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Saturday 23 May 2020

ABBOTSFORD CENTRELINK SURVIVES - FOR NOW















There has been a reprieve on the imminent closure of the Abbotsford Centrelink Office in inner Melbourne!

This is important news for those who rely on the service. This extension comes on the heels of an announcement by Services Australia that the office would close on 22nd May 2020. The public was given only one day's notice. This would be harmful to many public tenants who live in the nearby highrises and rely on this office. 9.5 percent of residents in City of Yarra are public tenants. In fact Yarra has the highest density of public housing in the state of Victoria.

We congratulate Adam Bandt, Leader of the Federal Greens, who acted swiftly by putting pressure on the government. Jack Verdins, representing Friends of Public Housing, also spoke against the closure of the Abbotsford Centrelink office at Adam Bandt's public media statement.

It will be interesting to see how this story unravels over the next three months as statements from Services Australia and the landlord, Salta Properties directly contradict each other. Salta has made a public statement saying the lease remains available for renewal on existing terms. 

So while neither party is telling us much about what has passed between them, it is clear from this that the Abbotsford Office does not need to close.

Bill Shorten says that this is just one amongst other closures planned. And Stephen Jolly, socialist councillor for City of Yarra has offered, if need be, the use of a Richmond premise.

Australia Services = Federal Government agency responsible for government payments and services, formerly Department of Human Services.


QUOTE FOR MEDIA FROM "FRIENDS OF PUBLIC HOUSING VICTORIA"
"We have seen a huge increased need for Centrelink services during the COVID 19 crisis. This is evidenced by extraordinarily long queues and the MyGovt website crashing due to over-demand. Now the Government wants to close the Abbotsford Centrelink Office which provides a vital service for people in the area, including many public tenants, with only a day's notice! The Abbotsford Centre should not be closed. Trying to replace face-to-face service with online services is not the way to go, because many problems are too complex to be handled by a telephone service and a computer program. Many Centrelink recipients do not have a car and /or have disabilities so this is a bad decision for the government to be taking."
Jeremy Dixon, Fiona Ross, Jack Verdins
Spokespersons 'Friends of Public Housing Victoria'
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The Guardian Article 


Government faces calls to save Melbourne Centrelink office after postponing closure.
Three month reprieve comes after a bitter war of words erupted between the agency responsible for Centrelink and a major property company over the Abbotsford site.


Luke Henriques-Gomes
 21 May 2020 17.19 AEST
First published on Thu 21 May 2020 12.45 AEST
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The Morrison government is facing calls to save a busy Centrelink office after it told the public sector union it would postpone controversial plans to shut the centre in inner Melbourne.


The decision to postpone the closure, one day after Services Australia announced suddenly that the office would shut for good from Friday, came after a bitter war of words erupted between the agency responsible for Centrelink and a major property company over the site.


The Abbotsford service centre, which is surrounded by some of Melbourne’s largest public housing estates, was set to close on Friday, but may now be saved after the landlord indicated its desire to continue the lease and Services Australia said it would await an offer.
Services Australia officials informed the Community and Public Sector Union on Thursday the lease would be extended for three months and the closure would be postponed.


Alistair Waters, the union’s national president, said: “The CPSU is shocked and disappointed by Services Australia’s decision to close the Abbotsford site.
“While we welcome the delay, the need for face to face services isn’t going to magically disappear in three months.”


The development came only after the Guardian reported comments from the landlord, Salta Properties, which claimed it had learned of the closure of the Centrelink office on Friday through Twitter – and that it had offered to continue the lease on existing terms.


In a statement on Thursday hitting back at Salta’s claims, Services Australia said the offer to renew the lease had come via text message on Thursday, a day after the closure was announced. “The landlord of the Yarra Service Centre in Abbotsford, advised Services Australia through its legal representative on 12 May 2020 that it will not agree to any lease extension beyond 22 May 2020,” a statement said. “The current legal position stands as the landlord’s notice to vacate instructs Services Australia to vacate the premises by 22 May 2020. “Today, 21 May 2020, Services Australia received an offer via text message to allow an extension to the lease for three months. We await a written legal offer.
“Services Australia will announce any changes to the services in due course.”


On Wednesday, the government services minister, Stuart Robert told the local MP and Greens leader, Adam Bandt by letter that the landlord had advised the agency they would “not retain Services Australia as a short-term or long-term tenant and will not permit any occupancy by the Agency at the premises after the lease expires”.
Robert said: “Let there be no misunderstanding – despite the Agency actively engaging with the landlord over an extended period, a lease agreement has not been reached.”
He claimed the landlord was “also unwilling to permit a lease holdover arrangement to allow further lease renewal negotiations, or to locate a suitable alternative premises”.


On Thursday, the landlord, Salta Properties, which is led by billionaire developer Sam Tarascio, flatly denied the claims, saying it was completely blindsided by the news.
A spokesman told the Guardian it had offered the agency a “lease extension on existing terms and was awaiting a formal reply”. “Salta Properties was shocked to learn late yesterday on Twitter of Centrelink’s decision to vacate the premises,” he said. “This morning it reached out again to Centrelink to confirm the premises remain available and it is welcome to stay. Salta is waiting to hear back.”


The spokesman said the landlord had received a deed of extension and replied with comments.“Salta never heard back,” the spokesman said. “Salta remains open, as it has all along, to allowing Centrelink to remain open at its current address under a lease extension on existing terms.”


In a statement issued on Wednesday, a Services Australia spokesman, Hank Jongen, also said the outcome of “comprehensive lease negotiations” meant Centrelink was required to vacate the building “before the lease expiry date of 22 May 2020”.


On Wednesday Services Australia said it would close the Abbotsford service centre from the end of Thursday, and would be directing people to the South Melbourne office more than 6km away and on the other side of the city.


It has been the scene of some of the largest dole queues during the coronavirus pandemic, according to Bandt.


Robert was under pressure on Thursday to explain the confusion over the future of the centre. Bandt demanded a written explanation and warned of a potential censure motion, while Labor’s government services spokesman Bill Shorten claimed the minister needed to “stop hiding behind fanciful stories”.


“The minister must immediately reach out to the landlord and ensure Abbotsford Centrelink remains where it is,” Bandt said.


Shorten accused the government of a “reckless plan” to close down Centrelink shopfronts, claiming that service centres at Mornington and Newport, Newcastle and Tweed Heads were also on the chopping block.


City of Yarra councillor Stephen Jolly said on Thursday the council would pass a motion offering a council building in the nearby suburb of Richmond for a long-term lease as a Centrelink office, including one year’s free rent. Robert has been contacted for comment.

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https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/may/21/landlord-blindsided-by-decision-to-close-melbourne-centrelink-office-with-24-hours-notice

Blog Post - Jeremy Dixon, Fiona Ross FOPHV

Saturday 2 May 2020

RAMADAN IN THE TIME OF COVID 19












Public Housing communities are truly wonderful. I love living in Public Housing.
With Ramadan underway, my Muslim neighbours are fasting from sunrise to sunset  for a month. 23 April - 23 May.
This is a deeply religious and significant time for Muslims worldwide. The evening meal - after sunset on every day of Ramadan - is known as Iftar. Usually this is a communal and social event with family and friends dropping by. There is also a growing tradition around the world of Muslim communities providing food in outdoor areas to the general public, and anyone who is hungry, as part of Iftar.
With the COVID 19 social distancing restrictions, there have been changes to celebrations this year.
Guess who's the lucky recipient of my Muslim neighbours' generosity?  Me! 😍 😋  
Each evening for the past week, there's been a knock on my door, and plates of food are given to me from, not one, but two of my lovely neighbours.
Delicious food! They are both excellent cooks! 
Dates, barley and wheat soups, samosas, puff pastry sweets.
I am very touched.  "Shukraan jazilaan" "Ameseginalew"  Thankyou very much. 
To all our Muslim neighbours living in Public Housing and everywhere- "Happy Ramadan".
- Fiona 💗
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I cannot understand why more people in Australia are not involving themselves more in defending public tenants?
Is it the erroneous stigma and prejudice attached to public housing and public tenants,
or because they don't really know what's going on, because its largely not publicised.
We have amazing multicultural communities in Public Housing!  
As part of the Vic Labor state government's so-called Public Housing Renewal Program,  relatively few public tenants will be returning home, and it is also highly likely that the new homes will be transferred to private Community/ Social housing. In fact this has already happened on 3 former Public Housing estates so far. 
Many families will be unable to return, because the developers will be replacing 1,2 and 3 bedroom homes with small mainly one and two bedroom units. What a blow for multi-cultural diversity in the innercity!
All Public Tenants are assured that they have 'the right' to come home after redevelopments, but the fine print says otherwise. It is only if the size of the new units matches the need.  
If you want to support public tenants from 'relocation' or rather displacement policies that promote Gentrification by Stealth, then a good place to start is to call us by our right name - public tenants, not 'social housing' tenants. No public tenant that I know, will call themselves a 'social housing' tenant. 
We are proud to be public tenants.
Please support us. Our communities are too precious to be broken up and destroyed!
If you want to get more involved please write to our housinghumanrights@gmail.com, and visit us on Facebook    https://www.facebook.com/FOPHVIC/
Thankyou.