MORE than 1,500 homes in Sedgemoor are sitting empty, despite a national housing crisis which has left thousands of families homeless.

And newly released figures from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government show that hundreds of properties have been left unoccupied for at least six months.

In October last year, when the most recent count was taken, there were 1,684 vacant homes in Sedgemoor - one in every 32 houses in the area.

Of those, 325 were classed as long-term vacancies, meaning that they had been unoccupied for at least six months.

Polly Neate, chief executive of housing charity Shelter, said that making sure properties were occupied was just part of the answer to the country's housing shortage.

She said: "In the midst of a homelessness crisis it is of course frustrating to see houses left empty. But the fact is that even if we filled every one of these, there still wouldn't be nearly enough homes to solve the problem.

"Decades of failure to build has left us in the lurch - the Government must now get on and build a new generation of social homes where people need them most."

The problem of empty homes in Sedgemoor has worsened in recent years.

In 2008, despite the number of vacant properties peaking nationwide, there were just 1,575 in the area.

Sedgemoor District Council, working with not-for-profit firm Somerset Care and Repair, runs a scheme aiming to help owners of empty properties bring them back into use.

Across England, there were more than 600,000 vacant properties last October, over a third of which were long-term vacancies.

Figures show that 400 new homes were built in Sedgemoor last year.

In total, 518 new homes were created, including those converted from office blocks or houses split into flats.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, said: "The number of long-term vacant dwellings in England is still lower than when records began, but we are determined to bring this figure down.

"That is why we are equipping councils with tools they need to tackle the issue head on, such as bringing forward legislation that will allow them to double the rate of council tax on those homes left empty for two years or longer."