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SVP welcomes housing strategy but early delivery essential for low-income households

SVP Welcomes Restoration of State’s Role in Social Housing and Increased provision but Government must deliver early for low-income households in need of housing

The Society of St Vincent de Paul (SVP) welcomes the Government’s new ambitious Social Housing Strategy 2020 launched today

" It is long overdue and implementation starts today.  It has to.” says the Society.

"Since the late 1980s Governments and local authorities have drastically reduced new social housing build focusing instead on facilitating home ownership and assuming private landlords will accommodate the rest." says SVP.   

"Ireland is paying the price for this policy through a degree of homelessness bigger and more acute than ever previously experienced with 800 children and their families becoming homeless in the first 10 months of this year. Rents are high and rapidly increasing in the private rented sector, resulting in insecurity and homelessness; and local authority social housing supply is completely insufficient to meet the housing needs of the record-level 90,000 households on housing waiting lists.

"We also welcome the actions contained in the Strategy which, when implemented, provide hope of a secure, better quality home for those who need support in acquiring one.  SVP welcomes that the Strategy ‘restores the role of the State in the direct provision of social housing through a resumption of building on a significant scale’. 

"The new Planning and Development Bill (2014) requires that 10% of new units in private developments must be delivered for social housing solely.  This needs to be implemented and honoured.  Private profit for the few- including powerful construction interests- must not derail Part V again.

"SVP welcomes the central role that the private rented sector plays in the Irish housing system. It has the capacity to provide quality thermally efficient, secure housing - but has a long way to go. The sector requires support and investment to deliver a real housing choice, given that the State is a massive funder of the private rented sector with over half of all rents to landlords - over half a billion euro coming from Rent Supplement, RAS and related supports at major cost to the exchequer.    

"But the use of the private rented sector to meet social housing needs means that legislative and policy reform is required for an adequate supply of good quality accommodation.  Cases of extremely poor physical standards in parts of the private rented sector are many and these units are often occupied by people on low incomes. Physical and energy standards must be improved through legislation using the same 2020 timeline. The Home Renovation incentive tax relief helps landlords to fulfill such obligations.

"An enhanced role for voluntary providers (also known as Approved Housing Bodies) in delivering social housing is also welcome- however the sector needs to scale up in capacity and where necessary share back-office services in order to have the size and structure required to meet the level of demand for housing among those on lower incomes."

 

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