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Opening Doors to Affordable Housing CHCWA Council Meeting April 2014

Opening Doors to Affordable Housing CHCWA Council Meeting April 2014. Affordable Housing Strategy 2010-2020. Stronger, more diverse social housing system More affordable private rentals and home ownership opportunities Better use of government land and housing assets

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Opening Doors to Affordable Housing CHCWA Council Meeting April 2014

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  1. Opening Doors to Affordable Housing CHCWA Council Meeting April 2014

  2. Affordable Housing Strategy 2010-2020 Stronger, more diverse social housing system More affordable private rentals and home ownership opportunities Better use of government land and housing assets Public-private partnerships – market solutions Affordable Land Supply

  3. In essence... more supply and more transition points Retail, hospitality, NGO, casual workers Nurses, police, trades Centrelink recipients Professionals $90,000 <$70,000 <$30,000 <$50,000 Moderate incomes Very low incomes Low incomes St Bart’s, Lime Street

  4. Some highlights…. 14,200+ affordable homes since 2010 for people on low-moderate incomes including: • 4,000+ social housing • 1,660 discounted rentals (NRAS) • 6,460 home loans through Keystart – approx 1,000 shared equity Value-adding partnerships, e.g: • MRA – agreement for 1,300 affordable homes by 2020 • CHOs – 155 growth properties complete or under construction • Private sector partnerships – 250 apartments in CBD financed by private sector with 30+% affordable; JV investment partners • Builders’ EOI – 1400+ new entry level homes • DoP/ WAPC, Office of Land and Housing Supply, LandCorp, WALGA

  5. What the AH Strategy has meant for the CH Sector Investment – circa $400m in asset transfers since 2010/11; $2.4b asset value in community sector hands Growth – 75% of new social housing has gone to CH sector. Sector is now almost 20% of social housing system Consolidation – 8 providers hold 60% of assets Diversity - greater role for growth providers (social developers) as well as niche providers (client or location specific)

  6. Some ongoing challenges.... Relational Intelligent cooperation vs competition Oversight in the public interest vs over regulation/prescription Capability Different skill sets needed in both sectors Scaling up (CHOs) and letting go (Govt) Legitimacy Evidence + returns for policy makers, treasuries and banks Winning hearts and minds of tenants Financial Housing those in greatest need vs growing supply Financial viability - how the gap is funded

  7. The horizon....? Federal context – future of the NAHA and other CW outlays? NDIS impacts. Commission of Audit. Welfare, tax, federalism and program reviews State budget context – constricted capital expenditure, asset sales, doing more with existing ingredients Policy context – planned approach to sector growth (NSW, VIC, WA) vs more aggressive reform (QLD, SA, TAS). Sector efficiency + multi-provider diversity Social context – ‘deserving and undeserving poor’; generational and spatial divides = Necessity for Innovation & Intelligent Cooperation

  8. Celebrating progress…

  9. Whole is greater than the sum of the parts… SharedStart… Based on 30% of gross income, 10% deposit, 6.28% interest rate and 30 year loan term. Source for Perth house price: Market Update, June quarter 2013, REIWA

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