Housing News Digest
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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Archive
Landlord ordered to pay $38k after child develops rheumatic heart disease
Esther Taunton (No paywall)A Christchurch landlord has been ordered to pay $38,626 after their “serious exploitation” of vulnerable tenants led to a child developing rheumatic heart disease. In a decision released on Friday, the Tenancy Tribunal found landlords Anne and Roger Stocker had breached the Residential Tenancies Act in several ways, including failing to maintain the property in respect of health and safety matters. (Stuff) Same story in 'The New Daily' at: [https://thenewdaily.com.au/finance/property/2021/10/29/landlords-child-sick-nz/]
https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/126824887/landlord-ordered-to-p…
# International, Rent, Tribunal NCAT, Health, Landlords and agents, Mould.Homeless families to get permanent housing as hotel program winds down
Michael Fowler The Age (Paywall)Hundreds of homeless Victorians who have been staying in state-funded hotels during lockdowns will be found a permanent place to live, but there will not be a home for everyone as the hotel program prepares to wind down permanently. Housing Minister Richard Wynne said $66 million dollars would go towards supporting 250 families, including 400 children, to stay in hotels until permanent homes that fit their needs are found. ... However, hundreds of homeless singles and couples will need to work with support agencies to find new lodgings before the hotels program closes permanently, which is pencilled in for February. ... Council to Homeless Persons chief executive Jenny Smith welcomed the $66 million commitment, but warned some people would still fall through the cracks. She called for the state government to extend the permanent housing support to highly vulnerable individuals in the short and medium-term.
https://www.theage.com.au/politics/victoria/homeless-families-to…
# Australia, Public and community housing, Coronavirus COVID-19, Homelessness, Housing market.Social landlords must adopt a zero-tolerance approach to damp and stop patronising tenants
Richard Blakeway Inside Housing (Paywall)From the United Kingdom ... The prevalence of damp and mould in the sector means a strategic response is required. Social landlords must move from inferring blame to taking responsibility, writes [Housing Ombudsman] Richard Blakeway. When I started as the housing ombudsman, one of the first cases I saw concerned damp and mould. The issues we investigated, and the experiences of residents living with it, are now all too familiar. While there are many and varying causes that lead to damp and mould in the cases we see, the impact on the resident can be profound. You can see the distress, disruption, even embarrassment, felt by them. You can see the evident concern about their health and well-being.
https://www.insidehousing.co.uk/comment/comment/social-landlords…
# International, Public and community housing, Repairs, Health, Mould.Challenging the notion of housing reform as “political suicide”: household financial stress analysis of Australian political constituencies
Bill Randolph and William Thackway The Fifth Estate (No paywall)In Australia, where more than 60 per cent of voters own their own home, the notion of housing reform policies that may negatively impact housing prices is widely viewed as “political suicide”. The term has been used to describe moves to reinstate both inheritance taxes (largely relating to property inheritance) and attempts to abolish negative gearing. ... While financial stress among renters and mortgagors was significant prior to the onset of COVID-19, the pandemic has only served to underline the existential threat they pose to Australia’s housing market. ... But the extent of household financial stress among both home buyers and renters – many of whom are the Boomers’ children who aspire to buy but see the prospect receding by the day – related to ever escalating housing costs, may prompt a greater degree of voter support for systematic policy reform. The question is, have we reached the tipping point, and if not now, when?
https://thefifthestate.com.au/energy-lead/local-government-energ…
# Must read Australia, Rent, Federal Government, Home ownership, Housing affordability.Apartment price growth outstrips rents in major CBDs, new figures show
Elizabeth Redman Domain (No paywall)Inner-city apartment prices appear to be defying gravity, with price growth outpacing rent growth in the hard-hit CBD unit markets of Sydney and Melbourne, new figures show. Low interest rates have reduced mortgage costs for investors, allowing many to accept lower rents for a time without being forced to sell.
https://www.domain.com.au/news/apartment-price-growth-outstrips-…
# Australia, Rent, Strata, Housing market.From a 'class divide' to 'intergenerational theft', Australia's real estate frenzy leaves many behind
Stephen Long ABC (No paywall)An un-renovated semi-detached home in Bondi sold recently for more than $2.7 million. It had last traded back in the early 1950s, in the pre-decimal currency era, for about a thousand pounds. The "mint original condition", three-bedroom home up the hill from the famous Sydney beach, provides a window into the extraordinary escalation of Australian real estate prices. Had its value merely tracked the rate of consumer price inflation over those 68 years, today that 1,000 pounds would only be worth about $37,000. It is not hard to see why the level of home ownership — once a defining feature of Australian society — has tumbled.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-11-01/real-estate-housing-affor…
# NSW, Home ownership, Housing affordability, Housing market.Billionaire wants to build windowless college dorm that is basically a ‘prison’
Gino Spocchia (No paywall)An architect has reportedly resigned from a billionaire-backed student halls project because its rooms are windowless, and are “unsupportable from my perspective as an architect, a parent, and a human being”. Charles Munger, the wealthy donor-turned “amateur architect”, is reportedly behind the proposed development of Munger Hall, which will house students from The University of California in Santa Barbara. (Independent)
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/warren-buffet-…
# International, Rent, Sub-letting.Concern proposed planning law change to increase number of trees in Canberra could drive up house prices
Antoinette Radford and Elizabeth Byrne ABC (No paywall)Canberra could soon double down on its reputation as the bush capital under proposed changes to planning laws, which would result in more trees being planted in newer suburbs. The potential changes to the planning laws would compel new residential developments to have at least 20 per cent tree canopy coverage. The ACT government hopes that additional tree coverage will cool the city, and set the territory firmly on track to reaching its goal of 30 per cent tree canopy coverage. ACT Environment Minister and Greens MLA Rebecca Vassarotti said the proposed changes would ensure green space and cooler temperatures for some of Canberra's newer suburbs.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-10-30/proposed-tree-canopy-law-…
# Australia, Climate change, Housing market, Planning and development.