council’s place committee decided that empty homes held by the council would not be transferred to the Community Benefit Society (CBS) and rented out at market rates “considerably more than a social rent”.

The CBS was created in January 2018 to help homeless people, or those at risk of becoming homeless, into temporary homes made empty during estate revamps.

At Thursday’s (September 22) meeting, Lib Dem councillor Emily Davey quoted a previous email she sent that raised concerns about implementing the society and increasing rent.

She said: “Not even the worst rogue landlords would treble the rents on their tenants overnight”.

She said: “Because there was a committee decision about implementing it [increasing rent], we need a committee decision to say it’s not being implemented. Life has moved on.

"I’m happy to say those empty council properties are being used. We’re not leaving them empty.” 

But the delay in bringing the decision to the committee came under fire at the meeting.

Conservative councillor Ian George said: “I’m not going to vote for this [scrapping CBS]  because I don’t think we had enough information. I don’t think enough of the concerns have been answered – that seems to happen a lot these days.”

But Councillor Davey said: “I think the reason for the delays is the priorities of the housing department changed.”

She said the council needed to “tie it off” to confirm the original plans weren’t going any further. 

The committee voted to officially abandon the society with eight councillors in favour and two abstentions.