Millers Point

Sunday 12 October 2014

Bulli public housing property sells for $860,000 at auction despite protest

A tiny fibro cottage in Bulli attracted a sale price of more than $860,000 along with a huge crowd on Saturday, as the Illawarra-based Public Housing Union staged a rowdy protest attacking the NSW Government for selling off public property.

In front of more than 100 spectators, the three-bedroom, one bathroom home, at Farrell Road, was auctioned for $861,500 – well above the reserve of $700,000.

About 20 protesters travelled from around the Illawarra to attend the auction, and carried placards saying “stop the sell-off of public housing” and “massively increase public housing now”.

“We built a garage, put down all the concrete, planted trees, put in carpet and put the gas on expecting to buy.''

During the official proceedings, auctioneer Lou Niceski had trouble being heard over the protester’s convenor Paul Matters who was shouting through a megaphone.

Mr Matters argued many Housing NSW properties like the Bulli home were being left vacant or sold off while there were still thousands of people on the government’s public housing waiting list and a growing number of homeless in the Illawarra.

Among the protestors were public housing tenants Eric and Rosemarie Earley, who have lived at a Woonona home since they arrived in Australian from Scotland in 1974.

Eric Earley: “When we moved here no one wanted to live here ... but now because the land values have gone up they think poor people don’t have the right to be here.”
 
Eric Earley: “When we moved here no one wanted to live here ... but now because the land values have gone up they think poor people don’t have the right to be here.”
 
A former steelworker and coalminer, Mr Earley claimed he had originally been told he would be able to buy his home from the government but that this opportunity had been taken away from him.


“We moved in and built a garage, put down all the concrete, planted trees, put in carpet and put the gas on expecting to buy,” he said.

“But then we were told we would never be able to buy, so we’ve been paying rent to them ever since.”

The 75-year-old said he was now worried he would be moved out of his long time family home, as many similar houses in Woonona and Bulli were being sold off by the government.

“When we moved here no one wanted to live here, because it was a slaughter yard but now because the land values have gone up they think poor people don’t have the right to be here,” Mr Earley said.
“But I am most worried about the people who are homeless – living on the beach at Coniston or under bridges in Sydney – when we’re selling off these homes or leaving them vacant for 12 months.”

The protesters – who were supported by a small contingent from Millers Point – planned to attend another Housing NSW auction at Point Street on Saturday afternoon.

The result of this auction is not known and Mr Niceski declined to comment on both auctions.
When asked about the decision to sell the Bulli homes, a Family and Community Services spokesperson said the government had sold 37 houses in the Illawarra over the past 12 months.

Thirty-eight new dwellings would be constructed in 2014-15, the spokesperson said.
“The department regularly reviews its property portfolio and makes decisions on sales based on the condition of the properties and their suitability for public housing,” a statement from the FACS said.

“The proceeds from the sale of the department’s properties will be reinvested in the social housing system to support the department’s housing priorities including redevelopment, maintenance and upgrading.”

Millers Point residents protest auction sale

Saturday, October 11, 2014
By Jim McIlroy
 
Residents and supporters of the Save Millers Point campaign protested outside the auction of another public housing property on October 8. About 30 protesters gathered outside Ray White Real Estate in Double Bay, holding placards and chanting, "Aristocrats, shame on you."

Millers Point public housing tenants' spokesperson Barney Gardner said: "Once again, this callous and greedy state Liberal government are selling off another of our 'assets'. This public housing property is being auctioned, whilst 57,000 are on the waiting list and countless numbers of our most vulnerable people sleep rough."

A statement by campaign supporter John Dunn on October 9 said: "Last night, an 1840s terrace at 30 Argyle Place, Millers Point, sold for $1.7 million, which was far above the expectations of the agents and the government ... There have been six house sales since the March 19 announcement [by the Coalition state government] to relocate all residents and sell all property in Millers Point within two years. All the houses sold since that time were already empty on March 19, and in fact three of them had been offered previously through auction marketing programs.

"It appears the government is very intent on emptying the [293] properties it owns in Millers Point, Dawes Point and The Rocks, but much less interested in selling them. The government has remained silent on its reasons for emptying these properties. The economics of selling them and destroying a community do not stack up.

"It appears the government wants few witnesses to its actions in Millers Point. They are on track to sell only a tiny proportion of the properties they have emptied, but they are on the brink of crushing a community that is strong, diverse and supportive."

"It is time for the government to face the people whose community in Millers Point it is destroying, and to begin to provide answers," Dunn stated.

[Click here for more information on the Save Millers Point campaign.]

From GLW issue 1028



RESOURCED: https://www.greenleft.org.au/node/57503