Built To Fail

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13/12/2016. Government- New Rental Strategy - Rebuilding Ireland. Pictured Minister for Housing, Planning and Local Government Simon Coveney TD speaking to the media on the Government strategy entitled the new rental strategy under rebuilding Ireland in Government Buildings this afternoon. Photo: Sam Boal/Rollingnews.ie
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From top: Housing Minister Simon Coveney at the Rebuilding Ireland launch last December; Dr Rory Hearne

The latest social housing and homeless figures are frightening and show a crisis that will worsen significantly in coming years

Dr Rory Hearne writes:

The latest figures included in the government’s Social Housing Status Report and the January 2017 Homeless Figures are frightening, in terms of the worsening housing crisis and the inadequacy of the government’s response to address it.

Dublin City Council will be building just 560 new social housing units in the coming two to three years based on current plans.

At this rate it will take at least 30 years to house those on the Dublin City housing waiting lists. While only 604 social housing units started on-site in 2016 in Dublin City, just five in South Dublin and there were no local authority housing units started on site in Cork City last year.

While the homeless crisis continues to worsen. There were 7,167 homeless people in January including 4,760 adults and 2,407 children which is the highest number of homelessness on record. Dublin is worst with 3,247 adults and 2,046 children homeless.

According to Focus Ireland 87 families with 151 children became homeless in Dublin in January, which their Director Mike Allen, explained “means that shockingly a child became homeless every five hours in Dublin during the month of January.”

Minister Coveney’s Social Housing Status Report is deeply worrying from a number of perspectives.

Firstly the plan claims that, “a rich construction pipeline is in place, which will see over 8,430 new social houses being built over the coming years”.

Yet 652 houses of this new ‘pipeline’ are already completed, as they were built last year, and should not be included.

But most worrying is the fact that only a fifth (1,829) of this new pipeline are ‘on site’ already. That means that the majority of the new social houses in the plan will not be built until 2019 or 2020 on current building schedules.

What this shows is that there is no way the government will meet its targets for new social housing construction (it claimed it would construct 26,000 by 2021), and so we are likely to see around 1000 new builds in 2017, perhaps reaching 2,000 in 2018 and 2019.

That is no where near sufficient to address the level of housing need. We need at least 10,000 new build social housing units delivered per year.

Unfortunately Rebuilding Ireland and the Department of Housing do not provide aggregate numbers of housing units being delivered by the different organisations and areas.

In order to get a picture of what is happening in reality on the ground in terms of delivery in the key areas of social housing need I have gone through the social housing projects and timelines outlined in the Status Update delivery for the four Dublin Local Authorities and Cork City and created this table below.

table

From this we can see that most worryingly only 604 social housing units have started on-site in 2016 in Dublin City, just five in South Dublin and there were no local authority housing units started on site in Cork City last year.

In total just a third of the new social housing units outlined for these key areas started on site in 2016.

These figures also show that a significant proportion (37% across these areas, and 48% in Dublin City) of new social housing units are not being built by local authorities but by ‘Approved Housing Bodies’- housing associations, like Respond, Tuath, Cluid and so on.

At a national level just 75 local authority housing units were built in 2015 and there were only 161 new local authority houses built by September 2016. This shows the national 652 ‘new build’ figure itself is misleading as it is likely to be mostly AHBs.

The issue here is that it is local authorities are state authority responsible for meeting housing need and that have the capacity to upscale and deliver large numbers of social housing units.

Housing Associations can play an important role in delivery but their capacity is much more limited to provide new units on a large scale. They are not-for-profit (so far) but are private, not state, organisations.

What this table also shows is that in Dublin City, a third of the new build local authority housing units are ‘regeneration’ units. These should not be counted as additional new units as they are replacing existing social housing units in areas such as Dolphin House and O Devaney Gardens where residents are planning to return once building is complete.

Furthermore, we can see from this that while there is a social housing waiting list of almost 20,000 in the capital, Dublin City Council will be building just 560 new social housing units in the coming two to three years based on current plans. Including Voluntary Housing Bodies, this number increases to 1,255.

At that rate it will take at least 30 years to house those on the housing waiting list (that doesn’t include people who become newly homeless, in need of housing etc).

A major reappraisal of financing, delivery mechanisms and time-frame targets are required for social housing delivery if we are to address this crisis.

For example, local authorities should be allocated an additional €500 million to directly build, a new state housing authority should be set up to provide 10,000 mixed income affordable rental housing units per annum, and NAMA should be directed to provide the 20,000 housing units it is planning to build in the coming years for mixed income affordable rental housing.

Dr Rory Hearne is a policy analyst, academic, social justice campaigner. He writes here in a personal capacity. Follow Rory on Twitter: @roryhearne

Rollingnews

Earlier: A Record 7,167 People

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16 thoughts on “Built To Fail

  1. The Lady Vanishes

    Thanks for this. Depressing reading! I notice that there is a lot of unused space above shops etc. in the city centre and in village high streets throughout Dublin. I wonder would it be worth looking into tax or other incentives for conversion of this space into rental housing?

    1. Kieran NYC

      It’s a great idea and seems to be brought up all the time, but never seems to lead to actual proposals/legislation

      Frustrating.

      I much prefer living in city centres

  2. Cian

    So is the problem the government? or the councils? Because most of these ‘city’ councils are run by FF/SF

    Cork City council: [FF (10) SF (8), FG (5), AAA-PBP (3), WP (1), Ind (4)]
    Dublin City Council: [SF (16), Lab (8), GP (3), Ind(11)], [FF (9), FG (8), AAA (6), Others (2)]
    Dun Laoghaire Rathdown: [FG (11), FF (8), GP (2), Ind (1)], [Lab (7), PBPA (3), SF (3), Ind (5)]
    Dublin South: [SF (10), FG (7), FF (5), Lab (4), AAA (3), PBP (3), GP (1), Renua (1), Ind (6)]
    Fingal: [FF (6), SF (6), FG (5), AAA (4), Lab (4), GP (2), PBP (1), SocDem (1), Renua (1), Ind (10)]

    1. Kieran NYC

      Yup. But they get away from scrutiny/scorn because there’s no single person to point the finger at.

      1. Cian

        Okay, so what specific national policies have prevented the local councils from building/buying council houses over the last 10 years?

        1. Daddy

          Cuts in funding to local councils from central Government.

          Fine Gael policy of using private landlords to provide social housing.

          National law which got rid of pre 63 style bedsits, removing a cheap accommodation option, forcing thousands into bigger more expensive flats and sending many into unsuitable house-shares or homeless shelters.

          No effective national strategy for housing.

          No strategy to deal with the effect of repossessions on those displaced.

          Developers paying money to councils instead of providing % of social house (A National Policy).

          Massive tax breaks for property investors (Fine Gael) who bought up 1000s of properties and then hiked the rents up in cartels, forcing 1000s out of their homes.

          Poor national laws and protections for tenants (now we see overcrowding and dangerous conditions due to weak laws).

          1. Cian

            Thanks for this list. I can see how many of these are national level, however you are blaming FG specifically for lots of these – but were implemented by previous FF-led Governments
            (a) Fine Gael policy of using private landlords to provide social housing. [this has been these since FF]
            (b) National law which got rid of pre 63 style bedsits, removing a cheap accommodation option, forcing thousands into bigger more expensive flats and sending many into unsuitable house-shares or homeless shelters. [FF legislation, 2008 – and this legislation was resisted by landlords]
            (c) No effective national strategy for housing. [agreed]
            (d) No strategy to deal with the effect of repossessions on those displaced. [agreed]
            (e) Developers paying money to councils instead of providing % of social house (A National Policy). [Started under FF, and the CoCos were getting huge amounts of money and should have been investing this in property – but they didn’t.]
            (f) Massive tax breaks for property investors (Fine Gael) who bought up 1000s of properties and then hiked the rents up in cartels, forcing 1000s out of their homes.
            (g) Poor national laws and protections for tenants (now we see overcrowding and dangerous conditions due to weak laws). [not necessarily weak, the current laws (FF 2004 and 2008) are balanced between landlord and tenant. I’m not saying that they are perfect, and they could be improved, but it isn’t a complete landlord-fest]

            At the end of the day I feel that the councils have dropped the ball over the last 10 years by not replacing housing stock – even when they were getting millions from developers to do so.

  3. Junkface

    What an unbelievable mess! These guys aren’t fit to govern anybody. Why in God’s name would young people stick around to live in this mess of a country? Nowehere to live and its all overpriced to hell. At this rate seeing the housing problem fixed in Ireland in 20 years would be optimistic. The mind boggles

  4. Daddy

    We live in a apartheid state and have done since 1922.

    Social mobility and economic opportunity are controlled by a small cohort of the same old families. A large reliant class is maintained to provide labour and a market for essentials.

  5. GiggidyGoo

    Heard him on drivetime earlier. He drove a stagecoach and four horses through Kennys earlier Dail lies.
    Now that Kenny is on his way out, no doubt the fake news (his lies) will reach a crescendo.

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