THIS WEEK'S HIGHLIGHTSThe Dales property crisis | | The Dales - spiralling property prices |
Inside Out looks at the tale of two brothers, Chris and Rick Baker, and their fight to stay in the Dales where they belong. They refuse to budge from Swaledale, despite the blight that threatens the very nature of the Yorkshire Dales as we know it - spiralling house prices. Perfect home The Dales is an idyllic place to live. People come to it looking for the perfect holiday home or retirement place. The outsiders have got money to burn, and they're sending house prices soaring. The Dales is in crisis. In some of the villages, over a third of houses are second homes - at least, that's the official figure. Locals have told Inside Out that they believe that it is closer to 50 per cent. In just five years, property prices in the national park have doubled. A house in the Dales will set you back, on average, a whopping £240,000. Young people are being forced out by the rising prices. And all the summer tourists can't rescue a crippled local economy. House hunters For three years Rick Baker has been renting a house in Reeth while he looks to buy a home for his growing family. But his budget can't buy the kind of house he needs. Rick's brother Chris, on the other hand, knows that he's one of the lucky ones. Seven years ago, he bought a barn cheap from a local farmer - it was his only hope of getting a house he could afford.
Strict National Park rules meant that Chris faced a four year battle to convert the barn.  | | Country living but at what price for locals? |
In the end planners gave him permission only because it contained an old Swaledale bread oven which they said was worth preserving. Now, after years of hard graft at weekends and evenings, he's got something close to his dream home. But brother Rick continues to struggle to find his dream home. He's recently been looking at a house in Reeth - but what he can get for his money is disappointing. The three bedroom house which he's looking at is on the market for £200,000 - the price is just too much for him. Help at hand? To improve the housing problem, the the National Park Authority has stepped in with a new set of rules which it says will mean that young people can stay put. From now on, all new housing in the Dales will have to be sold to local people, at prices around 30 per cent lower than market value. And in the future those houses will have to be sold on to other local people. It's been touted as the great hope to preserve the future of the Dales, but the new plan is causing dismay and controversy. The Dales National Park Authority identified dozens of villages where they would allow barns to be converted into homes in the future. But a senior external planning inspector has stepped in to override their plans in more than 30 hamlets where locals felt they would be needed most. And there's another problem - the National Park authority doesn't allow much new housing in the Dales. The Dales is changing fast. Rick Baker still looking for a house. The longer he waits the higher the prices go. For him, the Dales plan has come too late. Links relating to this story:The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites |