Millers Point

Friday, 15 May 2015

Three historic Millers Point terraces sell at auction for a total of $6.7 million

May 15th 2015
49-51 Kent Street are two of the state-owned historic terraces at Millers Point to have sold at auction
Three state-owned historic terraces at Millers Point have sold at auction for a total $6,715,000 and all for above their reserve prices.

The Georgian-style sandstone terraces were all bought by local buyers on Thursday night and were fiercely contested by about five groups vying for each property, according to a source in the room.

The sales take to 15 the number of former housing commission properties sold so far, generating $33.5 million for the state government.

39 Kent Street, Millers Point.
The highest sale on Thursday was an 1855-era Georgian-style residence on 148 square metres that sold for $2.54 million. McGrath's Peter Starr had set a pre-auction guide was $2 million to $2.2 million.

The five-bedroom house was the most contested of all properties on the night likely because of its size, a 6.3-metre street frontage and it has right of way through a breezeway, the source said.

The property next door had the same pre-auction guide, but sold for $2.45 million. Set on 123 square metres, it had four bedrooms and two bathrooms.

50 Argyle Place, Millers Point

Both adjoining homes have harbour views from the rear.

The surprise result of the night was the smaller 1860s-era terrace also on Kent Street that sold for $1,725,000.

Billed in the marketing as a "colonial treasure", the rundown three-bedroom property had a guide of $1.5 million to $1.6 million and was hoped to match the prices of the matching terrace next door in slightly better condition that sold in March for $1,624,000.


Add caption

Historic Millers Point terraces sell for $6.7 million 49-51 Kent Street are two of the state-owned historic terraces at Millers Point to have sold at auction

Despite the strong results McGrath's Richard Shalhoub has not changed his $4 million-plus guide on the prize of the Millers Point sell-off, a six-bedroom residence on Argyle Street.

The freestanding 1830s residence, called Grimes Cottage, is one of the oldest residential buildings in Sydney. It goes to auction next Thursday evening.

Chief executive of Government Property, Brett Newman, said in a statement: "A conservation management plan endorsed by the Heritage Council is attached to each property to protect and guide purchasers' plans for restoration, repairs and maintenance."

The sales are expected to fund new housing on Sydney's outer suburbs Lurnea, Condell Park, Padstow, Warilla, Mount Warrigal, Chester Hill, Yagoona, Gymea, Kingswood, Casula, Beverly Hills and Miranda.

RESOURCED: http://news.domain.com.au/domain/real-estate-news/three-historic-millers-point-terraces-sell-at-auction-for-a-total-of-67-million-20150515-gh2878.html

Thursday, 14 May 2015

Millers Point public housing crisis: Struggle Street in central Sydney captured by filmmaker Blue Lucine


Blue Lucine said she will continue filming in Millers Point until the situation is resolved. Picture: John Appleyard
“The State Government has said they need to sell this public housing to build more public housing which sounds reasonable enough until you do some research and it has become evidently clear that there is not much profit to come from this.

“If anything all it is going to do is damage our history and social consciousness. We are talking about Sydney’s older community with working class roots that helped build the wharves and the government just want to shuffle them off to make room for the rich and famous.”

Blue Lucine talks with long time Miller's Pont resident Barney Gardner. Picture: John Appleyard
The young filmmaker said she would continue shooting until the State Government’s deadline for the completion of the sell-off in March 2016. “I will be here filming until the end, whether that is the residents chaining themselves to their fences – I have come too far to stop now,” she said.

“The important thing for me between now and then is to keep releasing small parts of the documentary online so the public can keep up with the situation.”


 
 
Ms Lucine said the plight of Millers Point was synonymous with struggling communities across the globe.

“This is not just happening in Millers Point, we are seeing this struggle everywhere where the concept of community is really changing and people are able to buy their social status instead of earning it,” she said.

“My film looks at the way money can push people out of the way simply because their land is valuable.

“If we push everyone who isn’t wealthy out of the city then the life of our city will die, there will be no diversity and no culture.”

For more information about Forced Out or to help fund it visit:
documentaryaustralia.com.au/films/1839/forced-out


RESORCED: http://m.couriermail.com.au/news/millers-point-public-housing-crisis-struggle-street-in-central-sydney-captured-by-filmmaker-blue-lucine/story-e6freon6-1227354693120


http://www.news.com.au/national/millers-point-public-housing-crisis-struggle-street-in-central-sydney-captured-by-filmmaker-blue-lucine/story-e6frfkp9-1227354693120 

Saturday, 9 May 2015

Millers Point Three Years On

https://mirrorsydney.wordpress.com/2015/02/26/millers-point-three-years-on/

   

In 2012 I wrote a story about Millers Point and mentioned the threats to the community from the surrounding developments and the government’s proposed sale of public housing. Last year it was made official, the houses would be sold and since then residents have been fighting to stay in their homes and keep their community together.

MP Protest 1

It’s almost three years since I wrote about Millers Point, and High Street has a very different atmosphere. It has changed from one of peaceful community to one of struggle. Banners are hung over balconies, spray painted onto sheets in stencil letters: Millers Point Not 4 Sale; Say No to the Total Sell Off of Public Assets. The street has a stripped feeling, some of the houses already empty, others clinging on.

The building site beneath High Street is busy as the Barangaroo project continues. The construction site makes a mechanical churning, digestive kind of noise, and I imagine this is the sound of it chewing up the past. Already the shape of the land below has been altered from the straight lines of the wharves. Now the curved shoreline is a neatly curated return to a past shape, based on an 1836 map. Blocks of sandstone, each labelled with a barcode for correct placement, have been assembled at the water’s edge. A larger sandstone block than the others has been unveiled on the point, renaming it Barangaroo Point.


Barangaroo Point
Image from the Barangaroo website.
 

Millers Point is facing disappearance. Some of the houses are now empty, their windows blank and curtainless, the residents moved elsewhere. Other residents are fighting, their houses hung with handmade signs: No One wanted to be here when I came here over 30 years ago, so now should I have to go? Some Millers Point residents have lived here for three or even five generations, and all speak with sadness and anger at the loss of their community. Many are elderly and have been fighting to stay in homes where they have lived for much of their life. Most recently, a petition for Mary Vo to stay in her home for the last few years of her life has been collecting signatures.

The state government says the houses must be sold for reinvestment in the public housing system, although how exactly the money will be invested hasn’t been revealed. The houses are being gradually auctioned anyway, and continual pressure is being put on those remaining in their homes to relocate. People fear that Wooloomooloo will be next, then Glebe, until all the city’s social housing has disappeared.

A 1960s plan for Woolloomooloo. From "Sydney 1842-1992" by Shirley Fitzgerald.
A 1960s plan for Woolloomooloo. From “Sydney 1842-1992″ by Shirley Fitzgerald.

Last year, just after the announcement the houses would be sold, I went to Millers Point one afternoon and spoke to the industrial heritage artist Jane Bennett who was painting the High Street vista, her easel set up near the fence. I looked through her folder of previous work, paintings of industrial landscapes that have disappeared, most of them around the harbour. It was late afternoon and a soft, sunset light was cast over the street. I watched for a little while as she painted and we talked about the Harbour Control Tower at the end of the street, where she was an artist in residence for more than a decade. Now the tower is owned by the Barangaroo corporation and will be demolished. (See Jane’s paintings of Millers Point, and read about her involvement with the suburb here.)

MP Jane BennettThe scene Jane was painting that day, the houses in the lush afternoon light, has already changed.

Construction seems to bear down upon it from all sides, Barangaroo down below, roadworks. Last June I went on the tour of the development. Like all the other visitors I was given a branded water bottle, cap and tote bag as I entered and then spent time trekking around the construction zone, asking the same questions everyone else seemed to be asking: what’s going to happen to the tower, and where had the fire been? The barcoded sandstone and reptile petting zoo was meant to distract me, but it didn’t, or at least not in the right way. My eyes drifted to the streets above, and the banners hung over the railing. I didn’t want the carefully arranged development, the park where I could go down to actually touch the harbour water, if I had to look at the rows of Millers Point houses glossed up and made into exclusive residences.

Millers Point Banners 2

Walking around Millers Point in 2015, I have a grim feeling. For as long as I have known it the suburb has been a gentle place in the city, small, old houses, with miscellaneous window decorations, and always people around, leaning over their front fences, chatting. It was out of step with the cut-throat city surrounding it, and that made it precious.

High Street MP

On Kent Street one house has on its front wall a carefully assembled collection of laminated A4 posters of heroes and villains: Cat memes next to Tony Abbott, Johnny Rotten next to Margaret Thatcher, Clover Moore next to John Howard, amid a storm of laminated monopoly money.

MP Collage
MP Collage 2

The protests continue. Follow their progress at the Millers Point Community, which has resident’s stories, history and links to other resources. There are also a number of facebook groups, including Save Our Homes.

MP Houses 1
 
 

Thursday, 7 May 2015

Pyrmont site up for grabs

Government Property NSW is looking to sell a non-core asset at 108 Miller Street, Pyrmont, which has the potential for redevelopment into city fringe apartments.

Pyrmont is said to be one of the fastest growth areas for high rise apartments, given its proximity to the city and the potential upgrade of the Bays precinct, which could be the new home for internet giant Google, as well as the Sydney fish markets, Barangaroo, The Star casino and the inner west entertainment suburbs of Balmain and Annandale.

Savills' residential site sale division's Stuart Cox and Neil Cooke have been appointed as the agents, and said, given the Miller Street site is seen as a "blank canvas", no price guidance has been made public.

Brett Newman, chief executive of Government Property NSW said the site is expected to attract significant interest for mixed use redevelopment, which will provide additional, much-needed inner city housing as Sydney continues to grow.

The NSW Government has been steadily selling down its property portfolio, where it deems the assets are non core - these include at Millers Point where it aims to sell 290 homes -  and has so far raised $26.8 million from sales

Mr Cox said the Pyrmont development opportunity is expected to attract strong interest from both local and offshore development groups.

According to Ged Rockliff of Savills residential projects, there is pent-up demand from domestic and international buyers for quality apartments in prime locations in Sydney, against the backdrop of limited competing supply coming to the market.

"The twin dynamics of strong demand and tight supply have pushed apartment prices higher. In particular, we have seen Pyrmont apartment prices increasing by 17.86 per cent in 12 months; the current median unit price now sits at $820,000," Mr Rockliff said.

RESOURCED: http://www.smh.com.au/business/property/pyrmont-site-up-for-grabs-20150505-ggus94.html 

Millers Point Properties On The Market

NSW Department of Finance and Services

06/05/2015
Government Property NSW CEO, Brett Newman, today announced the launch of three new Millers Point terraces to the market.

The properties, listed with Raine & Horne Double Bay, are located at 32, 42 and 56 Kent Street.
32 Kent Street is the first in a row of five terraces built in 1870 and retains many of its original features, including the fireplace surrounds, timber stairs and balustrade.

The terrace at 42 Kent Street, built in 1873, features harbour views and a private courtyard.
Part of a relatively intact row of four houses, 56 Kent Street was constructed in 1876 as an investment property with some of the earliest tenants being master mariners.

The terraces will join 4 Millers Point properties already on the market with McGrath Real Estate, including 39, 49 and 51 Kent Street which will go to auction in the coming weeks. Grimes' Cottage, located at 50 Argyle Place is also set for sale and is one of the few free-standing residences in the precinct.

Mr Newman said there continues to be an unprecedented level of interest in these historic properties.
To date 12 government-owned properties have been sold in the Millers Point precinct, generating $26.8 million to be redirected back into social housing projects.

"Each of the properties is sold with a Conservation Management Plan endorsed by the Heritage Council," Mr Newman said.

"These plans ensure the historical significance of the property is protected and guide owner's plans for restoration, repairs and maintenance. This includes development applications for the City of Sydney and Heritage Council approval."

As a result of being subject to both the Heritage Act 1977 and the City of Sydney Local Environment Plan, owners of any heritage listed property sold in Millers Point are required to meet the statutory obligations set under Heritage Act, Section 118, outlining the minimum standards of repair and maintenance.

These standards are applicable to all NSW state heritage listed buildings including properties sold at Millers Point.
 
- See more at: http://www.noodls.com/view/9B7FFBB8ADBA5FC00DFFDC153586484F3A11D486?368xxx1430893685#sthash.uilv5I7F.dpuf

RESOURCED: http://www.noodls.com/view/9B7FFBB8ADBA5FC00DFFDC153586484F3A11D486?368xxx1430893685  

Wednesday, 6 May 2015

Keen interest in property sales

The Chief Executive of Government Property, Brett Newman has announced the launch of three new Millers Point terraces to the market and plans for the sale via tender of a site in Pyrmont.
The Millers Point properties, listed with Raine & Horne Double Bay, are located at 32, 42 and 56 Kent Street.

The home at 32 Kent Street is the first in a row of five terraces built in 1870 and retains many of its original features, including the fireplace surrounds, timber stairs and balustrade.

The terrace at 42 Kent Street, built in1873, features harbour views and a private courtyard.
Part of a relatively intact row of four houses, 56 Kent Street was constructed in 1876 as an investment property with some of the earliest tenants being master mariners.

"The terraces will join four Millers Point properties already on the market with McGrath Real Estate, including 39, 49 and 51 Kent Street which will go to auction in the coming weeks," Mr Newman said.

More high-value assets on offer
 
He said Grimes' Cottage, located at 50 Argyle Place, was also set for sale and was one of the few free-standing residences in the precinct.

"There continues to be an unprecedented level of interest in these historic properties," Mr Newman said.

He said 12 government-owned properties had been sold to date in the Millers Point precinct, generating $26.8 million to be redirected back into social housing projects.

"Each of the properties is sold with a Conservation Management Plan endorsed by the Heritage Council," Mr Newman said.

"These plans ensure the historical significance of the property is protected and guide owner's plans for restoration, repairs and maintenance," he said.

"This includes development applications for the City of Sydney and Heritage Council approval."
The former C R Kennedy site in Pyrmont set for sale by tender is located at 108 Miller Street with additional frontage on Mount Street. The total land area of the site is 1,846sqm.

"The site, purchased by Transport for NSW for the now discontinued Inner-West
Metro, is in close proximity to the Sydney CBD, The Star Casino, Sydney Fish Markets, Darling Harbour, Barangaroo, light rail, Jones Bay Wharf and Cockle Bay," Mr Newman said.

"The property is expected to attract significant interest for mixed use redevelopment, which will provide additional, much-needed inner city housing as Sydney continues to grow."

RESOURCED: http://www.psnews.com.au/nsw/Page_NSWpsn41212.html 

Monday, 4 May 2015

Fight For Millers Point The Subject Of New Documentary

4 May 2015
By Thomas Williams
 
 
NSW Government attempts to sell off public housing on the CBD fringe and move our residents is being captured on film. Thomas Williams reports.
 
The sell-off of public housing in and around the Sydney suburb of Millers Point is being etched into history by a new documentary currently in production. The film, which is the first feature-length project by 27-year-old Sydney filmmaker Blue Lucine, is following the lives of Millers Point residents, including some who are refusing to leave their homes.

Ms Lucine’s documentary, which currently has the working title ‘Forced Out’, came into being shortly after former Minister for Family and Community Services, Pru Goward, announced in March 2014 that the NSW government would auction off 293 high-value public housing properties in Millers Point, Gloucester Street and The Rocks, relocating 590 residents.

The state government says it intends to complete this sale by March 2016, and will put sale proceeds back into the public housing system.

Ms Lucine says she began her film with an open mind, but soon faced a stark reality.

“I started with the opinion that maybe the government’s plan was the best thing for Sydney, but that changed once I was inside the houses and I saw the decay and just how badly everything has been left,” she says. “It just didn’t seem logical that the government would think selling that amount of property in such a short amount of time was a good idea.”

Produced by Tom Zubrycki and Helen Barrow, ‘Forced Out’ has similarities to Mr Zubrycki’s 1981 film, ‘Waterloo’, which documented the efforts of Waterloo residents who fought against public housing redevelopments in the 1970s.

“Waterloo also touched on exactly the same things: the planning process, community involvement, no bureaucratic accountability,” says Mr Zubrycki, who believes ‘Forced Out’ will bolster the cause of Millers Point residents.

“‘Forced Out’ will help residents by reassuring them that there are people who are with them,” he says. “The film will mean that whatever they do individually will be recorded in history, regardless of whether they’re successful or not, and I think that’s important.”

A 12-minute preview of ‘Forced Out’ was screened at Sydney’s Parliament House in March, exactly one year since Minister Goward’s announcement. Millers Point residents, media, members of the public and local Labor, Greens and Independent members attended the screening.

No Liberal party representatives were present, despite having been invited.



“My goal is to present a balanced argument, but it’s becoming more challenging because the Liberal government won’t engage, and they won’t discuss and they won’t be honest,” Ms Lucine said.

“I’m trying to show what they’re doing, and even giving them a chance to explain why, but they won’t.”

The previewed section of ‘Forced Out’, which focuses on economic, political and heritage issues, drew strong reactions from locals. Millers Point resident Eddy Hughes said such issues are increasingly important to the suburb’s fight.

“The emotional side of the argument isn’t working anymore,” she said. “No one cares.”
Barney Gardener, lifelong Millers Point resident and convener of the Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks Public Housing Tenants Group, said, “This sell-off is going to affect everyone, so what we need to do is band together and stop this ridiculous sell-off of our public assets.”
Barney Gardiner, one of the leaders of the fight to save public housing on the fringes of Sydney's CBD. (IMAGE: ANGELA NICHOLSON).
Barney Gardiner, one of the leaders of the fight to save public housing on the fringes of Sydney's CBD. (IMAGE: ANGELA NICHOLSON).
Ms Lucine says she doesn’t know how the rest of the Millers Point sell-off will eventuate, but promises to be there until the end, sharing residents’ stories.
 
“For me, the film is about awareness. My biggest fear with Australia’s culture right now is that we’re so insular, and that leads to really bad things in society when everyone ignores what’s going on.”
Having already received funding from Screen Australia and Screen NSW, the creators of ‘Forced Out’ are planning to launch a crowd funding campaign in June this year.

Tax deductible donations can currently be made to film via the Documentary Australia Foundation website.
 
- See more at: https://newmatilda.com/2015/05/04/fight-millers-point-subject-new-documentary#sthash.k8aALSVt.z8YyqtaX.dpuf

RESOURCED: https://newmatilda.com/2015/05/04/fight-millers-point-subject-new-documentary 

Millers Point: A Community Up For Sale

16 Aug 2014
By Thomas Williams

IMAGE: Angela Nicholson.
IMAGE: Angela Nicholson.
The NSW Government's determination to clear out public housing from one of the nation's priciest suburbs is matched only by the determination of long-time residents to stay. Thomas Williams reports.

Within the first six months of 1900, over 44,000 rats were killed and heaped into piles throughout some of Sydney’s oldest suburbs.

In an attempt to rid the city of the bubonic plague, professional rat catchers either threw the rats’ muddied corpses into Sydney harbour or destroyed them in special rat-friendly incinerators.
Those very rats, covered in plague-spreading fleas, first made land on the wharves which still hug the suburb of Millers Point.

Many local homes were marked for cleansing, disinfecting, demolition and burning, as the plague went on to kill 103 people in eight months. Today, homes in Millers Point are still being marked out, but for a different type of cleansing.

The New South Wales state government will auction off 293 high-value public housing properties in Millers Point, Gloucester Street and the Sirius building in The Rocks over a two year period, forcing 590 residents to be relocated.

Many of these residents, and even some whose homes aren’t being sold, have tied yellow ribbons to their front doors in solidarity against the state government’s plan.

Aside from such a ribbon, the red-brick frontage of 14 High Street is decorated with three small Australian flags and the words “NO SALE OF PUBLIC HOUSING” stencilled onto a white banner.

The home, like many others in the suburb, has barely changed as high-rises have climbed into the cityscape around it. Number 14 belongs to Barney Gardner, a 65-year-old who has lived in Millers Point since his birth.

Barney has moved house only once, making the trip from 12 High Street to 14 High Street in 1990.
You never stray far from the tree.

Sandwiched between commercial tourist precinct The Rocks on its east and the forthcoming high-roller-haven Barangaroo to its west, Millers Point is comparatively quiet, placid and residential. It’s dotted with slick offices but lined with pastel and earth-coloured terraces. The homes here are heritage listed, “But the people are too,” Barney says. “So if they get rid of the people, who’s gonna tell the stories?”



IMAGE: Angela Nicholson.
IMAGE: Angela Nicholson.
 
Approaching the Harry Jensen Activity Centre on Argyle Street, a large banner is visible across the centre’s fence-line - “OUR COMMUNITY NOT 4 SALE”. Inside, the space is weighted by a sterile linoleum floor, metal-framed chairs crowding small round tables, and a kitchen to the rear.

A whiteboard on the wall reads, “THURSDAY: Roast pork with gravy and apple, or french lamb casserole, and veggies.”

Barney twice offers coffee or tea or water or biscuits before we sit. He’s wearing a plaid flannel shirt, and speaks calmly. But just over a week before we spoke, he was standing outside Sydney Town Hall, yelling into a megaphone and comparing the state government’s plan to Nazism.

“We’re gonna stay in our places FOREVER,” he and over a dozen protesters shouted, their voices coldly subsumed by the wind.

In March, Pru Goward, then Minister for Family and Community Services, revealed that the state government will relocate the 590 evicted residents and reinvest the proceeds from the sale of their homes back into the social housing system, which has over 57,000 people on its waiting list.

Affected residents immediately received a letter from Family & Community Services titled “MOVING TO A NEW HOME”.

The letter opened with, “I am writing to you today to inform you that government owned properties in Millers Point area [sic] will be sold, including the home you occupy.”

Three residents died and two others were hospitalised in the following weeks.

“It can’t be directly attributed to what’s going on, but we know [the letter] did affect them,” Barney says, shuffling the newspapers and documents which sit in piles on the table between us.

As the convener of the Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks Public Housing Tenants Group, Barney speaks for many residents who cannot represent themselves.

According to Barney, Millers Point is “under attack” from a “blitzkrieg” whose main tactic is harassment via Specialist Relocations Officers, aka the government “goons”.

“We don’t wanna have a violent confrontation, but if they force that upon us that’s their doing, not ours," he says. “We’ll just be linking arms and chaining ourselves to gates and doorways.”

Specialist social agency Cred Community Planning were commissioned by the Department of Housing in 2012 to develop a Social Impact Assessment for Millers Point.

The assessment was only made publicly available on the day of Pru Goward’s sale announcement. Cred’s assessment declared that the public housing in Millers Point “is not generally considered suitable as social housing dwellings”, due to the expense of internal upgrades, high maintenance liabilities, and the fact that many buildings aren’t Building Code of Australia compliant.

In her sale announcement, Goward claimed that almost $7 million had been spent on property maintenance over the last two years alone.

Cred recommended that some of the funds from the sale of homes in and around Millers Point be used to build new social housing properties nearby, especially for elderly residents, adding that they may experience “ongoing negative impacts of stress and poor health outcomes”.

The state government dismissed this recommendation, and said that they want elderly residents to “build connections in their new communities”.

Cred’s assessment also noted that 55 per cent of Millers Point tenants have lived in the area for over 10 years, and that 12 households have lived in the suburb for at least five generations.

For many residents, the state government’s plan to sell their homes is not only an attack on the basis of their livelihoods but an attack on their emotional and historical links to the suburb.

For many, including Barney, it’s a losing battle.

“My mind wanders to despair because I see the elderly people here. The despair and the look in their eyes, the sound of their voice. But that helps me keep focused on what we’re trying to do,” he says. “Would the Americans allow a McDonalds to be built on Plymouth Rock?” Barney suddenly asks.

“[Millers Point] is only going to be, eventually, for the rich,” he says. “The root of all evil in this is money, nothing else.”

In an opinion piece published by Fairfax Media, Pru Goward claimed that there is “no room for nostalgia” when discussing the fate of Millers Point. Goward cites what she believes to be only “short term anguish [the move] may cause some tenants”.Barney doesn’t agree.
Barney Gardner, born and bred in Millers Point, but being moved out of the suburb as the NSW Government sells the community out from under him. IMAGE: Angela Nicholson.
Barney Gardner, born and bred in Millers Point, but being moved out of the suburb as the NSW Government sells the community out from under him. IMAGE: Angela Nicholson.
“I remember one day they had about 10 kids in ‘em,” Barney says, describing the billy carts that he and his childhood friends used to race down some of Millers Point’s steepest hills. The carts were home-made, with timber from the wharves and metal ball bearings from the maritime machine shop.
 
Barras, they were called. “There’s no footy oval, there’s no cricket pitch. So our playground was the streets,” Barney says.
 
Throughout its history, Millers Point’s wharf lineage has been its backbone. Wharf workers, including Barney’s father, used to make their way down onto Hickson Road at half-past six each morning to line up for work along ‘The Hungry Mile’, which leads from Walsh Bay to Darling Harbour.

Barney’s mother worked nearby in the wharf canteen. Her family was poor, as were most others in the suburb.

As a baby, Barney’s sister often slept in a dresser drawer. The Maritime Services Board owned much of the housing in Millers Point until an audit in the early 1980s made residents Housing Commission (now Housing NSW) tenants by default.

Barney, who has worked in the city council, in wool stores and with a local electrician, also ended up working in the waterfront around shipyards. “These houses were purposefully built for the maritime industry workers, people who worked in the wharves, went to sea, worked in stores, all manner of maritime industry,” he says.

Decades before his waterfront work, Barney and his childhood chums used to sneak past the wharf watchmen to get the best fishing spots. They would race their bikes around the streets of Millers Point, and learn to swim down at the Metal Wharf on Walsh Bay, which now houses offices and expensive condominiums.

“That was all our fun, and we wouldn’t swap it for anything else because it was really, really a good time,” he says. “A hard time but a good time.”

“It has been a wonderful life,” he says, before quickly self-countering. “It’s been hard... we’ve been blamed for a lot of things in this area since it first evolved, and one was the bubonic plague. Then they found out it was the fleas on the rats.... No one wanted to live here.”

The New South Wales state government has already begun searching for potential buyers for the high-value properties in and around Millers Point, asking for expressions of interest in both private and commercial circles. Beginning on the 13th May this year, the state government also began showing prospective one-bedroom public housing apartments to the Millers Points residents who are being moved out.

Between 10am and 12pm each Tuesday, in the Phillips Room of the Sirius building, the properties are shown on television screens. Residents interested in the apartments have to bid against each other, before the bids are collected and the winners drawn from a ballot.

Locals are calling it a “public housing lotto”. What’s more, if you miss the lotto the Housing department will decide where you’ll end up moving to.

The blue government-produced banner in the centre of the Phillips Room reads: My Property Choice.
Many Millers Point residents are concerned that a number of the places they’re being shown are in the Sydney suburb of Redfern, which has a crime rate well above the state average, while Millers Point is well below.

Yet, with over 57,000 people on the public housing waiting list, there’s a crucial unanswered question, “Why are they finding us places [to move to] but they can’t find people on the waiting list places?” Barney asks.

Barney wants to live out the rest of his life in Millers Point - to “age in place” is the phrase preferred by Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore. Yet there’s an overarching fear that residents can only go along with the state government’s ‘decide what you want or we’ll decide for you’ proposal.
“We’re fearful that the vulnerable people will be signed up and put in one of these places, what we call ‘rat holes’,” Barney says with a smirk. The people who built Millers Point now feel as worthless as the rats who once caused them so much trouble.

Elderly locals are quietly gathering for Thursday lunch as I leave the Harry Jensen Activity Centre. Outside, on the painted wooden panels of the bus shelter, a message has been written in dark permanent marker.
“People before Profit!”

Discuss this article

fightmumma
Posted Saturday, August 16, 2014 - 20:42
what that politician really means is: be a machine not a human being - but she wouldn't expose herself or her own family to the same level of displacement.  Displacement and big life changes are shown as factors in mental health issues due to the stress, lost sense of belongong and fragmented social connections that it causes.  She wants people who've built up multiple generations of social connectivity to move and forget that and start again - will she fund mental health services and social capital programs in the new areas that she forces these pepople to move to?
Another eg of idiotic people who do not live in the real world - making decisions that negatively affect the people who DO live in the real world...unaided by all that she herself benefits from and uses to line her own nest.
GraemeF
Posted Saturday, August 16, 2014 - 23:18
This is class war.
A right wing version of ethnic clensing. Economic cleansing. They truly hate anyone who is not wealthy having a normal life. The poor must suffer so the rich can feel superior. If the poor can live happily without vast reserves of wealth then they are making a mockery of spending your whole life in persuit of more and more dollars, therefore the poor must not be allowed to live happily.
It takes a truly nasty mindset to use faulty economic arguments to destroy a community. 
fightmumma
Posted Sunday, August 17, 2014 - 08:47
GF - important word being "community" because this gives us strength, belonging, happiness,security.
RossC
Posted Sunday, August 17, 2014 - 18:24
Revelations in ICAC about the millers point redevelopment.... Odds anyone?
Homerjunior
Posted Sunday, August 17, 2014 - 20:35
The Libs really are philistines. There is no justification for turfing people out of the Sirius building. Except for that guy running his own car park.
Youriyuri
Posted Monday, August 18, 2014 - 09:17
once again another brilliant article by one of the finest new independent newsoutlets rebuild by Mr.Chris Graham. although I would've liked if the article mentioned the history of undermining efforts to help the poor and lower middle class of Australia has been going on since the sacking of Gough Whitlam and previous goverments both Labor and Liberal with the Bob Hawke government followed by Paul Keating, then John Howard then Julia Gillard and now Tony Abbot is what can only be describe as a form of Classicide going on with the Neo-Liberal market fundamentalist movement going on in the western world. its a sad lament in the land of fair go and false egalitarianism. .
  

- See more at: https://newmatilda.com/2014/08/16/millers-point-community-sale#sthash.Lm00KRZB.dpuf

RESOURCED: https://newmatilda.com/2014/08/16/millers-point-community-sale 

Thursday, 30 April 2015

LORD MAYOR CLOVER MOORE's LETTER TO THE HON. BRAD HAZZARD; MP


THE LORD MAYOR OF SYDNEY
CLOVER MOORE


2 7 APR 2015

The Hon. Brad Hazzard MP

Minister for Family and Community Services
Minister for Social Housing
GPO Box 5341
Sydney NSW 2001
By email office@hazzard.minister.nsw.gov.au

Dear Brad

Congratulations

I write to congratulate you on your appointment to the Family and Community Services and Social Housing portfolios.

I look forward to working cooperatively with you for the benefit of our residents on the critical issues of housing affordability, provision of social housing, and homelessness within the City of Sydney Local Government Area (I-GA).

Sydney is in the midst of a housing affordability crisis that is threatening its economic and social sustainability. The cost of buying or renting private market housing in the inner-city is increasingly beyond the reach of low and middle-income earners, there is limited supply of key worker affordable housing; a lengthy, growing waiting list for social housing; and, rising homelessness.

I would like to offer you a briefing on the City of Sydney's Housing Issues Paper, which contains a range of proposals for Local, State and Federal Government to work together to improve housing affordability and diversity. The City is currently working with Urban Growth NSW to investigate opportunities for affordable housing on a number of urban renewal sites.

I read with interest your comments in the Sydney Morning Herald that you would consider retaining some public housing in Millers Point, recognising the impact of relocation on long-term elderly residents.
I strongly encourage the retention of some public housing in Millers Point, especially the Sirius apartment building, which was purpose-built for social housing and is home to mostly elderly residents.

I would also like to bring a delegation of Millers Point residents to meet with you.

The social impact study undertaken by SGS Economics and Planning for the Government stated that removing older residents from their homes could have negative health impacts. City officer's delivering services in Millers Point and The Rocks have reported significant levels of distress amongst tenants who do not want to relocate because of a long term commitment to the area and their wellestablished connections to neighbours and support services.

Sydney Town Hali 483 George Street Sydney NSW/ 2000
Phone 02 9265 9229 Fax 02 9265 9328 cmoore@cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au
O OLM2015 002348 HAZZARD CONGRATULATIONS MEETING REQUEST

The City remains concerned that the Government hasn't made a commitment to build new housing in inner Sydney or that plans for spending the proceeds of the sale on new social housing stock have not yet been made public.

Your staff can contact Julianne Brewer, Manager Executive Support on 9265 9591 or at jbrewer@cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au  to arrange a meeting.
Clover ore

Lord Mayor of Sydney

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

MILLERS POINT: CITY COUNCIL of SYDNEY NOTICE of MOTION. MON. 27th APR. 2015‏

ITEM 14.7 Millers Point 27 April 2015 
It is resolved that: 
  1. Council note: 
 
  1. the new Minister for Social Housing, Brad Hazzard, has stated his commitment to transparency for the Millers Point sell-off process through setting up a bank account specifically for the proceeds; 
Imagethe Minister has recognised the importance of maintaining the older residents within the community of Millers Point; and 
Imagethe City's recommendation for continued commitment to providing support to the Millers Point community through financial aid to the Redfern Legal Centre; 
  1. Council welcome the Minister's statement that he would consider retaining some public housing in Millers Point; and 
  1. Council note that the Lord Mayor has written to the Minister for Social Housing, to.Image 
Imagereconfirm the City's commitment to working with the State Government on the critical issues of social housing provision, homelessness and housing affordability in the City of Sydney; 
  1. request that the Lord Mayor and a delegation of Millers Point residents meet with the Minister; 
  1. strongly encourage the retention of some public housing in Millers Point, especially the Sirius apartment building; and 
Imagereiterate the City's concerns that the NSW Government has not made a commitment to build new housing in inner Sydney or release details on how the proceeds of sale will be spent on new social housing. 

Saturday, 25 April 2015

Calling on Minister Hazzard to open the door to Millers Point Residents


Brad Hazzard

This Council cycle my Notice of Motion will call on new Minister for Social Housing, Brad Hazzard, to meet with Millers Point residents and place their health ahead of the Government’s asset sales.

 Recent comments by the new Minister indicate that he is willing to consider the human impact of this sale. I remain hopeful that the Minister will recognise the strong case presented by the residents and find a way to compromise on the remaining homes.

Around half of the residents have been moved out in the last year. The psychological strain placed on these vulnerable residents, both those who have already moved and those who are fighting to remain in place, has been immeasurable. It is vital that we seize the opportunity to establish a working relationship with the new Minister.

Aside from this my notice of motion also calls on the Minister to make public the Government’s detailed plan for how the money from the property sale will be spent. To date $27 million has been raised.

Last week it was announced that some of the money has been used to finance new public housing units in Lurnea. Moving inner city public housing tenants to the fringes of the metropolitan area isn’t the answer.

While I support the creation of new public housing stock the Government needs to create more right across Sydney, especially in inner-city areas where there is better public transport, health services and employment access. The Macquarie Fields riots of 2005 sent a strong message that moving large public housing estates on the suburban fringes is poor social policy. Ten years on the Government needs to understand that location and design play a strong element in the social outcomes of public housing estates.

Sydney is a city of strong socio-economic divides. If we are going to meet the challenges of the future it is critical that place diversity at the front and centre of all our communities.

You can read my notice of motion here.

RESOURCED: https://clrdoutney.wordpress.com/2015/04/24/calling-on-minister-hazzard-to-open-the-door-to-millers-point-residents/ 

Grant to Redfern Legal Centre for Millers Point Residents

Posted on | Leave a comment      

       redfern legal centre

When former Family and Community Services Minister Pru Goward announced the sale of public housing properties in Millers Point in March last year, she began the process of destroying the Millers

Point Public Housing Community. In the past 12 months half of the public housing residents have been moved to other properties. For many of these residents it has meant leaving their friends and community behind and often finding themselves socially isolated.

Last April the City gave the Redfern Legal Centre, who are specialists in public housing related issues, a grant of $100 000 to provide advocacy and advice to the affected tenants. During this time 130 tenants have received support from the Centre. They are now seeking an additional $50 000 funding for another six months.

Of the remaining residents a large number are elderly and have disabilities and complex needs. There will be considerable pressure on these vulnerable residents to leave within the next year to fit in with the Government’s sale deadline. This support is critical when you consider the issues some tenants face including finding appropriate properties to meet their mobility needs in terms of physical access and transport, psychological impacts and social isolation, as well as domestic support needs. Some of these residents may also be finding that they no longer meet the Department of Family and Community Services’ criteria for public housing.

I will continue to support these residents in their fight to stay in their homes. It is critically important that these residents receive this independent support. I want to thank the staff at Redfern Legal Centre for their ongoing work and dedication to these residents. Given the scope and complexity of this work I believe this grant is not only appropriate but also excellent value for money in terms of the services it provides

For those of you wishing to support the residents you can sign the following petitions:
Save Myra from eviction
Save Flo from eviction
Save Mrs Vo from eviction
Save the Millers Point Workers Flats

RESOURCED: https://clrdoutney.wordpress.com/2015/04/24/grant-to-redfern-legal-centre-for-millers-point-residents/ 

Wednesday, 22 April 2015

A dozen Millers Point homes to hit the market as State Government’s public housing sell-off continues

This property at 39 Kent St, Millers Point, is expected to fetch more than $1.6 million.
This property at 39 Kent St, Millers Point, is expected to fetch more than $1.6 million. Source: Supplied

A FURTHER 12 properties will soon be sold as a part of Government Property NSW’s Millers Point sell off, with the first three of the lot currently on the market. 
        

A three-bedroom terrace at 39 Kent St is expected to sell for more than $1.6 million at auction, in line with the prices fetched for some of the previously sold properties.


A four-bedroom terrace at 51 Kent St and a five-bedroom terrace at no. 49 are also currently on the market and are expected to fetch well above $1.6 million.

McGrath agent Peter Starr is selling two former public housing properties in Millers Poin
McGrath agent Peter Starr is selling two former public housing properties in Millers Point. Source: Supplied
McGrath Edgecliff’s Peter Starr, who is listed as a selling agent on two of the three properties, said the homes had received a good number of inquiries since being listed on April 13.


He said buyers were attracted to the style and location of the homes and wanted to take advantage of the opportunity to buy the heritage properties, despite some of them being in a dilapidated state.


“No. 39 would probably require a bit more work than the other two, the other two are definitely
livable,” Mr Starr said.


He said the heritage conservation guidelines that came with the properties had not deterred buyers.

The home at 39 Kent St, Millers Point requires a bit of work.
The home at 39 Kent St, Millers Point requires a bit of work. Source: Supplied
   


Late last year, City of Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore proposed a plan to change the guidelines and prevent buyers from extending the homes in any way.


As a result, the NSW Heritage Council has asked for the area’s planning controls to be reviewed.


NATIONAL TRUST: MILLERS POINT SALES WILL DEVASTATE AREA’S HERITAGE


RESIDENTS RALLY TO SAVE HOMES


“The City’s view is that the existing height and floor space of a property within the Millers Point Heritage Conservation Area should be used as the new planning control. Minor changes to properties may be considered if the changes don’t jeopardise their heritage value,” Ms Moore said.


“These new planning controls will help protect these buildings as they move into private ownership. The proposal has the strong support of the Central Sydney Planning Committee — a joint City of Sydney and NSW Government planning body.”
Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore has proposed a plan preventing buyers from adding floor sp
Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore has proposed a plan preventing buyers from adding floor space to the existing properties. Source: News Corp Australia
Currently approval must be sought from the NSW Heritage Council if the new owners of the heritage homes wish to make any changes that affect the physical fabric of the place, including the buildings themselves.

A spokesman from the department of Family and Community Services said if a property is listed as a heritage item at both the State and local level, approval for any change to the property is required from the City of Sydney Council and Heritage Council of NSW.


“These properties are listed on the State Heritage Register, and under Section 118 — Minimum standards of maintenance and repair, requires that the owner must ensure the ongoing protection, weatherproofing, security and ongoing maintenance of the property,” the spokesperson said.

For sale: 49 Kent St, Millers Point.
For sale: 49 Kent St, Millers Point. Source: Supplied
    


For sale: 51 Kent St, Millers Point.
For sale: 51 Kent St, Millers Point. Source: Supplied
    To date, Government Property NSW has sold 12 out of the 293 propertiesthat were used as government housing, making just under $26.8 million.

The terraces along Kent St, Argyle Place, Windmill St and Lower Fort St have sold for between $1.624 million and $3.95 million.


Minister for Family and Community Services, Brad Hazzard, recently announced that the money made from the sales so far has been put into building 10 new two-bedroom seniors living dwellings in Lurnea in Sydney’s south west. The apartments are nearing completion with 99 new properties also underway in another 11 suburbs.


The three Kent St properties will go under the hammer on Thursday, May 14 at 6pm.

39 Kent St, Millers Point


MILLERS POINT FOR SALE: RESULTS SO FAR


26/08/2014: 29 Lower Fort St - $2.56m
21/08/2014: 119 Kent St - $1.911m
25/09/2014: 86 Windmill St - $2.27m
11/09/2014: 11 Lower Fort St - $3.95m
11/09/2014: 23 Lower Fort St - $2.685m
8/10/2014: 30 Argyle Place - $1.71m
5/12/2014: 24 Argyle Place - $2.35m
5/12/2014: 28 Argyle Place - $2.302m
5/12/2014: 32 Argyle Place - $2.15m
17/03/2015: 41 Kent St - $1.624m
16/03/2015: 43 Kent St - $1.625m
5/03/2015: 47 Kent St - $1.64m


LET US KNOW: DO YOU AGREE WITH HOW THE SALES PROCEEDS ARE BEING SPENT?