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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

Grenfell costs surpass £500m as council bill revealed

Robert Booth
The Guardian (No paywall)

The public costs of the Grenfell Tower fire have exceeded £500m after the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea revealed it had spent £406m on its response and recovery efforts in almost four years since the disaster. The sum is in addition to the costs to the taxpayer of the ongoing public inquiry, which hit £117m by the end of March this year, most of which was taken up with lawyers’ bills. The figures stand in stark contrast to the £300,000 saved in a cost-cutting exercise during the refurbishment of the 24-storey council block between 2014 and 2016 that led to combustible aluminium panels being substituted for the planned non-combustible zinc on the exterior of the block. The plastic-filled replacements fuelled the fire on 14 June 2017 which killed 72 people, the inquiry has already concluded. “It has already cost half a billion, and at the end of this awful process some people have estimated costs will reach £1bn,” said Emma Dent Coad, a Labour councillor in north Kensington and former MP for the area. “All of this is the consequence of saving £300,000 on cladding. The scale of the spending reveals the huge impact of this false economy.”

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/may/21/grenfell-costs-s…

# International, Public and community housing, Asbestos, lead, hazardous materials, Housing market, Local Government.
 

Government inaction on taxing land windfalls is hurting Australians, Liberal MP says

Shane Wright and Katina Curtis
The Sydney Morning Herald (Paywall)

Liberal MP John Alexander has criticised his own government for failing to properly capture the windfall profits flowing to developers around major infrastructure projects, warning without a new policy future generations will be left with ever-growing budget debt. The NSW MP, who is chair of the House of Representatives Infrastructure and Transport committee, said the federal budget would suffer ongoing budget problems if the government ignored calls for a form of a windfall gains tax on major infrastructure works like Sydney’s Western Sydney airport. Windfall gains are those which normally accrue to landowners who own undeveloped property that grows sharply in value because of rezoning or nearby new infrastructure such as light rail or a railway station.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/government-inaction-on-t…

# NSW, Housing market, Planning and development, Tax.
 

Racism and Housing

Martin Hilditch
Inside Housing (Paywall)

'Inside Housing 'is launching a new series of articles looking at racism and housing.

https://www.insidehousing.co.uk/news/inside-housing-launches-new…

# International, Public and community housing, Housing market, Race and ethnicity.
 

War on the demolishers? Probably not, and timing of NSW heritage review is curious

James Lesh and Cameron Logan
The Conversation (No paywall)

The New South Wales government has released a discussion paper expressing its ambition to review and “modernise” the Heritage Act (1977). ... One way to understand what has really prompted the review is to turn to the purpose of heritage legislation generally. Its primary stated objectives are to protect and promote heritage. ... Public confidence is paramount. Understandably, some suspect the hidden agenda of the NSW review is to fast-track development. Recent public comments by the state treasurer ... and government actions in connection with the Sirius Building ... erode confidence in the protection of heritage and urban governance more broadly.

https://theconversation.com/war-on-the-demolishers-probably-not-…

# NSW, Public and community housing, Heritage listings, Planning and development.
 

Black people 70% more likely to be impacted by housing crisis than white people

Dominic Brady
Inside Housing (Paywall)

A major report by housing charity Shelter found that Black and Asian people are more likely to experience unaffordable, unfit or unstable living conditions. Polling of 13,000 Britons found that Black people are 70% more likely to be impacted by the housing emergency than white people, while Asian people are 50% more likely to be affected. In total, one million Black adults (57%) and 1.8 million Asian adults (48%) do not have a safe or secure home compared with white adults. ... Other groups that are disproportionately affected by the housing crisis include people with significant disabilities, single mothers, low-income households and members of the LGBTQ+ community. You may read Shelter's report entitled 'Denied the right to a safe home' at: [https://assets.ctfassets.net/6sxvmndnpn0s/13hLYmEooTpZ79D9bxc57m/a4f1f800618c8504441418aea50a0b74/Shelter_Denied_the_right_to_a_safe_home_Report.pdf]

https://www.insidehousing.co.uk/news/black-people-70-more-likely…

# International, Disability, Housing market, LGBTIQ+, Mould, Race and ethnicity, Women.
 

How race impacts on people’s chances of living in a damp home or experiencing fuel poverty

Alex Turner
Inside Housing (Paywall)

From the United Kingdom ... Damp, mouldy conditions in social housing have led to shocking exposés in the national media recently, and sparked an investigation by the Housing Ombudsman. But in the first of our new series, Racism and Housing, Alex Turner digs into government statistics, to flag the less-talked-about fact that white residents are significantly less likely to be living in a home that is damp, or live in fuel poverty.

https://www.insidehousing.co.uk/insight/insight/how-race-impacts…

# International, Public and community housing, Repairs, Mould, Race and ethnicity.
 

Housing affordability: Essential workers forced to move hours from their jobs as rents and house prices boom

Melissa Heagney
Domain (No paywall)

Essential workers in Sydney and Melbourne are being forced to move far from where they work to afford to rent or buy a home, new research shows. Moderate-income workers such as nurses and teachers are struggling to afford housing and are moving away to avoid being in housing stress, defined as spending more than a third of their wage on housing-related costs. Check the media report at: [https://www.sydney.edu.au/news-opinion/news/2021/05/27/key-workers-pushed-out-of-sydney-and-melbourne-by-high-housing-c.html]. You will find the full report at: [https://www.ahuri.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0026/67607/AHURI-Final-Report-355-Housing-key-workers-scoping-challenges-aspirations-and-policy-responses.pdf]

https://www.domain.com.au/news/housing-affordability-essential-w…

# Research alert Australia, Rent, Affordable housing, Housing market, Planning and development.
 

The lesson for Australia out of Victoria’s property tax hikes: two out of three ain’t bad

Brendan Coates
The Conversation (No paywall)

Victorian treasurer Tim Pallas’s three-pronged strategy to raise an extra A$2.7 billion in property taxes over the next four years is a case of two out of three ain’t bad.

https://theconversation.com/the-lesson-for-australia-out-of-vict…

# Australia, Housing market, State Government, Tax.
 

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