Of course you conveniently omit from that discussion that when it was asked of you where the working woman would live (in the context of there only being limited options to accommodate - a charateristic of a housing crisis) you answered, lamely, where she would not live!
So im asking, where is the incentive to progress a career if the reward for doing so means losing your home?
Perhaps eventually, as someone in favour of forced eviction for having the audacity for going to work, paying taxes, and contributing to society, you could answer this - where will the SH tenants go if forced to move out?
You keep saying "evicted" but I don't agree. What I and others are proposing is that someone gets a social house for a period of time (e.g. 5 years) after which if they are no longer deemed by the authorities as most in need, they vacate the house for someone else.Where does the evicted family go?
The solution to that has been around for over 50 years. We'd rather waste scarce public (and private) funds using Victorian construction methods to make our over-built and under-engineered houses.The other, more general, problem (I may have voiced it earlier in this thread or elsewhere on these forums - if I did, apologies) on social housing is that the ballooning cost of it is becoming impossible for governments to sustain.
It was manageable enough when a unit could be built for £50-60k, or even €100k, but with new builds now seeming to start at €250k, exclusive of site cost, it is a huge cost.
100,000 new units would barely meet demand but would cost €25 billion, before a cent is added to reflect site cost, contingencies ,inflation etc.
I said "people who have a good income and can well afford to buy their own home keeping a council home that is needed by a family currently living in a hotel"
That is, they may well be able to afford in monetary terms to buy or rent a property, but because they have jobs in fixed locations, because they have children in schools, because they have childcare in place, because they have ties to their local community with a life outside of work, because they have elderly parents that they care for, …etc…etc... they cannot find anywhere suitable to buy or rent and end up living with mammy and daddy well into their thirties, or end up in a hostel, or a hotel.
Where did I say they would have to move far away from where they currently live?Yes and I said,
So being well able to afford to buy a home does not guarantee that you will be able to buy a home. If your job is in Dublin, your wifes job in Dublin, your kids going to school in Dublin, your elderly parents that need looking after in Dublin, your sick brother or sister is in Dublin, your GAA club is in Dublin, your friends and associates are in Dublin, but the only affordable home available for you to buy is in Mullingar, do you not think that if someone is going to buy a home, that they at least have some right to choose where they want to buy?
I make no distinction here, unlike you, between social housing tenants and non-social housing tenants. If either or both, can 'well afford to buy their own home', then both have a right to at least make the choice of where it is that they want to live (seeing as they are paying for it and all) dont you think? Or do you think that only social housing tenants who can 'well afford to buy a their own home' should be compelled to buy any home that they can afford, regardless of its suitability? Are you for real?
See you really aren't listening.
- You said that you think that rents should be tied to income, increasing as incomes go up.
- I asked you if there should be a cap on the rents or should they just continue to increase as the tenants income increases.
- You said they they should not be capped and asked me at when level they should be capped.
- I replied that they should be capped at market rates.
So my position is that rents should be tied to income, increasing as income increases until they get to the market rate. You think they should just keep increasing.
Ok so, cap it at open market rates
Of course not. I've continuously said that rents should be ties to income but increase as income increases until it gets to the market rate.Im pretty sure you wouldnt expect a family on €20K a year to be paying €1000 pm if that what the prevailing market rate is?
It varies from area to area (just another costly complexity) but one-sixth of income is way too low for higher earners. That means that someone with an income of €80,000 in a council house in Crumlin only pays a maximum of €1100 a month and probably far less while their lower income neighbour in private rental accommodation with the same family circumstances is paying well over €2000 a month.as far as Im aware the Differential Rent Scheme applies a rent of one-sixth of income (subject to other considerations such as how many adults occupy the house, how many are at work, care for the elderly etc).
If someone in a social house in Crumlin can afford to buy or rent a private house in Crumlin but chooses not to I think that at the very least they should pay open market rent for the house they live in.
That means that someone with an income of €80,000 in a council house in Crumlin only pays a maximum of €1100 a month and probably far less while their lower income neighbour in private rental accommodation with the same family circumstances is paying well over €2000 a month.
So being well able to afford to buy a home does not guarantee that you will be able to buy a home. If your job is in Dublin, your wifes job in Dublin, your kids going to school in Dublin, your elderly parents that need looking after in Dublin, your sick brother or sister is in Dublin, your GAA club is in Dublin, your friends and associates are in Dublin, but the only affordable home available for you to buy is in Mullingar, do you not think that if someone is going to buy a home, that they at least have some right to choose where they want to buy?
Please stop trying (yet again) to deflect & drag the discussion off topic. I made reference to a viewpoint you have, which you denied, but which is true..
What I and others are proposing is that someone gets a social house for a period of time (e.g. 5 years) after which if they are no longer deemed by the authorities as most in need, they vacate the house for someone else.
What about all the people who have had to buy in Mullingar due to not being able to afford a place in Dublin, yet have all their ties in Dublin....what should happen for them???
And...where...will...they...go...once...they...have....vacated...the...property...considering...there...is...a...housing...shortage...which...I...am...sure....you...have...heard...of?
Firefly, you made reference to a viewpoint I have.
I dont know, what should happen to them? Do you think they should swap places with all the social housing tenants in Dublin?
Assuming they no longer qualify for social housing as there is someone in greater need they will have to provide for themselves like everyone else. At least they will have 5 years to plan for it!
At least now you are admitting it rather than denying it...
I am not saying anything should be done for them, I am trying to make the point that why should someone lucky enough to win the council house lottery get to stay in Dublin as they have connections there when people who put a roof over their own heads have to move to where ever they can afford??
Yes, I'd cap it at €2000 in the above example. I picket the market rate for rent as they are renting. Why would you cap the market rate for renting at the market rate for mortgages?On the other hand, with the Differential Rent Scheme, paying at 1/6 of income, they would be forking out €1,250 - but you think it should be capped at €930? The market rate?
On yet another hand you reference €2,000 a month for private rented accommodation, so €2,000 would be the cap. (How did you decide to apply the rental market rate, instead of the mortgage rate when considering we were talking about those 'well able to buy...'?)
If people who can afford to provide for themselves did so it would mean resourced could be used to provide for those who can't.even though you know that these rates are causing people to become homeless.
As incomes increase the amount required for basics such as food and clothing remain about the same and so more income is available for other expenditure. I don't think anyone expects a family with a household income of €21K to hand over €7K on rent though they would be left with €277 a week in net income. I don't have much more than that myself and I've 4 kids to look after.A social housing family with €21K is expected to hand over €7,000 of that back to the State?
I agree!Believe me, you don't have to travel too far around here to get a sense of entitlement.
Can you state your please?Council tenants should pay rents in line with their income, increasing as their income increases until it reaches the open market rent.
I would suggest that far fewer people born in Killiney and Mallahide end up living in Killiney and Mallahide than people born in Crumlin or Killinarden.Do you think the State should provide subsidised housing for everyone who can't afford a home where they grew up and have family connections? What about all the people who grow up in Dalkey, Killiney, Foxrock and Mallahide? If they have family connections there, get married and start a family and move in with a one set of parents and have their kids in school should the State provide them with a home in those areas?
so we bought where we could afford in the commuter belt.
Social housing is not supposed to be there to provide your forever house and keep you living in luxury in your perfect world.
Once someone is earning enough, they should move on. It's up to them to sort out where.
I wasnt sure which cap you were applying...you mentioned people who can "well afford to buy", so I assumed mortgage amounts were an option. You have clarified it that it is market rents, so we will go with that.Why would you cap the market rate for renting at the market rate for mortgages?
That would mean it would be cheaper for them to buy so there would be an economic imperative for them to move out, buy in the area, and thus make a social house available for one of the families living in a hotel. That would be socially just.
If people who can afford to provide for themselves did so it would mean resourced could be used to provide for those who can't.
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