Public housing ownership may move to non-government groups

Reprinted from the Mackay Daily Mercury.  Read it directly here.

Public housing ownership may move to non-government groups

Merrilyn Rowler: If you can’t get people housing in your society then that’s the government’s responsibility ...
Merrilyn Rowler: If you can’t get people housing in your society then that’s the government’s responsibility …

MACKAY tenant advocacy groups have criticised a recommendation put to the State Government to transfer ownership and management of public housing to non- government groups.

This week the State Government was given the Queensland Commission of Audit report, which included a recommendation to progressively transition existing and new public housing stock to the non-government sector.

However, Mackay Regional Tenants Group president Merrilyn Rowler said this was a bad idea. Continue reading

Tenancy service to shut its doors

Reprinted from the Whitsunday Times 3-5-13.  Read it directly here.

Photo from the Whitsunday Times

Photo from the Whitsunday Times

IT IS deja vu for staff at the Tenancy and Housing Information Service Whitsunday who have once again been told that due to a lack of funding their service is set to close.

Tenant advocate Julie Scanlon and service co-ordinator Rebecca Adamson first felt the effects of State Government funding cuts in July 2012, when it was announced that their service would close on October 30 that year.

After fighting a losing battle to see the service retained, Ms Scanlon and Ms Adamson packed their bags, sold the furniture, destroyed the records and moved out of their premises on Proserpine Main Street. Just days later the Federal Government came to their aid with funding to extend the service until June 30, 2013.

Ms Scanlon said it was hoped that the State Government would pick up the ball after that date but a recent letter from the Department of Housing and Public Works said this would not be the case.

“This service is going to close – I don’t think there’s any doubt about that, so what we need now is clarity so we can advise people where to go when we disappear – so that link is not totally lost,” she said.

Since the Whitsunday office was revived in October 2012, more than 750 tenancy matters have been passed through its doors, ranging from outright homelessness to Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT) support.

Ms Scanlon said it would be awful if the service was reduced to a phone call, when so often clients needed to see a friendly face.

She said plans to redirect funding from Tenancy Advice and Advocacy Services (TAAS) towards the building of social housing in Queensland’s southeast would not help the people of the Whitsundays.

Nonetheless,Whitsunday MP Jason Costigan said putting money into bricks and mortar would address the problem of homelessness and made sense.

Tenancy advice centre disputes duplication claims

Reprinted from the ABC newswebsite  (Brock Taylor 29-4-13).  Read it directly here

A Mackay tenancy advice centre says it is still receiving referrals from the Residential Tenancy Authority (RTA), despite Queensland Government claims it is duplicating services.

The Government is cutting funding to 23 local tenancy services around the state and federal funding runs out at the end of June.

Local coordinator Koni Johnson says her staff are still dealing with about 10 clients a day and the centre needs to stay open up until the June deadline.

“Everyone is very concerned because we’re quite committed to social justice and we believe that this decision is wrong and that’s the only way we can describe it,” she said.

“We feel interest earned on tenants’ bonds should be used for tenants and tenants can use this service because of that.”

She says claims by Housing Minister Tim Mander that the service is duplicated by the RTA are wrong.

“People are still coming in to see us and seeking advice and advocacy and if it was something they could seek advice and information about elsewhere, they would already be doing that,” she said.

“We still get approximately 10 people a day who come in and see us requiring advice because we are a specialised service in tenancy information and advice.”

Fears for Qld’s homeless services after funding cuts

Reprinted from ABC news online.  Read directly from the website here.

Fears for Qld’s homeless services after funding cuts

The Federal Government has renewed its calls for the State Government to continue funding tenant advice and advocacy services in Queensland.

Across the state, 23 services are set to close by the end of June after the Queensland Government decided to cancel their funding agreements.

Federal Housing and Homelessness Minister Mark Butler says state and territory ministers recently agreed tenancy advice was a core function of their governments.

“We’re currently considering our position,” he said.

“It’s obviously critically important that funding continue to other homeless services that are providing frontline services to people who are already homeless. Continue reading

TUQ responds to the Minister’s comments in Parliament

Reprinted from the Tenants’ Union of Queensland’s website.  Read it directly from here.

TUQ media release 17 April

TUQ offers visit to correct Mander misunderstandings

The Tenants’ Union of Queensland (TUQ) today expressed deep concern for what appears to be misunderstandings regarding the role of the Tenant Advice and Advocacy Services (TAAS) program after Housing and Public Works Minister Tim Mander’s comments in parliament on Tuesday.

‘In the face of cutting the entire program of tenant advice and advocacy in the state, we are concerned that the Minister does not have the correct information about our services.  As such we would like to invite him to tour the TUQ and other tenancy advice services with us’.

The TUQ outlined several areas of concern regarding the Minister’s comments.

‘Firstly, there is no other program which provides tenant advice and advocacy, especially not the Residential Tenancies Authority’, said Ms Carr.  ‘The RTA has never helped a tenant write a letter, prepare their tribunal application, never appeared in the tribunal on behalf of a tenant.  And nor should they as an impartial body’.

‘If the Minister was thinking that any organisation can pick up the role of tenancy advice as an adjunct that would be concerning’, said Ms Carr. Continue reading

Tenants Union urges rethink on advisory funding (ABC online)

Reprinted from ABC News On-line Read the post directly here
by Melinda Howells Posted  Thu Apr 11, 2013 4:30pm AEST

The Tenants Union of Queensland says the closure of a statewide advisory service will create more demand for public housing.

The State Government discontinued funding last year and interim funding from the Commonwealth is about to run out.

Tenants Union coordinator Penny Carr says the service has been operating in 23 different locations and helps people stay in the private rental market.

“We’re worried that this does create more demand for social housing and it puts people at risk of homelessness,” she said.

“Our services are keeping people housed.

“The vast majority of tenants, probably just under 90 per cent of the renting households, are renting in the private rental market. Continue reading

ninemsn coverage – Qld won’t fund tenant group

Reprinted from ninemsn.  Read it directly http://news.ninemsn.com.au/national/2013/04/12/07/19/qld-won-t-fund-tenant-group

 7:15am April 12, 2013

The federal government says the Queensland government has put people at risk of homelessness for failing to fund tenant advocacy groups.

The state government cut funding in July 2012 to the Queensland Tenant Advice and Advocacy Service (TAAS) as part of its austerity measures.

The federal government stepped in with interim funding, which is due to run out at the end of the financial year.

The Queensland government has confirmed it will not fund the TAAS from July.

The organisation acted as a clearing house for government funds, distributing money to 23 non-government organisations that provided help for 80,000 households.

Federal Housing Minister Mark Butler says Queensland is the only state that doesn’t fund tenant advocacy.

“Only two weeks ago, every state and territory including Queensland recognised this as a core responsibility of every state government to continue to do,” he told ABC Radio. Continue reading