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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. 

Our main email newsletter, Tenant News is sent once every two months. You can subscribe or update your subscription preferences for any of our email newsletters here.

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

Publish date
Key topics

‘To get out is an absolute struggle’: landmark study sheds light on Australians sleeping rough

Stephanie Convery
The Guardian (No paywall)

Jorey would remain homeless for nearly 20 years. His story overlaps with thousands of others who have experienced homelessness, and a new report from the Australian Alliance to End Homelessness and the Centre for Social Impact at the University of Western Australia (UWA) has brought them together. Released on Monday, the report, titled Ending Homelessness in Australia: An Evidence and Policy Deep Dive, draws on surveys collected from 20,953 people who have come into contact with homelessness services across Australia over the past 10 years. Joint the webinar for the launch at: [https://www.csi.edu.au/events/ending-homelessness-in-australia/]

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2022/feb/07/to-get-out-is-an…

# Australia, Discrimination, Health, Homelessness.
 

Housing demand is driving rent up. Here are your options when faced with a rent increase in Queensland

Michelle Gately
ABC (No paywall)

Could you stretch your budget to meet an extra $120 a week in rent? When Yeppoon woman Brandi Gilligan's landlord proposed a 30 per cent increase, she tried to find a new rental within the family budget. But the alternative is just as difficult for families in regional Queensland who are trying to move in a market where vacancy rates are just tipping above zero. The bad news for tenants is that Queensland, like most states, does not have regulations limiting how much landlords can increase rents by. ... The chief executive of advocacy group Tenants Queensland, Penny Carr, said ... "Tenants are pretty scared to lose their tenancy and what they're doing is trading off their rights to try to secure the tenancy in a more ongoing way. ... The Australian Capital Territory probably has the most robust regulation of rent increases across the country, and they require a landlord to apply to the tribunal if a tenant doesn't agree to a rent increase that is over the CPI (Consumer Price Index). It's the landlord who has to make the argument."

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-02-03/rent-increase-rules-expla…

# Australia, Rent, Housing market.
 

Private rented sector white paper to be published in the spring

Lucie Heath
Inside Housing (Paywall)

From the United Kingdom ... A “landmark” white paper outlining new regulations for the private rented sector will be published in spring, the government has confirmed. n a separate Levelling Up White Paper, published by ministers today, the government confirmed that its long-awaited proposals outlining changes to the private rented sector will be published within the next few months. ... It will also set out how the government intends to end Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions, a pledge that was first made by former prime minister Theresa May in 2019. Ministers said they will also “explore” the idea of a national landlord register and “set out plans for a crackdown on rogue landlords”.

https://www.insidehousing.co.uk/news/news/private-rented-sector-…

# International, Rent, Landlords and agents, No-grounds evictions.
 

What’s wrong with Australian mortgages? They’re fixed for shareholders, not home owners

Richard Holden
The Conversation (No paywall)

If you’re paying off a mortgage – or aspiring to – imagine if you didn’t have to worry so much about rising interest rates. That’s already the reality for US home buyers. Unlike in Australia, most mortgages in the US have a fixed-interest rate, locked in for 30 years. ... So why don’t Australian lenders offer 30-year fixed-rate mortgages too, like their US counterparts?

https://theconversation.com/whats-wrong-with-australian-mortgage…

# Australia, Home ownership, Housing market, International.
 

NSW, Victoria split on whether retirement communities should be able to ban younger residents

Mark Skelsey
(No paywall)

Two of Australia’s largest States are at odds when it comes to age restrictions in land lease communities, with NSW set to allow retirement operators to bar younger people becoming residents at the same time that Victoria has outlawed the practice. ... The Tenants’ Union has raised concerns that age restrictions are unjust for younger people who may wish or need to live in the community…and can conflict with (existing laws) which allows a home owner’s spouse or de facto partner, or a home owner’s carer, to have an automatic right of occupation of a residential site. They have suggested that if age restriction rules are to be permitted, clear exemptions should be prescribed to clarify the situation.

https://www.downsizing.com.au/news/1075/NSW-Victoria-split-on-wh…

# TUNSW in the media Australia, Discrimination, Land lease communities, Young people.
 

Rents are up more than 30 percent in some cities, forcing millions to find another place to live

Abha Bhattarai
(No paywall)

From the United States ... Rising rents are expected to be a driving force in inflation this year and have been an ongoing policy challenge for the Biden administration. Kiara Age moved in less than a year ago and now it’s time to move again: Rent on her two-bedroom apartment in Henderson, Nev., is rising 23 percent to nearly $1,600 a month, making it impossibly out of reach for the single mother. ... Rental prices across the country have been rising for months, but lately the increases have been sharper and more widespread, forcing millions of Americans to reassess their living situations. ... he pandemic has exacerbated inequalities in many parts of life, and housing is no different. Homeowners benefited from rock-bottom interest rates and surging home prices, while renters have faced surging costs with little reprieve. (The Washington Post)

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2022/01/30/rent-inflatio…

# International, Rent, Coronavirus COVID-19, Federal Government, Housing market.
 

Stop gaslighting us! Gas is bad, for people and planet

Rose Mary Petrass
The Fifth Estate (No paywall)

New research has found that gas-burning stove tops are leaking the greenhouse-gas (GHG) equivalent of half a million petrol cars, not to mention the health risk of leaking methane in our homes. Shockingly, more than three quarters of methane emissions from stove tops were leaking into houses while the appliances were not in use.

https://thefifthestate.com.au/innovation/residential-2/stop-gasl…

# Australia, Utilities electricity water gas, Climate change, Health.
 

Rent rises and record-low vacancy rates lead to long-term hotel stay for Yeppoon family

Katrina Beavan and Paul Culliver
ABC (No paywall)

When Yeppoon local Brandi Gilligan's rent increased by $120 a week she decided to try her luck finding another rental home more within the family's budget. It seemed like a sensible idea at the time. Ms Gilligan had never experienced obstacles to renting before, her partner had a stable income and the pair had a good rental history. But a statewide housing crisis in regional areas has stopped the family in their tracks. After months of application rejections the family moved into a hotel three weeks ago in a last-ditch effort to avoid homelessness. "We've applied for multiple rentals, and we've been told that there are about 40 to 50 applications per house," Ms Gilligan said. ... Queensland Council of Social Service (QCOSS) chief executive Aimee McVeigh said families like Ms Gilligans' are at the coalface of a statewide housing crisis that has shown no sign of improving in 2022. "Unfortunately, [Ms Gilligan's] really awful story is not a unique story," Ms McVeigh said.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-02-01/regional-queensland-renta…

# Australia, Rent, Homelessness, Housing affordability, Personal stories.
 

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