Communities organise to stop Berejiklianā€™s destruction of public housing

February 10, 2021
Issue 
Hands Off Glebe protest on January 30 in front of the award-winning complex set to be demolished. Photo: Peter Boyle

In early November, residents of the Franklyn Street public housing complex in Glebe and the Explorer Street public estate in South Eveleigh from NSW housing minister Melinda Pavey informing them that over the next couple of years they would lose their homes.

At a rally in January against the redevelopments, a number of Franklyn Street residents spoke of their distress.

Despite being told theyā€™ll be housed in the new development, they donā€™t know when theyā€™ll be leaving, where theyā€™ll be going to in the interim, and if theyā€™ll ever be back.

The buildings are to be replaced by three high-rise apartment towers. The sizeable garden areas within the estate will become roads. And the community thatā€™s developed within the complex ā€” that received a design award in the past ā€” will be destroyed.

The new apartment blocks are set to contain 425 dwellings. The 108 public housing units will be replaced by 130 ā€œsocial housingā€ units. Yet, when the math is done, this doesnā€™t mean there will be more social housing tenants than there currently are.

The New South Wales government is promoting the new units as ā€œsocial housingā€. However, it really is community housing ā€“ 70% of which is private and 30% which is community housing. This has been the departmentā€™s public housing ā€œredevelopmentā€ theme for two decades.

Public no more

Dr Alistair Sisson told Ā鶹“«Ć½ that social housing is ā€œa catch-all termā€ for non-market housing.

This includes public housing ā€” ā€œhousing owned and managed by the state governmentā€ ā€” as well as community housing ā€” that is ā€œmanaged and sometimes owned by not-for-profitsā€.

When it comes to government information about the ā€œredevelopmentā€ of public housing estates ā€”Ā such as the ā€” the undefined social housing units are really community housing, run by non-profit entities such as Mission Australia and Bridge Housing.

ā€œThatā€™s whatā€™s expected from the Glebe and South Eveleigh developments and from all of the estate redevelopment projects under the ,ā€ Sisson said.

ā€œItā€™s happening at Ivanhoe estate in Macquarie Park. Itā€™s underway in Telopea, Parramatta and Riverwood.ā€

Sisson is a research associate at the University of New South Wales City Futures Research Centre. He said that, under the guise of improving social housing, public housing sites built on land of higher value are identified and rezoned. Following that consortiums of developers and community housing providers pitch their plans.

Once a consortium is awarded a contract, the public land is handed over for free. Public housing residents are notified they will receive new homes ā€” after years of construction. Non-for-profits bear the cost and responsibility for the upkeep of community housing rather than government.

As Maritime Union of Australia (MUA) Sydney Branch secretary Paul Keating told the January 30 rally in Glebe despite the Berejiklian government spruiking the benefits of redevelopment, its plan is really to ā€œcontract out social services to non-government organisationsā€.

Cannibalising public housing

ā€œThis is a model of privatisation that consecutive governments - whether Labor or Liberal - have been executing,ā€ NSW Greens MP for Balmain Jamie Parker told the rally.

ā€œBut, this government is doing it more than it has ever been seen before.ā€

According to Parker, the process began in the Howard-era, when the federal government stopped funding public housing. While most states started constructing their own housing, NSW turned to the privatisation model with the 70-30 split.

The first such redevelopment was in the , announced in May 2002. It marked a shift in the governmentā€™s relationship with public housing tenants when it suddenly notified them that their homes would be bulldozed and they would be displaced.

The proliferation of public housing redevelopments comes under the NSW Land and Housing Corporationā€™s Communities Plus program, which was launched in 2016.

There are currently 28 redevelopment projects underway, with Franklyn Street and South Eveleigh being the latest editions.

Parker went on to explain that even though the allocation of community housing in the Franklyn Street redevelopment involves 22 more units, the current public housing complex contains 254 bedrooms, while the new community housing units will be ā€œalmost exclusively one bedroomā€.

Gentrification

Sisson said there are three main reasons why successive state governments have been so keen on the 70ā€“30 redevelopment model.

The first is a genuine aim to improve housing stock, although this method means they donā€™t have to outlay any money.

ā€œAnother reason is if they can transfer the tenancy off the books of the state government and onto community housing providers that means itā€™s a cost that they save as well,ā€ he said.

The federal government also provides rent assistance funding to the not-for-profit community providers.

The third is ā€œtrying to capitalise on land valuesā€. This entails the government moving to transform certain areas into more upmarket locations. Sisson added that heā€™s sure property developers have been eyeing off certain locations for years and putting their plans to politicians.

Uncertain futures

Franklyn Street resident and Hands Off Glebe Secretary Emily Bullock said the housing ministerā€™s claims to have sought advice from the tenants was not true. She said that they had been left completely in the dark.

Bullock said that instead of tearing down estates like Franklyn Street, the government could refurbish them and spend less. She said that there were more than on the waiting list.

Friends of Erskineville secretary Andrew Chuter said the group was concerned about residents living in the Explorer Street public housing estate in South Eveleigh. He described the government's redevelopment program as a ā€œbonanzaā€ for property developers.

ā€œIn Erskinevilleā€™s Ashmore Estate, the Goodman group bought land in 1995 for $16 million. It was upzoned and sold in 2015 for $350 million,ā€ Chuter told the protest. ā€œAt Lewisham Estates, upzoned land went from $9 million to $50 million in just 7 years.ā€

ā€œWe need to demand that money back,ā€ he concluded. ā€œWe need to defend and extend public housing, not demolish it for private developersā€™ profits.ā€

[Sign an calling on NSW housing minister Melinda Pavey to halt the demolition of the Glebe and South Eveleigh public housing estates. A estate in Eveleigh is being organised by Friends of Erskineville on February 13 at 12pm. Paul Gregoire is a Sydney-based journalist who writes for .]

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