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Affordable homes for health staff to be built on NHS land under new plans
A general view of staff on a NHS hospital ward at Ealing Hospital in London

NHS trusts are to lease unused land to housing developers to build homes for staff, ministers announced today, as the health service struggles to recruit workers priced out of areas with high housing costs.

Nurses, porters and other NHS employees will be able to rent the properties, with most offered at discounted rents, though some will be let at market rates, the Department of Health and Social Care said.

Trusts will retain ownership of the land itself.

The scheme, part of the government’s 10-year capital plan for the NHS, will begin with pilot schemes before any wider rollout.

The plan also commits £6.75 billion over nine years to tackle a maintenance backlog standing at a record £15.9bn, plus £200 million to upgrade GP surgeries so they can treat more patients.

Health minister Karin Smyth said: “Too many NHS buildings are crumbling and outdated. This government is taking the long-term decisions needed to rebuild the health service.”

Sir Ciaran Devane of the NHS Alliance welcomed the “focus on long-term NHS capital investment.”

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