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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

Millionaire nation: One in four Australian homes now worth more than $1m

Jennifer Duke
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

One in every four homes across Australia is now worth $1 million or more, with property owners adding hundreds of thousands of dollars to their net wealth during the pandemic. The valuation of the nation’s housing stock ... has revealed property owners in greater Sydney are now more likely than not to have a million dollar home, with 52 per cent of homes worth seven figures. In greater Melbourne, more than a third of homeowners can make the claim their property is worth over this amount.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/millionaire-nation-one-i…

# Australia, Home ownership, Housing market.
 

Turning down free money: landlords and the problem of the split incentive

Riley Brooke
Tenants' Union of NSW (No paywall)

On November 11 the NSW ban on evictions for impacted tenants ended. We’ve now moved into a period of transitional protections. ... Another change from November 11 is that renters who meet the eligibility requirements as 'Covid-19 impacted tenants' will now be able to directly apply for the residential tenancy support payment. While the relief payments were a welcome new initiative in the 2021 package, limiting the ability to apply for the payment only to landlords was a problem.

https://www.tenants.org.au/blog/turning-down-free-money-landlord…

# NSW, Eviction, Rent, Coronavirus COVID-19, Landlords and agents.
 

How the Pandemic Worsened a Housing Crisis in the Bronx

Jose A. Alvarado Jr.
The New York Times (Paywall)

In a New York City borough where residents have long struggled to afford their homes, thousands are now threatened with eviction as state pandemic aid dwindles. Livia Fernandez used to commute every day from her one-bedroom apartment in the Bronx to an Ecuadorean restaurant in Queens, where she worked as a cook and earned $700 a week. But when the pandemic hit New York City last year, the restaurant shut down, and she lost her job. Ms. Fernandez got Covid-19 in March 2020, and ever since she has felt weak and unable to work. Her two young daughters were also infected. For 20 months, Ms. Fernandez has not paid her $1,400 rent — she owes more than $28,000. Her landlord has yet to demand payment, instead hoping that Ms. Fernandez would qualify for a state pandemic relief program. But with the rent relief program now nearly out of money, Ms. Fernandez knows her housing situation is precarious. “Where will I go with two daughters?” Ms. Fernandez said. “I can’t live in the streets.”The pandemic has left millions of people across the country jobless and on the brink of losing their homes. But few places better illustrate the escalating housing crisis than the Bronx, where working-class residents have long struggled to afford the city’s rising cost of living. Before the pandemic, more than one-third of households in the Bronx spent at least half their income on rent.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/16/nyregion/bronx-evictions-hous…

# International, Rent, Coronavirus COVID-19, Housing market, Personal stories.
 

Blind and evicted: the last person to leave Sirius building

John Dunn
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Myra Demetriou passed away on October 23 at the age of 94. She is remembered not only as the face of the Sirius campaign, but also the last public housing tenant forced out of Sirius.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/blind-and-evicted-the-last-perso…

# NSW, Public and community housing, Estate renewal, Personal stories.
 

Healing trauma with whispers and clicks


ABC (No paywall)

When the pandemic kicked off and heaps of Australians lost work, the federal and state governments made an unusual commitment to protect renters from being evicted. But now almost all of those protections are gone. [Starts at: 57 seconds] (Triple J Hack)

https://www.abc.net.au/triplej/programs/hack/hack/13629682

# TUNSW in the media, Audio Australia, Eviction, Rent, Coronavirus COVID-19, Federal Government, Homelessness, Housing affordability, Housing market, No-grounds evictions, Personal stories, Regional NSW, State Government.
 

Hear Us: A National Tenants’ Bill of Rights Is Foundational for Race Equity

Nia Johnson
(No paywall)

From the United States ... Since the House passage of the Infrastructure and Investment Jobs Act, the Biden administration is seemingly confident about getting the Build Back Better Act signed into law. For anyone who cares about having a roof over their head, it’s notable that President Biden’s $1.75 trillion framework includes significant cuts from an original $3.5 trillion budgetary plan. More cuts can be expected to an already truncated plan as the bill moves through the Senate. Though many policymakers and pundits tout this legislation as an unprecedented investment in affordable housing, the optimism is unwarranted. Low-income tenants would likely agree, including people of color such as Michelle Sullivan. ... Today’s housing crisis is an affordability crisis. But it’s also a dignity crisis, a morality crisis, and a corporate power crisis that values profit over people. A national Tenants’ Bill of Rights alone won’t fully deliver equity and justice, but it’s an essential step in the right direction.

https://nextcity.org/urbanist-news/entry/hear-us-a-national-tena…

# Must read International, Eviction, Rent, Repairs, Coronavirus COVID-19, Housing affordability, Housing market, Human rights, Minimum habitability standards.
 

‘My life just went downhill’: New housing for older women facing homelessness

Lucy Cormack
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Staring down the barrel of homelessness at 55 after a marriage breakdown and a cancer diagnosis, Bee had lost everything. The once financially stable graphic designer had nowhere to go after living periodically with family, in temporary shared boarding houses and in her car. “My life just went downhill so fast and when you don’t have a job or money, no one is going to rent to you,” said Bee, now 66, who has asked not to use her real name. It is a common tale among women over the age of 55, the largest growing cohort of people experiencing homelessness. ... Responding to the crisis, the NSW government has committed more than $18 million to create 78 new dwellings in Seven Hills, Camden, Airds, Revesby, Merrylands, Peakhurst, Penrith and Maroubra. The sites will be leased to community housing providers and will be subject to a tender process for development and property management. All will exist solely for the use of older women facing homelessness. ... [Women’s Housing Company chief executive officer Debbie ] Georgopoulos said partnering with the government was a welcome step forward but conceded 78 dwellings was “a drop in the ocean. There are almost 5000 single women over 55 on the NSW housing waitlist. We know that will go up this year because of the pandemic ... ”.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/my-life-just-went-downhill-n…

# NSW, Public and community housing, Homelessness, Housing affordability, Housing market, Older people, State Government, Women.
 

‘You’re throwing money away’ and other renting myths – busted

Lauren Vardy
(No paywall)

As more Australians choose to rent each year, a growing number of people have questions about what’s involved in the renting process. Here are nine myths we regularly hear from renters and the truths behind them. (rent.com.au)

https://www.rent.com.au/blog/renting-myths

# Australia, Rent.
 

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