Some relief for Monte Carlo Caravan Park residents

Picture source: The Courier Mail

Save Tenant Services congratulates the Minister for Housing, Minister Mander, on a promising outcome for residents of Monte Carlo Caravan Park.  These residents have been living in fear of the park being sold off since the middle of last year when the government announced it would sell the park.  Minister Mander now says the park will be run by a not for profit housing provider.  See below the Minister’s press release of January 22.Let’s hope there is similar news for the other two parks (Woombye Caravan Park and Lazy Acres in Torquay) which are also subject to the decision to sell made last year by the Newman government.

Win-Win for Monte Carlo Caravan Park
(Minister for Housing & Public Works, Honorable Tim Mander 22-1-13)

The   Monte Carlo Caravan Park on Brisbane’s Southside is set to remain in place   following a State Government announcement which will give a not-for-profit   housing provider the opportunity to run the facility.

The   Newman Government will invite a select group of not-for-profit housing providers to submit expressions of interest in the Cannon Hill site on the condition that it continues to operate as a caravan park.

Under the plan, the successful proponent will take possession of the site in   exchange for an agreement to build new social housing in key target areas.

Minister for Housing and Public Works Tim Mander said the EOI would include respected   providers Horizon, Four Walls, Churches of Christ Care, Brisbane Housing   Company and Bric. Continue reading

Thank goodness for tenant advocates

Reprinted from the Courier Mail  21-1-13 (read it from their website here).
Let’s hope the Queensland state government re-establishes their commitment to tenant advocacy after the Commonwealth’s emergency funding runs out at the end of June.

Tiny French apartment houses man for 15 years, for $418 a week

A MAN who lives an apartment too small to even stand up straight in has been paying more than $400 a week for the tiny abode.

The apartment in Paris measures just 1.56 square metres, and has been home to the 50-year-old man, known only as Dominique, for the past 15 years.
His plight came to light after the man asked housing advocacy group Fondation Abbe Pierre for help dealing with his landlord, according to French news site NPR.
The advocacy group has published a photo of the tiny home, which has a skylight and a slanted roof, and said on its Twitter feed that “a person doesn’t stand correctly” in the space.
Dominique had reportedly been paying €330 a week to rent the cramped space.

 “I come home, I go to bed,” he told French website and radio station RTL.

The legal minimum size of an apartment in Paris is 9 square metres and an apartment must include a shower, according to Le Monde.

The owner of the apartment faces a court later this month and the door of the tiny apartment has been permanently shut, RTL reports.

The high rent demanded for the apartment, which has reportedly been managed by three different real estate agencies, is being touted as evidence of the excessive cost of renting in Paris.

Ex-Housing Minister back in the news

Reprinted from the Courier Mail 17-1-13.  Read the article directly from their website here.

Bruce Flegg and his son exchanged a series of emails about Government staff. Source: The Courier-Mail

STARTLING new documents reveal the extent of the professional relationship between former Newman Government minister Bruce Flegg and his lobbyist son. The documents filed in the Supreme Court show a trail of emails between Dr Flegg and his son Jonathon, who was working for lobbying firm Rowland.

They include a clear directive from Mr Flegg to keep the correspondence off government computers – a move that would mean the emails would be exempt from Right to Information laws. 

The emails include a critique of 16 of the Newman Government’s ministerial chiefs-of-staff, sent by Jonathon’s Gmail account to his father’s BigPond email address just three weeks after last year’s state election. 

It is not clear who wrote the critique, but Dr Flegg forwarded it to the personal accounts of his own chief-of-staff and media adviser, with the warning: “Very confidential. For your info. Useful. Don’t send to any govt computors (sic).”

The dossier of emails is part of former media adviser Graeme Hallett’s defence to an $800,000 defamation damages claim brought by Dr Flegg.

Included is a directive from the minister to his chief-of-staff to have a policy officer look at information that “Jonathon will forward”. Continue reading

Tenant bond interest lost to tenant advice services after today!

Without any response from the state government to the TUQ’s request for specific, time-limited funding to represent tenants’ interests in the current tenancy law review, today marks the last day there is funding for any independent tenant advocate in the state.  That means, after today, not one cent of the $34M of the interest generated on tenants’ bonds last year will be applied to any independent tenant advice service or for any tenant advocate to raise tenants’ interests in the current legislative review, which will continue next year.

This is not a sustainable outcome and will only serve to undermine people’s confident in the outcomes of the legislative review and impartiality of the Residential Tenancies Authority.

Tenant advocates have lobbied for tenant/landlord regualtory systems since the mid 1980s when there was no accessible process for a tenant to seek the return of a bond regardless of how the property was left.  Getting a  bond back was often difficult, sometimes impossible until the introduction of the then Rental Bond Act 1989 regulating the process and limited access to independent tenant advice. Continue reading

Anxious Monte Carlo residents face unclear future

Earlier this year the state government announced it would sell the Monte Carlo caravan park in Brisbane.  This park was purchased in the early 1990s by the then Labor government to protect it from private sector redevelopment.

Given the recent announcement, anxious residents have been attempting to purchase the park themselves but have so far received a limited response.

4ZZZ’s Steve Riggall caught up with the residents about the situation.  Listen to the interview here.

Thank you for your support and happy holiday season

Save Tenant Services wishes our supporters, your family and friends a very happy and safe holiday season.  And we hope you get a break from all the challenges of life and find someone to share a laugh with.

Thank you so much for your support – without it, our services would no longer exist.  And thanks to you, tenancy advice is available for Queensland tenants every day throughout the holidays except for the weekends and public holidays.

Another Blow for Queensland Tenants

The following press release was issued today by the Tenants’ Union of Queensland.  You can view it directly on their website by clicking here. 

In another blow, Queensland tenants may be left without a representative voice in the current review of tenancy law. 

The Tenants’ Union of Queensland (TUQ) has been making representations to the Queensland government for specific funding to ensure tenants’ interests are represented as the current review of tenancy law progresses through next year.  However, no response has been received, and the TUQ now fears there will be no independent, specialist tenant voice in these debates.

 The TUQ’s recurrent funding for policy and law reform work finishes at the end of this month, after the Queensland government’s announcement last October to withdraw funding.   Given the review of tenancy laws, the TUQ has pursued specific funding to ensure the interests of tenants are represented.

‘Our organisation has been advising tenants and representing their interests in policy and law reform debates since 1986.  With no specialist voice at the table where reforms are being debated, the risk of unbalanced outcomes is heightened, with tenants being the big losers’, TUQ spokesperson, Ms Penny Carr said.

The Property Owners Association, the Real Estate Institute and housing policy advocates will now be left to debate tenancy law review outcomes without adequate specialist representation for tenants. Continue reading

WA commissioner voices concerns over evictions

The story below was reported by ABC online on Tuesday December 11.  It outlines concerns over the WA government’s ‘three strikes and you’re out’ policy for public housing tenants, something that was being considered her by ex-Housing Minister Flegg.

The Housing Minister Terry Redman has rejected criticism that the State Government’s three strikes housing policy is adversely impacting on children.

The Equal Opportunity Commissioner Yvonne Henderson wants the policy reconsidered because she say it results in a high number of Aboriginal families being evicted from public housing.

She says while traditionally most complaints to the commission have been about discrimination in the workplace, the biggest increase in complaints concerns accommodation.

Ms Henderson says there has been a 65 percent increase in those complaints. Continue reading

A Christmas miracle but where to from here?

This holiday season Queensland tenants will have access to independent tenancy advice services.  Against all odds!  That’s because, as you probably know, on July 24 the Queensland government faxed all 23 services funded through the Tenant Advice and Advocacy Service (TAAS) Program to inform then of the Program’s discontinuation

Communities, tenants and services rallied across the State voicing concern for the loss of these valuable services.  People were outraged that the small amount of tenant bond interest (around 10%) was being withdrawn from the only independent, tenant-focused services available.  Most people thought is unfair that given tenant bond interest is used to wholly fund the Residential Tenancies Authority (Click here for a visual representation of the funding for 2010-11), whose services are provided free of charge to lessors and real estate agents as well as tenants that the relatively small percentage of bond interest provided for tenant specific services was withdrawn. Continue reading

Tenants’ Union Tasmania loses eviction battle for public housing tenants

The ABC website reported this story last Wednesday, December 5.  Unfortunately the Tenants’ Union of Tasmania were not successful in trying to save the tenancies fo a number of public housing tenants.  Even though they weren’t successful at least there is an organisation standing up for tenants rights.  Where would the community be without tenant advocates?

The Tenants Union is considering its legal options after losing a Supreme Court case in Hobart to stop the eviction of public housing tenants.

The union took legal action against Housing Tasmania after five tenants were evicted.

It argued the tenants were denied natural justice because they were served eviction notices without reasons or opportunity to appeal.

One of the cases, involving a single mother, was tested in the Supreme Court.

Justice Alan Blow found Housing Tasmania was within its rights to evict the woman because her lease had expired and was not terminated.

The judge said that meant she had no right of appeal.

The union’s Ben Bartl, says the decision is disappointing.

“It sends an appalling message to all Housing Tasmania tenants; it says that the government can simply tell tenants that their lease is not going to be extended,” he said.

“In our view the judge has made a decision that is overly legal.”

He says it sends a bad message to other public housing tenants.

See the report on line here.

Ex Housing Minister Flegg sues sacked staffer for defamation

Reported in today’s Courier Mail by Robyn Ironside

FORMER Public Works and Housing Minister Bruce Flegg has launched legal action against his sacked media advisor Graeme Hallett for defamation, and for costing him his ministerial income.

In a lawsuit lodged in the Brisbane Supreme Court this week, Dr Flegg lays the blame for losing his job squarely on Mr Hallett.

 He is believed to be seeking up to a million dollars in special damages for the income he will forgo after quitting the ministry and returning to the backbench.

Dr Flegg also accuses Mr Hallett of defamation as a result of a press conference he called the day after he was sacked by his boss, who said he was untrustworthy.

 At the press conference, attended by all major media organisations, Mr Hallett accused Dr Flegg of being unfit to hold office.

 He released documents from Dr Flegg’s lobbyist son Jonathon showing he had regular contact with his father’s office despite previously claiming he had been banned from lobbying the minister.

Mr Hallett also revealed diary entries showing Dr Flegg was working in his electorate office were untrue, with the Minister instead working at a Burpengary medical centre as a GP.

Although Dr Flegg and Premier Campbell Newman initially dismissed Mr Hallett’s statements as a “fizzer” the Minister resigned before Parliament sat the following day.

Mr Hallett has raised the possibility of taking action for wrongful dismissal.

Blue ribbon law firm Cooper Grace Ward is representing Dr Flegg in his action.

 No date has been set to hear his case.

There is a considerable difference between a backbencher’s and a minister’s salary, equivalent to about $60,000 a year,

Rent capping – a reality for Ontario, Canada but a pipe dream for Queensland?

We just want to warn you not to get too excited when you read this – this is not Australia (although we wish it was!), it’s Canada.  This is from a forum called Tenants Help Tenants in Ontario.

2013 Rent Increase Guideline (June 22, 2012 8:30 am)
Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing 

Rent increases for the one million tenant households in Ontario cannot exceed 2.5 per cent over the next year, unless a landlord makes a successful application to the Landlord Tenant Board.  Continue reading

JPs to hear minor civil disputes – good for tenants?

As the government extends the time for Justices of the Peace (JP) to sign up for a trial to hear minor civil dispute matter in the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal, we’re still not sure whether this will be good for tenants. JPs will be able to hear matters worth up to $5,000.  That’s a lot of money for most tenants.  We hope the pilot’s evaluation will be robust.

The following is a press release from the Queensland Attorney General, Mr Jarrod Bleijie, issued last Friday.

JP pilot program application date extended

The Newman Government has given JPs more time to sign up for the recently announced Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal Justices of the Peace pilot program.

Attorney-General Jarrod Bleijie said JPs from Brisbane, Ipswich, Townsville and the Gold and Sunshine Coasts would now have until 5 December to apply to join the program.

“The pilot program will utilise the skills of JPs (Magistrates Court) to come up with common sense solutions to minor disputes of less than $5,000 in QCAT,” Mr Bleijie said.

“The trial will be used to assess whether the use of JPs in QCAT helps to reduce backlogs by freeing up magistrates and QCAT adjudicators to deal with more complex matters.

“To be eligible for the legal positions and preside over the panel, JPs must have been a lawyer with at least three years’ standing in Australia.

“Applicants for the non-legal positions must have held an appointment for at least five years.

“QCAT will provide training, assessment and evaluation of the applicants before they begin hearing matters.”

Mr Bleijie said the pilot program was part of the Newman Government’s review of the state’s JP system.

“JPs play a vital role in the community and the trial is a step towards enhancing that role and addressing the backlogs affecting magistrates courts in these regions,” he said.

“We have committed $3.5 million over the next four years to deliver this pilot program, outsource the delivery of JP training programs and refocus the JP Branch.

“Through this additional funding the Newman Government acknowledges the important volunteer role JPs perform in administering our laws and delivering justice services.”

The pilot program is expected to begin in April 2013.

The pilot QCAT program will be trialled in Brisbane, Maroochydore, Southport and Townsville and JPs can apply at www.qcat.qld.gov.au.