Millers Point

Sunday 10 July 2016

The public housing dilemma dividing our suburbs


Jed Smith   news.com.au
The iconic Sirius building in Millers Point, with some of the best views in Sydney, has been sitting practically empty for over a year, with the Baird Government kicking public housing tenants out to redevelop the site.
The iconic Sirius building in Millers Point, with some of the best views in Sydney, has been sitting practically empty for over a year, with the Baird Government kicking public housing tenants out to redevelop the site.Source:News Corp Australia

THE unprecedented property boom sweeping our nation’s cities has driven house prices out of reach for most ordinary Australians.
 
Described as a “slow burn crisis,” by one academic, the real worry is how this price growth is affecting Australians who are already vulnerable and disadvantaged and how the growing gap between rich and poor could change the shape of our cities.

Ultimately, Sydney has become a “very, very divided” city, says University of NSW Professor of Housing Research and Policy, Hal Pawson. And he says those divisions are along the lines of wealth.

This division causes untold problems. In Paris and Brussels for example, home of some of the worst recent terror attacks in the west, their failure to integrate public housing tenants located in “ghettos” rife with unemployment on the fringes of the city, was seen as a key precursor to the unrest.

“We are certainly seeing an ongoing spatial polarisation of Sydney’s rich and poor, but more through the operation of the private housing market than through public housing policy,” says Prof Pawson.
“For decades now in Sydney there’s been a slow shift of low cost private rental property from inner areas towards much less accessible places on the city edge. And while a responsible government would have countered this trend by protecting and expanding inner city social housing that unfortunately has not happened”.


The iconic Sirius building in Millers Point, with some of the best views in Sydney, has been sitting practically empty for over a year, with the Baird Government kicking public housing tenants out to redevelop the site.
 
In Sydney, the property boom is seeing the bulk of inner-city Sydney’s once extensive public housing network dismantled and sold to developers with the government promising to spend the proceeds on building more affordable housing in cheaper locations.

But exactly what this will amount to remains unclear, says Prof Pawson.

“It would be very, very interesting to be able to analyse the quite significant building program the state government says it is undertaking on the back of the Miller’s Point capital receipts,” he says, referring to the sell-off of the Sydney harbourside public housing community at Miller’s Point.
“But we actually don’t know enough about what is being built and where,” he says.


This former boarding house at 5 Lower Fort Street, Millers Point sold recently at auction for $4.675 million. Not exactly affordable inner city housing.
This former boarding house at 5 Lower Fort Street, Millers Point sold recently at auction for $4.675 million. Not exactly affordable inner city housing.Source:Supplied
 A press release from the Housing Minister last year loosely listed several suburbs where replacement public housing would be built, though the size, scope and exact locations of the developments were not revealed.

Of the suburbs located in the greater Sydney area (Condell Park, Padstow, Chester Hill, Yagoona, Kingswood, Beverly Hills, Casula, Gymea, and Miranda) all but two (Miranda and Gymea) are located in the inner and outer southwest zones of the city, both areas already subject to the highest youth unemployment in the state.

In light of this, I took a trip from the city to Casula and Macquarie Fields, two neighbouring suburbs in the Campbelltown area, one of which is earmarked for a new public housing development and the other already home to a large public housing estate.

What was advertised as a 59 minute drive took closer to two hours and routinely slowed down to a bumper to bumper crawl.

After passing a large army base and barracks, complete with a sign asking me to give thanks for the road I was driving on because it belongs to them, I arrived at the Glenquarie Housing Estate in Macquarie Fields where a 2005 riot left several police injured.

The town centre consisted of two service stations, a Red Rooster, a McDonalds, a shopping centre, and the Glenquarie Tavern, which I found to be dominated by chart music, poker machines and a TAB.

The woman working behind the bar was a 20-year veteran of the public housing commission at Glenquarie. She didn’t have a problem with it. She’d managed to raise three children there (her youngest daughter was now at university). Her house hadn’t been broken into once in all that time though she knew of others who’d been broken into up to 20 times in the same period.

“It’s just the luck of the draw. Our street is pretty nice, not super nice, but everyone says hello, kinda, you know,” she said. The woman said she had no trouble picking up work locally “as long as you weren’t fussy” and willing to do cleaning jobs, bar work, and other odd jobs.

Google Maps might say that the drive from Campbelltown to Sydney city is just over an hour, but in traffic it’s more like two hours. Good luck if you’ve got a job in the city.
Google Maps might say that the drive from Campbelltown to Sydney city is just over an hour, but in traffic it’s more like two hours. Good luck if you’ve got a job in the city.Source:Supplied
 Macquarie Fields is located in the Campbelltown district, an area which was lumped with public housing in the 1970s in what was one of the most infamous chapters of Sydney’s urban planning make over.

“Campbelltown is a good example of a concentration of public housing infrastructure that was put there in anticipation of the growth in employment and services that never really happened or has taken much longer to happen than anyone expected,” says Prof Pawson.

“It was expected that there would be a lot of industry locating there in the seventies and these estates that were built around the time would be well located. But of course the economy has changed since then and not only did those jobs never actually happen but the employment structure of Sydney has been changing really quite radically, especially in the last decade and more and more of the job growth is in and around the inner parts of the city a long way from where the main concentrations of public housing are,” he says.

By shifting the city’s battlers to an area already lumped with the highest youth unemployment in the state, are we not just compounding their problems?

“If this produces a significant net increase in public housing then three cheers for that,” says Prof Pawson, of the government’s plans to sell-off inner-city public housing to be able to build a higher quantity of homes.

“But if these new homes are mainly being built in remote suburbs that’s far from ideal for people who specially need to be close to jobs and services to get their lives back on track.”
As Prof Pawson points out, building affordable homes is just part of the equation when relocating Australia’s most vulnerable people — a mix of the elderly, the abused, disabled, single parents, and key service industry workers.

Equally important is easy access to job opportunities, transport, and the social and cultural services needed to lead a good life. Replacing inner city public housing with new blocks in isolated city edge locations already suffering high unemployment suggests the government is not taking this issue as seriously as it should, says Prof Pawson.

The sale of properties like this at Millers Point might have made the State Government more than $100 million, but there’s little transparency about where that’s going. Picture: Adam Ward
The sale of properties like this at Millers Point might have made the State Government more than $100 million, but there’s little transparency about where that’s going. Picture: Adam WardSource:News Corp Australia
 
“The public housing system is becoming more and more stripped down in terms of what it can offer beyond a minimal service of providing emergency repairs. Doing more than that and providing community support, community development type input is something the public housing budget finds more and more difficult to stretch to,” he says.

“Living near public transport is the most important thing. If that’s the case then at least even if it’s gonna take you some time and cost some money to get to jobs and services you can do it without a car. Ideally, you have services close enough that you don’t even have to take a bus or train,” he says, adding:

“There needs to be opportunities to have a social life; the kinds of places where Australians meet and socialise. So things like sports clubs, social clubs, pubs, being near enough to somewhere like that is important if you’re going to have the opportunity to have a social life even if it’s a long way from employment.”

RESOURCED: http://www.news.com.au/finance/real-estate/the-public-housing-dilemma-dividing-our-suburbs/news-story/f848463016cc2692bd0916b226d4b490

#‎savemillerspoint‬ ‪#‎BattleForWaterloo‬ ‪#‎auspol‬ ‪#‎ausunions‬ ‪#‎nswpol‬ ‪#‎housing‬ ‪#‎socialhousing‬ ‪#‎community‬ ‪#‎publichousing‬ ‪#‎Sydney‬ ‪#‎nswisnotforsale‬
 

‘Rent Street': Millers Point emerging as Airbnb hotspot

Ingrid Fuary-Wagner, Jennifer Duke


 The government housing sell-off in Millers Point has had the unintended consequence of turning the historical suburb into a growing Airbnb hotspot where asking rents can be as high as $4500 a week.

Many Millers Point properties bought over the past two years are now being marketed to tourists on online home-sharing websites, including a Kent Street terrace that sold in mid-2015 for more than $2 million. It is advertised for about $650 a night.

The most common location for these homes is Millers Point’s main arterial road – Kent Street – which locals have dubbed “Rent Street” because of the many new renters, both short- and long-term.


Kent Street has been dubbed 'Rent Street' by locals due to a growing number of short-term rentals.
Kent Street has been dubbed ‘Rent Street’ by locals due to a growing number of short-term rentals.
 

“Millers Point is a residential zone and most tourist and visitor accommodation is not permitted,” a City of Sydney spokeswoman confirmed. Bed and breakfast accommodation is allowed where prior approval from Council is given, she added.

“Over the last eight months, three complaints have been lodged with Council and to date no notices have been issued.”

While many home owners are on 99-year leasehold arrangements this would not change the rules when it came to sub-letting, Corrs Chambers Westgarth partner Jay Andrews confirmed. When the leasehold is more than 40 years, the rights of the home owner become similar to those with freehold homes.

The state government has been selling terraces in the historic suburb for the past two years.
The state government has been selling terraces in the historic suburb for the past two years. Photo: domain.com.au
 
Last year, Council took action against the owner of 119 Kent Street for unlawfully running a tourism venture, as well as undertaking illegal renovations. The property was sold at auction for about $2.5 million – $590,000 more than the owner bought it for in 2014.

Despite this council action, many short-term letting homes continue to pop up for rent.

There are currently eight houses in the suburb up on Airbnb and similar sites, but locals say that number fluctuates throughout the year. There are 246 houses in Millers Point and Dawes Point, according to the 2011 Census, but the lion’s share of those are still in the hands of the government, awaiting sale.

Airbnb properties available across some of the City of Sydney.
Airbnb properties available across some of the City of Sydney. Photo: Inside Airbnb



Residents are worried that as more terraces are sold off, the number of Airbnb listings in the historic district will surge.

A lifelong Millers Point resident, who didn’t wish to be named, said it was “incongruous” to get rid of the local tenants and have buyers turn the homes into short-term accommodation.

“It’s a sign of the times, the property is very expensive,” she said. The median price in Millers Point is $2.43 million.

“Where once they were working class, and middle class people looked down their nose at them, middle class people are now buying in and maximising their return on their dollar,” she said. In June, all nine homes put up for auction in Millers Point sold under the hammer.

“The buildings are still here, that’s what people see, but what they don’t understand is that the heart and soul of the place has gone,” she said.

Properties in the Millers Point area


Semi-detached, row or terrace house, townhouse
Houses
 
One of the hosts in Millers Point using the Airbnb platform is local resident Robert Ness. He bought his Lower Fort Street property from the government six years ago and has rented out rooms in his home as shared accommodation on Airbnb for half a decade.

Despite hosting “quite a few” guests, his situation is different as he offers shared accommodation to those with an interest in history and architecture, he said. His home is not a registered bed and breakfast.

“I think the problem with Airbnb is when it started six years ago it was people living in a home with a spare bedroom who could make it available for occupancy,” Mr Ness said.

“But as it grew … people have milked it, bought investment properties and are absentee landlords. A person can rent it and stuff 15 people in – that’s the bad aspect.”

Millers Point Resident Action Group (RAG) chair John McInerney said he’d noticed a few Airbnb properties in the area.

“But as a residents association, we’d prefer people who were here for longer periods as they tend to get more involved in the community,” Mr McInerney said.

“The community has been destroyed, the living community has become an upmarket monoculture,” he said.

“There are still 250 vacant houses so who knows what will happen when they’re all bought.”

RESOURCED:http://www.domain.com.au/news/rent-street-millers-point-emerging-as-airbnb-hotspot-20160708-gppyxb/