THE HOUSING QUESTION
45
houses was being hopelessly retarded through rich
clients and contractors luring away labour for their
private work, by offering higher wages, and by other
methods of cold-shouldering housing schemes (not
least of which was the influence of builders and their
friends elected on Local Authorities). An Act known
as the Housing (Additional Powers) Act was passed
later in 1919, a section (No. 5) of which empowered
Local Authorities to prohibit private building if it
could be shewn to be interfering with their housing
scheme. This section was a total failure, for three
reasons :—
(1) Local Authorities were unwilling to work it.
Anyone who knew how local interests are favoured by
local Councillors could have foreseen how impossible
it would be to expect men to take the bread out of the
mouths of their friends whom they met every day in
the street.
(2) The Act only allowed Authorities to move
against private building within their own area. But
the common trouble was that a big firm in a neighbouring
area lured labour away. The Law forgot this—or
intended to forget it.
(3) The Section allowed an appeal to the Ministry
if a prohibition order were made by a Local Authority,
but the wording of the Section was so badly drawn
that these appeals were practically always successful.
Why the Section was so worded that a coach and six
could be drawn through it, it would be interesting to
know. Perhaps the big business interests in the present
House of Commons could say.