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Saturday 29 August 2020

DEVIL IN THE DETAIL....

POST BY JEREMY DIXON

I have no quibble with the government offering relocation to people who are at risk of Covid 19. But it is being mixed in with an obvious 'Community Housing' agenda. We know from experience that 'access to other housing being offered' at the end of the 2 year private lease is that public tenants will only be offered - or at best heavily leaned on to accept - Community/Social Housing. Or else they will end up with nowhere to live... Some choice! Taking advantage of a crisis to sneak in a privatisation agenda is plain LOW. A typical example of government deviousness. It makes me sad. Can't they just fix the problem rather than continue with their dysfunctional agenda of replacing Public Housing with non-govt Community/Social Housing ?! We agree with Ellen Sandell, Acting Leader of the Greens, who said we "cannot allow this to be 'privatisation by stealth' of public housing."

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Entire public housing estates were cleared on the promise to vulnerable public tenants that they would be returning to Public Housing. ( everything would stay the same) Public tenants left their homes in good faith. The first three tranches to go across has resulted in no Public Housing at all. It has been replaced by 'social housing', 'affordable housing' ( up to 80% of market rents, usually set just under 75% to ensure charity status tax breaks ), and private housing.

In Brunswick West - the tender went to Women's Housing Limited.
In Northcote and Nth Melbourne the tender was won by HousingFirst Social/Community Housing Association. 

To quote Inner Melbourne Community Legal Centre.
"The shift from public housing to social housing will mean many tenants may move back to having a new, less publicly accountable landlord and probably fewer tenancy rights."


https://imcl.org.au/news/housing/duplicate-of-submission-to-the-social-housing-renewal-standing-advisory-committee-at-planning-panels-victoria
 

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Here is The AGE article





People living in overcrowded public housing towers will be offered the opportunity to move to private rental properties for two years to slow the spread of the coronavirus.

Nine towers in Flemington and North Melbourne were placed under hard lockdown in July following COVID-19 outbreaks in public housing estates, with 3000 residents banned from leaving their homes for five days.


Public housing towers in Flemington and North Melbourne were locked down for five days.
Public housing towers in Flemington and North Melbourne were locked down for five days. Credit:Justin McManus

Under the State Government’s $31.7 million tower relocation program, up to 420 private rental properties will be leased for two years and offered to high rise estate tenants at greater risk due to the coronavirus.
The voluntary program will target public housing tenants living in larger households or those who have medical issues that make them more vulnerable to COVID-19.
 
The government says it will significantly reduce the risk of coronavirus transmission and open up much needed social housing for Victorians on the Victorian Housing register.
An estimated 80,000 people are waiting for public housing in Victoria.

The state has the lowest proportion of social housing stock in Australia at 3.2 per cent of all housing, compared with the national average of 4.5 per cent.
“Relocating large families and residents with health issues who wish to move will reduce the risk coronavirus poses to these households,” said Housing Minister Richard Wynne.
“It’s part of our ongoing work to keep high-rise public housing tenants safe and supported during the pandemic.”
Eligible households will be contacted directly to discuss the options available under the program.

All tenants will continue to have access to long term public housing, with other suitable long-term options available for households at the end of the two year program.

The Victorian Greens wrote to Mr Wynne in June warning many families were desperately waiting for transfers to ease their overcrowded living conditions.
The letter said these conditions had become even more stark during COVID-19 restrictions, with children attempting to learn from home while parents worked in tiny apartments.
Acting Leader of the Victorian Greens, Ellen Sandell, said the tower relocation program would be a relief for many public housing residents who are living in overcrowded and poorly maintained public housing, and worried about the risk of COVID-19.

“But it’s also a clear acknowledgement by the Victorian Government that they have abandoned public housing and failed to build enough houses for people, and this failure by the Government is what got us into this mess in the first place,” Ms Sandell said.
“A temporary fix will only put a band-aid on the problem. If the government wants to truly support public housing residents in the long-term, it needs to build more public housing so these families actually have somewhere to live when these private leases run out in two years’ time. We also cannot allow this to be 'privatisation by stealth' of public housing."
The tower relocation program was supported by Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton as a measure to help slow the spread of coronavirus.

The government said it built on protection measures already implemented in high-rise public housing towers such as increased cleaning and sanitisation of common areas and touch points, hand sanitiser in all towers and information in a variety of languages on how to slow the spread of coronavirus.

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Thursday 20 August 2020

GIVING AWAY A PUBLIC CARPARK TO PRIVATE INTERESTS

GUEST POST BY JACK VERDINS












     
HOW TO WRAP A PUBLIC CAR-PARK 

AS A GIFT TO PRIVATE SECTOR HOUSING?  

SHAME ON YOU LABOR … WHAT IS YOUR PLAN FOR HOUSING THE MOST NEEDY ?!
With the chaos at the Public Housing tower lockdown, the general public is starting to ask questions about what the government is up to with Public Housing. Maintenance seems shoddy and the apartments are overcrowded. Why isn’t the government looking after the buildings better? Why is the government not building enough Public Housing to ease the overcrowding and the waiting list?
A HEARTLESS ANNOUNCEMENT DURING THE CHAOS.
On July 6th 2020 a government press release trumpeted “Car Park Key To More Affordable Housing In Port Phillip”.
The City of Port Phillip is handing over public land (formerly a car park) to a private business called HousingFirst. The State Government is adding a sweetener in the form of $22 million of funding to finance the building works
 It is all presented in language that makes it look good...
HousingFirst Limited is a registered Housing Association, and the announcement says that a mix of tenants will be eligible for the homes, including people over 55 and people with disability, and can even reconfigure adjacent apartments for larger families or to house a carer.
There are 10 Housing Associations and 30 Housing Providers in Victoria and get referred to via cute home spun terminology such as Community, Social, and Affordable housing, but in reality are private businesses that receive government funding and financing. Not all but many of them have high costs. If prospective tenants are taken from the public housing waiting list, they will often have higher incomes and will be profiled as “low risk”.
 THERE IS DELIBERATE POLICY AT WORK HERE
Those siding with the government are spreading a narrative on the decline of Public Housing and are using it to stigmatise, and now to detain public housing residents in a lockdown.  The fact is that Victoria has had a punitive public housing system whose residents have been neglected for decades. Public housing in Victoria is the product of decades of neglect, disinvestment and stigmatisation by governments and media.
 The amount of public housing in Victoria has been hovering in real terms around the same mark of 65,000 dwellings for the last two decades. In the meantime, the private business going under the moniker of Community Housing grew their dwellings from 11,000 in 2011 to 19,000 in 2019 with funding from programs such as the Australian Government’s 2009 Nation Building Economic Stimulus Package which included stock transfers.
According to the Auditor General's Report there had been 9,000 Management Transfers of PH to Community Housing at June 2016. According to a 2014 document a further 8,300 properties were provided by DHHS - including capital and title transfers. 
Public Housing now makes up only 2.7% of all the housing in Victoria.
In the meantime, the number of people experiencing homelessness and housing insecurity in Victoria has increased to 100,000, and waiting time is 1-2 years for extremely urgent applications and out to 6 years for urgent cases. This is no surprise with no net additions to public housing stock for twenty years.
The lockdown of the towers has helped put a human face to Public Housing tenants. These are people with jobs. These are mothers, fathers, children, families, students and workers, all with hopes and aspirations just like anyone else.
Now it the time to look at what is going on in Public Housing and what is needed to get both Labor and the Liberals to change policy. We need to reinvest in Public Housing like they did post WWII and up to the 1980s which saw thousands of new public housing swellings get built each year. There are 100,000 people on the waiting list and many more unregistered and homeless who could do with a helping hand like the people did then. 

Sources
VAGO 2017 Managing Vic's PH 2017
p26. CHFA "Allocation, eligibility, and rent setting in the Australian community housing sector" 2014