TheBigShort
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I can't see how any of it would work really...
Saw this and thought of this thread.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4884490/Ex-council-house-Cornish-coast-sells-1-4m.html
I wonder do people think there is some sort of gold mine of housing somewhere.
If a tenant fails to make rent payments in an area with good employment opportunities, wouldn't it make sense to allow somebody else to avail of those employment opportunities?
That would be good for our economy - the active participants in which ultimately pay for public housing.
Incidentally, do have any sympathy for people that are currently in a "disadvantaged backwater" (your phrase)?
Brendan,
Don’t you think you need to clarify what you mean by “not working”.
Do you mean people who have not worked for a specific time period?
Are you referring to individual or household unemployment?
Would the age or state of health of the unemployed person or household matter?
It's unworkable. Unless you move to a economic and social model like the States.
If you offered an incentive to move world that work?
Guys
I wouldn't get hung up over whether it's free or not, or whether they pay their rent or not.
The reality is that social housing is very cheap for those who have it, whether they are working or not.
By the way, as part of the criteria for allocating housing, I would include the payment record and any record of anti-social behaviour.
I was speaking to someone yesterday, who lives in an apartment block. The apartment next door was rented out on HAP. They just threw their rubbish out the window onto the ground below. This would rule them out of any social housing in my book. It would not solve the problem of the rubbish being thrown out of a rented property, but it would tell people that to get priority on social housing they had to behave reasonably.
We have an entitlement culture. Some people feel entitled to social housing wherever they want to live and high levels of social welfare payment and feel no need to offer anything in return, even just normal neighbourliness.
Brendan
So we should build social housing for low paid working people in those areas then, yes?I have every sympathy for people living in economically disadvantaged communities.
The notion that we should build social housing in their communities to accommodate unemployed people would only reinforce that disadvantage, fostering a permanent cycle of poverty.
Social housing should not be given for life - it should be reviewed every 5 years
If someone would no longer be on the priority list at that stage, then they should no longer get housing.
People who work should be given priority over those who don't work.
If someone has not worked for years and they are living in an area where there are plenty of jobs, then they should be moved and the house should be allocated to someone who is working in those jobs.
This is better than having someone on social welfare living in Dublin while someone else lives in Longford and commutes every day.
But if someone gets a job on 29th June and is allocated housing on 30th June, and quits on 1 July and doesn't work again until a few days before the next 5 year review, they should not be allocated housing in their area of choice.
The logical conclusion to that is that our social welfare system is a poverty trap.This doesn't really make sense. Firstly, because they have been assigned a house they of course are no longer on the priority list.
But if you mean that they have advanced in their careers to a point that they ordinarily wouldn't be classed as in priority need of house, therefore evicted, then this would be cause for chaos.
The incentive would be, not to take the promotion at work, not to advance the career for fear of being evicted. In the event that someone who does advance their career and is subsequently evicted, then they need to find a home (perhaps their family too?). In doing so, they may quit their job for a vacancy in their new locality. If an economy is growing, employers may find it hard to find the right people to employ in the first instance, without having to consider a state run project of eviction!
The logical conclusion to that is that our social welfare system is a poverty trap.
Do you think that's a good thing?
So we should build social housing for low paid working people in those areas then, yes?
That's what Brendan is proposing.
No, my point is that our whole welfare system is a poverty trap.The point I made was in the context of Brendans proposal being implemented. I agree, a poverty trap it certainly would be.
Would you be in favour of prioritising low paid working people over people who aren't working when selecting them for housing in a particular location?He is not, he has not suggested building social housing. He has suggested prioritizing social housing for low paid workers through a process of assessment that will be implemented by eviction where appropriate.
No, my point is that our whole welfare system is a poverty trap.
Would you be in favour of prioritising low paid working people over people who aren't working when selecting them for housing in a particular location?
Maybe we should start another thread on this subject.You may think so, fair enough, that is your view. But this is about Brendans proposal. Would Brendans proposal enforce that poverty trap or alleviate any element of it?
Maybe we should start another thread on this subject.
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