Mercury (Hobart)

Sue smashes Housing Tas

- DAVID KILLICK

LIBERAL MP Sue Hickey has made a bombshell last-minute submission to the Government’s housing inquiry, calling for radical change to public housing policy.

Ms Hickey accused Housing Tasmania of having failed — saying an example was the Windsor Court unit block in Hobart, which she described as an urban ghetto replete with stealing, violence, knife-wielding, prostituti­on and meth labs run by street kids.

“Housing Tasmania appears to me to be an organisati­on failing its clients,” her submission said. “In my opinion, the organisati­on needs to be completely restructur­ed.”

LIBERAL MP Sue Hickey has made a bombshell last-minute submission to the Tasmanian Parliament’s housing inquiry, calling for radical change to public housing policy.

Ms Hickey, the Speaker and member for Clark, accused Housing Tasmania of having failed and called for a complete restructur­e of the organisati­on.

She said an example of ongoing problems was the Windsor Court unit block in Hobart, which she described as an urban ghetto with stealing, violence, knife-wielding, prostituti­on and meth labs run by street kids in vacant units.

“Housing Tasmania appears to me to be an organisati­on failing its duty of care to its clients,” her submission said. “The model may have worked 20 years ago, but it is not nimble enough to deal with the current situation of way too many people unable to access a roof over their heads.

“It is apparent that we are wasting valuable taxpayer funds running the present model. This has to stop, and the funds redirected to actually delivering rental housing to those in need. This leads to the question of why wouldn’t the government now transfer more of the balance of its Housing Tasmania managed housing stock to these efficient NGOs and church organisati­ons, who clearly put the human view first.”

The House of Assembly’s Select Committee on Housing Affordabil­ity began public hearings in Hobart yesterday.

Ms Hickey will give evidence first thing this morning.

She said it was time to overhaul the government housing provider, and Windsor Court was a stark illustrati­on of its failure.

“It has regular call-outs to the emergency services due to the violence that exists between the tenants or their couch-surfing friends, leaving some residents living in extreme fear,” Ms Hickey said.

“I have raised this with the Minister’s office on many occasions.”

Housing Minister Roger Jaensch did not directly address Ms Hickey’s submission in a statement issued late yesterday.

“We are actively participat­ing in the committee process and have provided a submission to it,” he said. “We welcome broad ranging engagement with the committee and we look forward to the outcomes of the process.

“We are working hard to implement our Affordable Housing Strategy, which invests almost $200 million over eight years, the largest ever investment into affordable housing in Tasmania’s history.”

Housing Tasmania chief executive Peter White appeared before the committee yesterday, before Ms Hickey’s submission was made public.

He said the government would spend $19 million this year servicing the $149.6 million historic housing debt owed to the Federal Government. Mr White said any deal to forgive that debt would enable to State Government to boost constructi­on of social housing or lift other services for the homeless.

“It could certainly provide quite a significan­t increase in social housing. It would equate to around 80 to 100 homes per annum,” he said.

The committee heard the State Government owned 12,504 properties with a total valuation of up to $2.1 billion.

Housing Tasmania appears to me to be an organisati­on failing its clients … [it] needs to be completely restructur­ed and downsized, as it does not deliver efficientl­y the services that it should provide

— SUE HICKEY

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