Scones
Your mentioning building and poor housing Lincslass has made me think about the shortage of housing for immigrants and for the population in general. We all know housing is short and one of the reasons for this is second home ownership.
The last English Housing Survey estimated that 772,000 households had a second home in 2018/19. Of those, 495,000 were in the UK, an increase of 77% in the past 10 years. That's over 380,000 UK homes taken out of the market between 2008 and 2018.
Now obviously people have an absolute right to have a second home if they wish, but if those homes could be owned or even rented long term by another family perhaps an immigrant family then at least the homes wouldn't be standing empty hollowing out rural and coastal communities.
My remote coastal town has many second homes. Young people can't afford to buy or rent here and so move away. The population ages, schools close, bus services are scrapped and there are no young people to provide essential services e.g. builders, plumbers, chefs, carers. Young immigrant families would fill an ever increasing gap here and their children would breathe life into the place.
www.insidehousing.co.uk/comment/comment/we-need-to-address-the-problem-of-second-homes-72386
I too live in a coastal town, we have had a small immigrant population for many many years, lucky because we all seem to get along together, and we’ve had some new arrivals, seem to be more transient though. Second homes, well if you can’t live in a house and it stands empty, that is something that needs looking at. A landlord I know does rent his house out to immigrant families, usually those on an accreditation scheme we have for medical personnel. Most of our jobs are filled by locals and immigrants so a good mix as it should be, and we have a thriving younger generation working in the area. Some immigrants may be able to fill posts, as I’ve said previously. Some will take a lot of integration and training before they can do so.