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Housing News Digest

The Tenants' Union Housing News Digest compiles our pick of items from all the latest tenancy and housing media, sent once per week, on Thursdays. 

Below is the Digest archive from November 2020 onwards. From time to time you will find additional items in the archive that did not make it into the weekly Digest email. Earlier archives are here, where you can also find additional digests by other organisations. 

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See notes about the Digest and a list of other contributors here. Many thanks to those contributors for sharing links with us.

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Archive

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Key topics

Owners blocked from moving into landmark Sydney apartment building

Matt O'Sullivan and Sue Williams
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Owners of a landmark apartment block in Sydney’s eastern suburbs face a long wait before they can move in after the NSW building watchdog ordered an immediate halt to their $50 million redevelopment which was almost complete. The watchdog has handed the owners of the Skye, which overlooks Tamarama Beach, a stop-work notice and an order preventing them from shifting in because fire sprinklers were not installed in seven of the building’s nine floors, which was deemed a “serious defect”.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/owners-blocked-from-moving-i…

# NSW, Strata, Housing market, Minimum habitability standards.
 

How leaseholds bought at cost, with mortgages, are still tenancies – and why that should change

Derek Whayman
The Conversation (No paywall)

From the United Kingdom ... Long leasehold is a prominent feature of the property market in England and in Wales. Homes owned under leasehold in each country number around 4.6m and 235,000 respectively. (Scotland has a completely different law of property, while in Northern Ireland, the law of leasehold is regulated very differently.) Owners of even long leases – what you get when you purchase a leasehold house or flat – are, technically speaking, tenants. This is so even though leasehold is a form of property ownership and the terms of long leases are typically 99 or even 999 years. Long leaseholders may be obliged to pay rent (labelled “ground rent”) and when the lease expires it reverts to the landlord.

https://theconversation.com/how-leaseholds-bought-at-cost-with-m…

# Legal significance International, Rent, Housing market.
 

Report shows rents have increased 9.4% nationally in past year

Mike Hosking
(No paywall)

From New Zealand ... Renters United spokesperson Ashok Jacob told Mike Yardley rents have been rising faster than wages for a long time. “This is more of a slow boil crisis than something more acute, something that’s been going on for a long time that’s caused by decades and decades of mismanagement and poor policy.”

https://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/on-air/mike-hosking-breakfast/audio…

# Audio International, Rent, Housing market.
 

Port Stephens facing a social housing Christmas crisis, MP warns

Charlie Elias
(No paywall)

The NSW Government has been accused of pushing Port Stephens into a Christmas housing crisis due to its ongoing failure to invest in social housing in the area. State MP Kate Washington said that desperate families in Port Stephens were languishing in poverty and some were becoming homeless because there's just no affordable housing available. (Port Stephens Examiner)

https://www.portstephensexaminer.com.au/story/7548866/ports-soci…

# NSW, Public and community housing, Rent, Homelessness, Housing affordability, Regional NSW.
 

Renting damages your wellbeing

Kassia Byrnes
(No paywall)

As a Millennial living in Sydney, I’ve pretty much known from the beginning that I’d never be able to own a house unless I won the lottery. This is a pretty confusing state to be in, seeing as our parents were still of the generation that could still just assume they’d grow up, get married, and buy a house. This isn’t doomsday thinking either, or anything to do with avocado toast, it’s just reality — and becoming truer every year. In the past 12 months, Australian housing prices had the highest growth rate in 20 years. At the same time as prices rise, incomes aren’t increasing to meet them. While in the 90s a homeowner only needed to spend a third of their earnings paying back their debt, these days new homebuyers have to put aside almost twice what they earn.
So no, it’s not laziness, or complaining, or entitlement — it’s hard fact. According to a new study, it’s also impacting wellbeing.

https://www.news.com.au/finance/homeowners-are-at-a-distinct-adv…

# Australia, Rent, Health, Home ownership, Housing market, Young people.
 

The return of the 10-minute eviction

Eli Saslow
(No paywall)

From Phoenix, United States ... The city’s last eviction moratorium of the pandemic had expired and the rent forgiveness program was running out of money, so Lennie McCloskey changed into his bulletproof vest and headed out to work. He climbed into his truck and counted through his daily stack of eviction orders. “Fifteen, sixteen — jeez Louise,” he said as he stacked them on the passenger seat. He strapped an extra magazine of ammunition to his belt and picked up his radio to call dispatch. "Constable 33, heading out,” he said. “Looks like a busy day.” [Read on] (Washington Post)

https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/12/15/phoenix-evictio…

# International, Eviction, Coronavirus COVID-19.
 

It’s Been a Home for Decades, but Legal Only a Few Months

Conor Dougherty
The New York Times (Paywall)

On paper, the converted garage behind the Martinez family home in the Boyle Heights section of Los Angeles is a brand-new unit of housing, the product of statewide legislation that is encouraging homeowners to put small rental homes on their property and help California backfill its decades-old housing shortage. Two stories tall with 1,100 square feet of living space that is wrapped in a curved exterior wall, adorned with pops of pink around the windows and decorative white squares, it looms over the squat main house as a statement of something different behind a chain-link fence. The inside tells a longer story. For years the unit was illegal, built clandestinely in the mid-1990s by Bernardo and Tomasa Martinez as part of a $2,000 project that turned the garage into a cold but habitable unit with a bed and bathroom. The family rented it for $300 to a friend, then $500 to Bernardo Martinez’s brother, using the money to offset their mortgage and weather unemployment during the Great Recession.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/18/business/economy/california-h…

# International, Rent, Housing market, Landlords and agents, Planning and development.
 

Inequality map reveals surprising dividing lines of Sydney’s ‘spatial’ wealth

Nigel Gladestone
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

A new way of mapping inequality reveals surprising divides between the haves and have-nots in Sydney, with some areas enjoying 10 times greater access to jobs, education and services.
The new analysis scores suburbs on their “spatial wealth” by comparing education options and jobs within a 30-minute-drive, as well as healthcare, social support and shopping access within a 15-minute walk. The most geographically advantaged neighbourhoods in Sydney have access to four times as many jobs, almost eight times the social support and ten times the education opportunities than the most disadvantaged areas. You will find a similar article entitled: 'Mapping shows the gaps between Melbourne’s haves and have-nots' at: [https://www.smh.com.au/national/mapping-shows-the-gaps-between-melbourne-s-haves-and-have-nots-20211218-p59iny.html]

https://www.smh.com.au/national/inequality-map-reveals-surprisin…

# Research alert NSW, Planning and development, Work, employment.
 

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