ABOUT

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.

We love sharing the news and hope you find it informative! We're very happy to deliver it for free, but if you find it valuable, can you help cover the extra costs incurred by making a donation

 

 

 


 

Archive

Publish date
Key topics

Boris Johnson’s planning reforms could turn southern England into urban sprawl

Simon Jenkins
The Guardian (No paywall)

The British government is trapped again by the picaresque politics of Boris Johnson. When the pandemic has subsided, the legacy of 2021 could yet be something more long-lasting – the permanent scarring of the landscape, courtesy of the 2019 parliament. ... At the root lies Johnson’s perfectly commendable ambition to “level up” the north and south. Britain has one of the most regionally divided economies in the developed world, with parts of northern England poorer than the regions that used to make up East Germany. Johnson rightly wants to divert wealth, talent, investment and productivity in that direction, but he has no clue what this means.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jul/25/boris-john…

# International, Housing market, Planning and development.
 

Home ownership plans ‘indefinitely shelved’ as soaring prices lock out young buyers

Jenny Noyes and Maeve McGregor
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Sydney couple Nina Betts and Harry Malcolm haven’t completely given up on the dream of owning their own piece of property somewhere in Australia. But their plans to buy have been put on ice since the pandemic hit and instead of falling, house prices everywhere went skywards. ... As for remaining in Sydney long term, they both agree it’s “not financially tenable” if they want to raise a family.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/home-ownership-plans-indefinitel…

# Australia, Home ownership, Housing affordability, Housing market, Young people.
 

There is a little-known two-tier system within social housing. Thousands of tenants are paying the price

Ethan Te Ora
(No paywall)

Debbie Port​ is less equal than other social housing tenants. The 45-year-old feels that injustice deep in her bones, like she does the penetrating cold at her flat. She feels the sting each week, in her bank account, when the rent comes out. And she is far from alone in that predicament: there are thousands of people in social housing, potentially more than 10,000, on the wrong side of an arbitrary policy line. n 2013, the National government passed the Social Housing Reform Act, rejigging who was eligible to receive the income-related rental subsidy, otherwise known as the IRRS. The current Labour Government, since taking power in 2017, has kept those settings in place. Read on ... (Stuff)

https://www.stuff.co.nz/pou-tiaki/our-truth/125681860/there-is-a…

# International, Public and community housing, Rent.
 

Calls to overhaul solar panel scheme for renters amid slow take-up

Annika Smethurst
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Environment groups and the state’s peak social and community sector body are calling on landlords to pick up the bill for solar panel installation on rental properties, amid a slow take-up of a government scheme. Under the 2018 Victorian government program, eligible landlords can apply for a 50 per cent rebate of up to $1850 for the installation of solar panels as well as an interest-free loan to cover the upfront cost. That loan is then repaid by the landlord or split with the tenant who contributes up to 50 per cent of the monthly repayment at a maximum cost of $19.27 a month. The program is part of Victoria’s Solar Homes Program, which is offering 650,000 solar panel rebates to owner-occupiers and 50,000 to rental properties over 10 years to lower electricity bills and reduce carbon emissions.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/victoria/calls-to-overhaul-solar…

# Australia, Rent, Utilities electricity water gas, Landlords and agents, State Government.
 

Watchdog orders more defects to be fixed in Sydney’s Opal Tower

Matt O'Sullivan
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

The builder and developer of Sydney’s Opal Tower have been ordered to fix defects in the 36-storey building more than two years after residents were forced to evacuate due to cracking. The state’s building watchdog handed formal orders to construction firm Icon and a company linked to developer Ecove on Thursday night due to concerns about incorrectly fitted aluminum shades on the tower’s facade, and defects related to fire-safety in the lobby areas. The orders to rectify the “serious defects” were also issued to the Sydney Olympic Park Authority, which owns the land on which the tower is built.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/watchdog-orders-more-defects…

# NSW, Housing market, Minimum habitability standards.
 

Leaving rehab: enhancing transitions into stable housing

Cameron Duff, Nicholas Hill, Hazel Blunden, kylie valentine, Sean Randall, Rosanna Scutella and Guy Johnson
AHURI (No paywall)

This research presents policy and practice recommendations to enhance the coordination of housing, health and social care supports for individuals leaving residential treatment for mental health or substance use problems. People who experience contact with a support service, particularly younger individuals with complex health, housing and social care needs, tend also to experience disrupted housing trajectories. This relationship is bidirectional, in that frequency of service contact is an indication of service demand and the complexity of individual’s health care needs. This research strongly endorses the ‘housing first’ model, which emphasises the centrality of stable housing, as a guide to enhance the coordination and integration of diverse housing, health and social care supports for individuals transitioning out of residential treatment settings.

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?pli=1#inbox/WhctKKWxXJLnJgwpvS…

# Research alert Australia, Public and community housing, Health, Homelessness, Young people.
 

‘Virtually no protection’: Why Australian homes are so cold

Sophie Miura
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Australia might be a sunburned country, but in winter, the cold reality bites: Our homes are not built to withstand the chill. This realisation has come into focus as thousands of people have left their heated high-rise offices to work from home during the pandemic.

https://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/life-and-relationships/virtuall…

# Australia, Housing market, Minimum habitability standards.
 

The plan to transform ‘overlooked’ Botany Road with offices, laneways

Megan Gorrey
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Sydney’s inner south will be transformed under a City of Sydney plan to raise building heights along Botany Road, boosting the number of towers and opening the corridor to billions of dollars of commercial investment. Buildings would top 17 storeys as part of the scheme to encourage office, entertainment and retail spaces, and boost the supply of affordable housing, on 57 hectares stretching from Redfern station to north Alexandria.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/the-plan-to-transform-overlo…

# NSW, Affordable housing, Local Government, Planning and development.
 

Housing News Digest Search

Publish date