Public housing in Australia

Public housing in Australia

Public housing in Australia is usually provided by departments of state and territory governments. Australian public housing operates within the framework of the Commonwealth-State Housing Agreement, by which funding for public housing is provided by both federal and state governments. [ [http://www.infoxchange.net.au/rhchome/iurhc/s01.htm The Reluctant Landlords? - A History of Public Housing in Australia] ]

Overview

The state government departments which are responsible for providing public housing have been known by a variety of names due to their history in each state, such as the "Office of Housing" (Victoria), the "Department of Housing" (New South Wales and Queensland) and "Housing" SA (formerly known as the Housing Trust) (South Australia), and known colloquially in some parts of the country as the 'houso' or 'the commission'. Their official name tends to change with the way each state government prioritises public housing within its departmental structure. For example, for a time in the 1980s, Victoria's public housing had its own department (Department of Planning and Housing). Since the early 1990s, departmental restructuring under the Kennett government relegated its status to the 'Office of Housing' within the Department of Planning and Development. It has since been moved from a 'bricks and mortar' issue to one of health and welfare, now being an office within the Department of Human Services. The management of some public housing has been outsourced to not-for-profit management companies as part of a demand management philosophy to target it towards people with special needs.

Census statistics

2006 census results indicate that Australia's public housing stock consisted of some 304,000 dwellings out of a total housing stock of more than 7.1 million dwellings. By comparison, all rental accommodation, whether public or private, accounted for slightly more than 2 million dwellings. [ [http://www.censusdata.abs.gov.au/ABSNavigation/prenav/ViewData?action=404&documentproductno=0&documenttype=Details&order=1&tabname=Details&areacode=0&issue=2006&producttype=Census%20Tables&javascript=true&textversion=false&navmapdisplayed=true&breadcrumb=TLPD&&collection=Census&period=2006&productlabel=Tenure%20Type%20and%20Landlord%20Type%20by%20Dwelling%20Structure%20-%20Time%20Series%20Statistics%20(1996,%202001,%202006%20Census%20Years)&producttype=Census%20Tables&method=Location%20on%20Census%20Night&topic=Housing%20Rental& Tenure Type and Landlord Type by Dwelling Structure - 2006 Census results, Australian Bureau of Statistics] ]

Dwelling types

Australian public housing has traditionally been of two main types – Inner-city medium to high-rise apartments, and low-density townhouses or fully detached houses on master-planned estates located on, what were at the time of construction, the suburban fringes of cities and towns. The inner-city public housing is mostly found in Melbourne and Sydney on estates generally comprising 3-5 storey walk-up flats and 11-22 storey high-rise towers. Since the late 1990s, the Victorian government has embarked on a process of redeveloping its inner-city estates with a mix of public and private housing. Low-density suburban estates can be found in nearly every city and town in Australia. Some of the low-density housing has been sold off over the years to long term tenants, and some has begun to circulate on the private property market at high prices in gentrified suburbs such as Port Melbourne.

History

Most public housing in Australia was built between 1945, when the first Commonwealth State Housing Agreement was signed, and 1980, with governments in recent decades less willing to build and provide for new mass public housing estates. The majority of Australia's public housing programs were originally initiated to house returned soldiers and their new families after World War II; a period of chronic housing shortages across the country. However the construction of high-rise estates in Melbourne and Sydney during the 1950s and 1960s was aimed more at improving the living conditions of inner-suburban residents living in sub-standard housing.

During the late 1970s, as local community resistance grew to inner suburban high-rise estates, public housing programs were severely curtailed. In addition to the reaction to large high-rises in the inner city was the social stigmatisation following the creation of sizeable enclaves of a single, negatively perceived socio-economic group. From the 1980s onwards, the focus was on small-scale infill projects and 'spot-purchase' of existing dwellings in appropriate locations.

ocial housing

In recent years, not-for-profit social housing providers have developed a more prominent role in providing affordable housing to eligible tenants. These social housing providers include charities, and organisations such as the Brisbane Housing Company, a not-for-profit corporation operated by the Queensland Government and the Brisbane City Council. Co-operation between state housing departments and social housing providers is increasing, as in Queensland where prospective tenants who are on the waiting list for public housing are now also on the waiting list for social housing. [ [http://housing.qld.gov.au/programs/pdf/ch_direction_statement_brochure.pdf Queensland Department of Housing, "One Social Housing System"] ]

Public housing today

Today public housing in Australia is generally seen by governments as welfare accommodation for low income earners, social security recipients and people with support needs such as the elderly and people with disabilities. Though public housing remains stigmatised in Australia, mainly due its status as a minority tenure, there is little hard evidence to support the stereotypes that public housing estates are any less safe than other neighbourhoods.

uburbs with public housing

Some areas of Australian cities known for a high concentration of public housing include:

Adelaide
*Elizabeth

Brisbane
*Inala
*Zillmere

Geelong
*Norlane
*Whittington
*Corio

Melbourne
*Broadmeadows
*Braybrook
*Carlton
*Collingwood
*Doveton
*Fitzroy
*Flemington
*Kensington
*Richmond
*Sunshine

Newcastle
*Wingate

Sydney
*Telopea
*Green Valley
*Mount Druitt
*Macquarie Fields
*Surry Hills

Wollongong
*Bellambi
*Mangerton
*Berkeley
*Warrawong
*Warilla
*Barrack Heights

ee also

* Public housing in the Australian Capital Territory

External links

tate and territory housing departments

* [http://www.dhcs.act.gov.au/hcs/ Housing & Community Services ACT]
* [http://www.housing.nsw.gov.au New South Wales Department of Housing]
* [http://www.territoryhousing.nt.gov.au/ Territory Housing (Northern Territory)]
* [http://www.housing.qld.gov.au Queensland Department of Housing]
* [http://www.familiesandcommunities.sa.gov.au/Default.aspx?tabID=939 Housing SA]
* [http://www.dhhs.tas.gov.au/services/view.php?id=348 Housing Tasmania]
* [http://www.housing.vic.gov.au Victorian Office of Housing]
* [http://www.housing.wa.gov.au/ Western Australian Department of Housing & Works]

Other social housing providers

* [http://www.brisbanehousingcompany.com.au Brisbane Housing Company]

References


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