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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

Six more train stations added to high-density housing plan

Alexandra Smith
The Sydney Morning Herald (Soft Paywall)

The Minns government’s signature density reforms around train stations will be expanded, adding an extra six stations to the existing 31 after several councils asked for more suburbs to be included. Belmore, Lakemba and Punchbowl stations will be added, as well as Cardiff and Cockle Creek near Newcastle, and Woy Woy on the Central Coast. All six were suggested by the local councils for inclusion. The bulk of reforms, which will amend planning controls to allow six-storey residential apartment buildings within 400 metres of the station in the 37 chosen suburbs, are due to start this month.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/when-the-new-planning-rules-…

# Legal significance NSW, .
 

Power to the renters: Demographic changes give them new clout

The Herald's View
The Sydney Morning Herald (Soft Paywall)

For many Sydneysiders, renting or trying to rent is a brutal reminder of their true powerlessness in a society that values homeownership as shelter and investment. Through no fault of their own, renters have been made to pay the spiralling costs for a roof over their heads while owners continue to receive all sorts of assistance to ease their burden. Little has been done to help tenants face the runaway train of paying rent in Sydney. But the realisation they may shape the future of politics in marginal seats has raised the possibility that renters possess powers never realised.

https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/power-to-the-renters-demogra…

# Hot topic NSW, Rent.
 

I joined a bunch of landlord groups to subtly manipulate them into being better people

Luke
This Is A Lot (No paywall)

So, about a year ago I joined a bunch of a landlord groups on Facebook and Nextdoor. I’ve worked diligently to manipulate them into taking pro-tenant actions, and it actually has kind of worked? Here’s the general strategy: 1. Make some posts detailing how I run my “businesss”1 and ask a few questions. 2. Establish credibility by earning their trust by posting helpful information. 3. Politely suggest taking actions that unequivocally benefit the tenant by dressing them up as beneficial to the landlord.

https://www.thisisalot.com/unhinged-opinions/i-joined-a-bunch-of…

# Hot topic International, Rent.
 

We must incentivise landlords and tenants to access energy improvement grants

Dan Wilson Craw
Politics Home (No paywall)

Private renters have been more exposed than other tenures to increased energy costs in the two years since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. One in four private renters is in fuel poverty, and 55 per cent of private rented homes have an energy efficiency rating of band D or below, compared to 30 per cent of social housing. Poor energy efficiency means it costs hundreds, sometimes thousands, of pounds more to keep your home warm. Many of us simply can’t afford to, so put up with cold temperatures in our homes. This has a direct impact on our health – but an indirect one, too, because cold temperatures lead to condensation and mould. The health impacts of poor housing are estimated to cost the NHS £1.1bn per year.

https://www.politicshome.com/thehouse/article/incentivise-landlo…

# Hot topic International, Utilities electricity water gas.
 

‘If I Had to Leave This Place, I Would Probably Leave New York’

Wendy Goodman
Curbed (No paywall)

Joshua Charow’s book, Loft Law, The Last of New York City’s Original Artist Lofts, from Damiani Books, tells the story, through pictures and interviews, of the people who live in some of the most romantically bohemian spaces in the city. Many of them have lived in their lofts for decades, even before it was legal to do so, fixing up the drafty, derelict spaces. Gentrification followed, and landlords did their best to cash in, often by getting rid of these pioneers. So a band of artists got together in 1979 and worked to found what became the Loft Law in 1982, which helped establish the Loft Board to oversee the conversion of raw spaces into rent-stabilized residential homes.

https://www.curbed.com/article/brooklyn-artists-loft-law-joshua-…

# Must read, History International, Rent.
 

Inaction on no-fault evictions blamed for thousands facing homelessness

Gwyn Topham
The Guardian (No paywall)

Households in England have been threatened more than 80,000 times with homelessness due to no-fault evictions since the Conservative government first announced it would outlaw the practice, according to a homeless charity. Promised legislation to scrap section 21 notices, which allow landlords to end tenancies at will with just two months’ notice, were first announced in parliament exactly five years ago, on 15 April 2019, by the then prime minister, Theresa May, and were repeated in the Conservative manifesto, but the bill has been repeatedly delayed.

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2024/apr/15/no-fault-evictio…

# Hot topic International, Eviction.
 

Single mum with arthritis faces homelessness after 'absolutely disgusting' no-fault eviction

Liam Geraghty
The Big Issue (UK) (No paywall)

A single mum has called for people facing a no-fault eviction to be given more time to find a new home as she faces a race against time to avoid homelessness next month. Debbie Graham, 54, is desperately searching for a new place to live after receiving a Section 21 notice in February, leaving her until 26 April to find a new home. The part-time mental health support worker, who suffers with arthritis, said she now expects to be sofa surfing at her friends while her 20-year-old son Jamie stays with his grandmother after giving up on finding another private rented home. As the Renters Reform Bill looks set to be “watered down” with amendments when it returns to parliament in the coming weeks, Graham backed rent campaigners’ calls for longer notice periods so tenants can find a place to live. “It’s looking like I will be homeless,” said Graham.

https://www.bigissue.com/news/housing/no-fault-eviction-homeless…

# Must read International, Eviction.
 

Will pet bonds really be a win-win? I’m not holding my breath

Kristin Kelly
The Spinoff (No paywall)

Renting in New Zealand, generally speaking, sucks. At the time of the last census, home-ownership rates were the lowest they’d been in almost 70 years yet as a country we continue to think of, and regulate for, renting as though it is an interim measure on the path to the Kiwi dream. Compared to the OECD average, our rentals are expensive, and in short supply. Their quality remains lower than owner-occupied homes and in 2019 we ranked fifth-equal-lowest in the OECD for restrictiveness of land controls and tenancy security.

https://thespinoff.co.nz/politics/16-04-2024/will-pet-bonds-real…

# Hot topic International, Rent.
 

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