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  • Housing Demand (Supplementary) [7]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 24 October 2007
    So why have you set such a low limit? Why not 25% or 30%?
  • Housing Demand (Supplementary) [11]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 24 October 2007
    Finally, what are you going to do about the still considerable number of empty properties that are not brought onto the housing market at all?
  • Housing Demand (Supplementary) [17]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 24 October 2007
    The key is that when those properties come available, there is a queue a mile long to acquire them. So, there is clearly a need for more of those types of properties.
  • Housing Demand (Supplementary) [25]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 24 October 2007
    Two quick areas I would just like to raise: how are you going to address the need for new affordable housing for families when we have already got a surplus of one bedroom properties at affordable level, and a large element of the developments that have taken place have been two bedroom properties? In actual fact the demand now in London is very much for family housing, both for affordable housing for rent but also housing that can be bought by families.
  • Housing Demand (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 24 October 2007
    Why then has the Mayor opposed, for example, what Wandsworth has been doing to bring back empty homes into the housing market?
  • Contingency (Supplementary) [6]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 25 April 2007
    Obviously you have not given us figures so, to a certain extent, we have got to conjecture what they are but, say, the cost of the Stadium in your budget is £250 million - I do not know if that figure is correct or not - and then you discover that, lo and behold, now £300 million is the true cost. Does that extra £50 million come from the contingency? What happens about that?
  • Contingency (Supplementary) [8]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 25 April 2007
    So is that procedure set up or is it to be determined?
  • Contingency (Supplementary) [10]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 25 April 2007
    Sir Roy , what I am trying to get at is how does the contingency fund work to fund specific projects?
  • Contingency (Supplementary) [11]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 25 April 2007
    So the process will be that you would have to make an application, and that application would be considered in the due fullness of time. Or is there a time period in which that should be addressed?
  • Contingency (Supplementary) [13]

    • Question by: Bob Blackman
    • Meeting date: 25 April 2007
    OK. You have this series of different projects, all with their own budgets within the overall budget, and you are going to put a series of contracts out to tender. Supposing, on the first one of those, you have a budget that says it is £250 million, but the cheapest cost comes in at £300 million. Does that mean the £50 million will come from the contingency fund, or does it have a knock on effect on the other budgets?