The Weekend Post

A PLACE TO CALL HOME IS A DISTANT DREAM FOR CAIRNS FAMILIES

- BRONWYN FARR

FOR mother-of-three Dominique Knowles, having a place to call home is becoming a distant reality.

She has lived with her young family in a backpacker hostel for almost a year, and it’s a hopeless situation.

The median rent in Cairns right now is $557 a week and the vacancy rate is 0.5 per cent.

Ms Knowles is madly applying for rental properties but her income is about $1300 a fortnight and real estate agents are looking for tenants who can pay rent with no more than 30 per cent of their income.

She became homeless when her landlord put her rental property on the market and she had to vacate.

She’s grateful Castaways backpacker owner Wayne Hutchison has largely converted his premises to families, and that she hasn’t been moved on as tourists start returning to Cairns.

“If it wasn’t for this place, I don’t know where I’d be,” she said.

“I know hotels and motels are kicking out long-stays now to accommodat­e tourists again.

“I have been looking through rentals at real estate agencies, going to inspection­s, applying and being unsuccessf­ul every time – they want so much for rent, some of it is really ridiculous. If it is $500 a week I just scroll past it.

“No wonder so many people are living in backpacker­s and hotels.”

Ms Knowles said an influx of southerner­s buying property reduced available rentals.

Building more social and affordable housing is the only solution to the Far North’s housing crisis, Cairns Women’s Centre manager Nicole Dye says.

“I think regional Australia is bearing the brunt of skyrocketi­ng housing prices, and as a result of that the rental affordabil­ity is all but disappeari­ng and the lack of housing is really devastatin­g for our families,” she said.

“Building more social and affordable housing creates more jobs and surely it is going to balance the housing system – there’s a massive shortfall of available rentals.

“It would relieve pressure on our services; if there was more housing we wouldn’t have people rocking up at our door, day in, day out.”

The State Department of Housing says 1996 households are on the housing register in the Cairns local government area – but it is at pains to stress it’s not a waiting list.

St Vincent de Paul area manager for housing and homelessne­ss Annette McKail said a national strategy involving federal, state and local government­s was critical.

“I think it is really important for the strategy to be looking not just at mortgages and social housing but to the private rental market, which most people on low incomes end up looking for,” she said.

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