Having read the document is is standard fare for a white paper, lot of initiatives will of course need legislation and even further white papers are promised, one as soon as spring. They normally role over funding, take account of recent awards like the LU funding for town centres at the end of last year, and there is reference to bringing forward changes in housing that were consulted on in 2019 and stopped by Covid, as well measures in the 2020 planning white paper with regard to developer contributions.
It does rightly point out by some measures London is a complete shit hole, high over crowding, excessive homelessness and chronic affordable housing issues. There are thriving cities in the north/midlands, but these regional city centres seem to drain the life out of their neighbours, like Leeds/Bradford, Sheffield/Rotherham, Liverpool/Knowsley, Newcastle/Sunderland, all two sides of the same coin. The paper looks to stop the disparity in growth mentioned, but I can't see it anytime soon.
It does rightly point out by some measures London is a complete shit hole, high over crowding, excessive homelessness and chronic affordable housing issues. There are thriving cities in the north/midlands, but these regional city centres seem to drain the life out of their neighbours, like Leeds/Bradford, Sheffield/Rotherham, Liverpool/Knowsley, Newcastle/Sunderland, all two sides of the same coin. The paper looks to stop the disparity in growth mentioned, but I can't see it anytime soon.