The Jerusalem Post

Housing cabinet eyes 20,000 units for haredi sector

- • By NIV ELIS

In a flurry of activity, the housing cabinet on Monday approved a variety of measures to spur growth in the housing supply, including a plan focused specifical­ly on the ultra-Orthodox sector.

The plan would see 200,000 new residentia­l units built for the haredi population over the next 20 years, 15,000 of which would be on the market within the next three years.

“The central significan­ce of the decision that we approved in the housing cabinet this morning is the setting of a long-term policy as a response to the unique needs of the ultra-Orthodox sector after years that they have suffered from many housing difficulti­es with no solution on the horizon,” Housing Minister Yoav Galant said.

The plan would make current haredi areas denser and larger, establish mixed neighborho­ods within non-haredi areas and build new haredi neighborho­ods and cities.

The units, however, will be linked in some way to whether the ultra-Orthodox people who want to buy them are working, an effort to boost low labor-force participat­ion in the community.

Separately, the cabinet approved a proposal by Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon to mix commercial, industrial and residentia­l areas. The idea behind the move is that many areas built for commercial and industrial use have much of the necessary infrastruc­ture for residentia­l buildings and surplus space.

Infrastruc­ture is a major bottleneck in the building process, so rezoning could help speed some residentia­l constructi­on. The process would require local authoritie­s to rezone and impose certain conditions. The cabinet also took steps to speed up permits.

In addition, the cabinet moved to allow local authoritie­s to levy property tax on empty residentia­l buildings. The tax is intended to spur owners to either rent or sell the buildings as quickly as possible.

Plans to increase foreign workers in the constructi­on field are taking hold. In the last year, the number of foreign constructi­on workers increased 40 percent to 50,280, with another 8,000 expected to join by the end of September.

As of now, 42,053 of the foreign constructi­on workers are Palestinia­n, and 7,000 of those expected to come by September will be as well. The remaining 1,000 will be mostly from Moldova.

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