South China Morning Post

‘Work going at full speed’ to finish 29,000 light public flats

Minister says projects make up 96% of the target of 30,000 such homes by 2026-27 financial year

- Fiona Chow fiona.chow@scmp.com

Secretary for Housing Winnie Ho Wing-yin says contractor­s building 29,000 light public flats are going at “full speed” to complete them, expressing confidence authoritie­s will reach a wider target of 30,000 by the 2026-27 financial year.

Ho yesterday said the projects were located in areas such as Yuen Long, Tuen Mun and Kai Tak, and represente­d 96 per cent of the government’s wider target.

“I am confident we can complete all 30,000 flats by 202627,” she told a radio programme.

“Three contracts have been operating at full speed, with some of the contractor­s involved based in Hong Kong or from mainland China.”

Another 800 light housing flats in Ma On Shan were also in the works, she added.

Authoritie­s earlier pledged to build 30,000 temporary homes for residents living in subdivided flats and who had been waiting at least three years to get a public rental home.

The average waiting time among general applicants for a public rental flat stood at 5.8 years, according to data for the last quarter of last year.

Ho also said yesterday another 2,147 public rental flats at Tsing Yi’s Cheung Ching Estate and Tuen Mun’s Yip Wong Estate had been speeded up to ensure their completion in the first quarter of this year.

The flats were being allocated to residents in the queue for public housing, she added.

However, the housing secretary said she could not guarantee the average waiting time for flats would go down straight away under the move, despite some of the immediate results seen under the advance allocation scheme.

Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu announced the scheme – which offers flats at selected public housing estates to families on the waiting list before infrastruc­ture and transport facilities are completed – in his 2022 policy address.

“It would not be surprising if the [average wait time] fluctuates every year because new public housing does not get brought out every quarter,” Ho said.

Last year, the Housing Authority ramped up efforts to tackle abuse of public flats, such as checking whether tenants had any undeclared residentia­l properties.

Housing officials last August sent out forms to more than 88,000 households and asked tenants to declare if they lived in the flats and had no other property in Hong Kong.

The housing minister said yesterday the authority had already recovered 450 flats during the operation, with eviction notices sent to another 100 tenants.

It would not be surprising if the [average wait time] fluctuates every year because new public housing does not get brought out every quarter SECRETARY FOR HOUSING WINNIE HO

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