logo
We're trading repairs for housing affordability

We're trading repairs for housing affordability

The Advertiser2 days ago

SINCE 2022, there have been regular flooding events occurring along the entire Australian east coast, from north Queensland through NSW to Victoria. They have resulted in tens of thousands of homes damaged or destroyed.
Houses damaged and destroyed in the Lismore floods of 2022 are still being repaired or rebuilt so that their owners can live in them once more. Flood events since then have occurred in Cairns, Ingham, Townsville, Brisbane, Kempsey, Port Macquarie, Taree, the Hunter Valley, the Sydney Basin and areas down the south coast into Victoria. That's all within just two and a half years. All areas hit by such disasters require renovation and rebuilding of people's homes.
In the most recent floods, authorities estimate 10,000 houses have been affected. Thousands of tradespeople are engaged in the repair and reconstruction of these homes. With so many tradespeople occupied in these rebuild programs as disasters keep coming, the workforce required to construct the large numbers of new houses to address the general housing shortage just doesn't exist. Trying to train substantial numbers of new tradespeople to address the scale of the shortage seems impossible.
It is reasonable to presume that more disasters, such as floods and fires, will provide plenty of ongoing reconstruction work and take large numbers of tradespeople away from new home builds. In two or three years, I expect they will still be repairing and rebuilding homes in Kempsey and Taree.
Substantially reducing immigration into Australia for a number of years to allow a catch-up in the workload is required. The problem with that, of course, is that to maintain our economy and standard of living, it is reliant on an ever-increasing level of migration into this country.
Many people would be surprised by how important it is to have a high level of immigration occurring on a constant basis. It's very much like an ongoing Ponzi scheme. If you stop, the whole system (economy and living standard) goes into decline.
Things are bad enough now, but I believe house prices are going to go up substantially, while availability will plateau, or at least not increase substantially.
THE Davidson Report found Newcastle council meetings were too long and overly political, from what I understand. So, at the first council meeting after the report, it felt like all the party politicians lined up to spend two hours attacking the lord mayor. One hour was devoted to recognising the University of Newcastle. It's not that hard to recognise; it's huge.
Perhaps a positive is that our elected party politicians are now all voting together, albeit on everything, to drive out any 'non-party' views. They seem united in backing the opposite of lord mayor Ross Kerridge to me. Wow, maybe party politics is dead in Newcastle.
HERE go the Boomers again, trying to kill off a proposed tax on super accounts over $3 million. They were successful in defeating changes to negative gearing, franking credits and capital gains tax concessions, so why not? This is a generation for whom university was free, jobs were plentiful, houses were cheap and for many, an era of two-income households. A lot of wealth was created.
They are also being supported by the taxpayer in retirement and have their hands out for whatever is on offer. This comes at a terrible cost to younger generations, who see the future as a continual struggle and unfairly carry the tax burden. We have real poverty in Australia, with children who go without, which limits their potential. We have homelessness growing, and people living with insecurity over food, housing and healthcare. It is not good enough and can only be addressed through fair and sweeping tax reform. The Labor government has six years to turn the growing inequality gap around and we must all pay where we can afford to do so. The vulgar displays of wealth in this country show a cohort who have not paid enough tax and don't seem to think they owe society, from which they have done very well, any recompense. The pressure on public hospitals, schools, social housing and welfare is not sustainable. End the bleating from those who can afford to pay.
TWO recent opinion pieces made some good points. One by Mark Kenny on party politics, and another on super changes by Jack Thrower. Thrower is an economist with the Australia Institute, which claims to be non-partisan. It was started by former Greens candidate Clive Hamilton and its director, Richard Denniss, is a former senior strategic advisor to Australian Greens leader Bob Brown, who taught at the Newcastle University and the Australian National University (ANU). Mark Kenny also writes for The Canberra Times, a left-centre paper. He is a professor at ANU and a former Fairfax and ABC employee. He is the director of the National Press Club. Their opinions are relevant, but thanks to the Herald, we can look at those opinions with more insight. Mind you, if you want a left-wing opinion, on just about anything, you can get it from the ANU.
Even if the City of Newcastle was considered high performing, clearly some common sense is missing in the hard rubbish collection section ("Flooding leads to fight over rubbish", Newcastle Herald 23/5) if poor residents affected by flooding are told to wait and take their rotting rubbish inside. How about organising a priority collection for them? I'm sure those not affected by flooding could wait another week. It's not rocket science.
MICHAEL Hinchey is spot on ("The centre is where you must hold", Letters, 28/5). The near-defunct Coalition needs to stop pandering to the climate change deniers (an ever-diminishing minority) and state clearly and categorically that they accept the reality of anthropomorphic climate change. Until they do so, they'll remain an anachronistic irrelevant force in Australian politics.
Did 'Macadamus' predict the Coalition band getting back together? They won't pull a crowd, but they don't have to; the band just has to sit back and watch Albo turn into Milli Vanilli.
I WONDER if Steve Barnett ("Insurgents are survivors somehow", Letters, 27/5) knows he is talking about old Israeli propaganda, suddenly replaced by 'Hamas is using the food to buy weapons.' From who? The surrounding Israeli Army. Then it changed to 'They are using it to buy war materials'. What, rubble? Then it morphed into selling it to get money from Palestinians. Why, when they can just take the money? None of these things can happen if there is enough food in Gaza to begin with.
TO those who pen long, biased political dissertations, I say there's none so blind as those who do not want to see.
SINCE 2022, there have been regular flooding events occurring along the entire Australian east coast, from north Queensland through NSW to Victoria. They have resulted in tens of thousands of homes damaged or destroyed.
Houses damaged and destroyed in the Lismore floods of 2022 are still being repaired or rebuilt so that their owners can live in them once more. Flood events since then have occurred in Cairns, Ingham, Townsville, Brisbane, Kempsey, Port Macquarie, Taree, the Hunter Valley, the Sydney Basin and areas down the south coast into Victoria. That's all within just two and a half years. All areas hit by such disasters require renovation and rebuilding of people's homes.
In the most recent floods, authorities estimate 10,000 houses have been affected. Thousands of tradespeople are engaged in the repair and reconstruction of these homes. With so many tradespeople occupied in these rebuild programs as disasters keep coming, the workforce required to construct the large numbers of new houses to address the general housing shortage just doesn't exist. Trying to train substantial numbers of new tradespeople to address the scale of the shortage seems impossible.
It is reasonable to presume that more disasters, such as floods and fires, will provide plenty of ongoing reconstruction work and take large numbers of tradespeople away from new home builds. In two or three years, I expect they will still be repairing and rebuilding homes in Kempsey and Taree.
Substantially reducing immigration into Australia for a number of years to allow a catch-up in the workload is required. The problem with that, of course, is that to maintain our economy and standard of living, it is reliant on an ever-increasing level of migration into this country.
Many people would be surprised by how important it is to have a high level of immigration occurring on a constant basis. It's very much like an ongoing Ponzi scheme. If you stop, the whole system (economy and living standard) goes into decline.
Things are bad enough now, but I believe house prices are going to go up substantially, while availability will plateau, or at least not increase substantially.
THE Davidson Report found Newcastle council meetings were too long and overly political, from what I understand. So, at the first council meeting after the report, it felt like all the party politicians lined up to spend two hours attacking the lord mayor. One hour was devoted to recognising the University of Newcastle. It's not that hard to recognise; it's huge.
Perhaps a positive is that our elected party politicians are now all voting together, albeit on everything, to drive out any 'non-party' views. They seem united in backing the opposite of lord mayor Ross Kerridge to me. Wow, maybe party politics is dead in Newcastle.
HERE go the Boomers again, trying to kill off a proposed tax on super accounts over $3 million. They were successful in defeating changes to negative gearing, franking credits and capital gains tax concessions, so why not? This is a generation for whom university was free, jobs were plentiful, houses were cheap and for many, an era of two-income households. A lot of wealth was created.
They are also being supported by the taxpayer in retirement and have their hands out for whatever is on offer. This comes at a terrible cost to younger generations, who see the future as a continual struggle and unfairly carry the tax burden. We have real poverty in Australia, with children who go without, which limits their potential. We have homelessness growing, and people living with insecurity over food, housing and healthcare. It is not good enough and can only be addressed through fair and sweeping tax reform. The Labor government has six years to turn the growing inequality gap around and we must all pay where we can afford to do so. The vulgar displays of wealth in this country show a cohort who have not paid enough tax and don't seem to think they owe society, from which they have done very well, any recompense. The pressure on public hospitals, schools, social housing and welfare is not sustainable. End the bleating from those who can afford to pay.
TWO recent opinion pieces made some good points. One by Mark Kenny on party politics, and another on super changes by Jack Thrower. Thrower is an economist with the Australia Institute, which claims to be non-partisan. It was started by former Greens candidate Clive Hamilton and its director, Richard Denniss, is a former senior strategic advisor to Australian Greens leader Bob Brown, who taught at the Newcastle University and the Australian National University (ANU). Mark Kenny also writes for The Canberra Times, a left-centre paper. He is a professor at ANU and a former Fairfax and ABC employee. He is the director of the National Press Club. Their opinions are relevant, but thanks to the Herald, we can look at those opinions with more insight. Mind you, if you want a left-wing opinion, on just about anything, you can get it from the ANU.
Even if the City of Newcastle was considered high performing, clearly some common sense is missing in the hard rubbish collection section ("Flooding leads to fight over rubbish", Newcastle Herald 23/5) if poor residents affected by flooding are told to wait and take their rotting rubbish inside. How about organising a priority collection for them? I'm sure those not affected by flooding could wait another week. It's not rocket science.
MICHAEL Hinchey is spot on ("The centre is where you must hold", Letters, 28/5). The near-defunct Coalition needs to stop pandering to the climate change deniers (an ever-diminishing minority) and state clearly and categorically that they accept the reality of anthropomorphic climate change. Until they do so, they'll remain an anachronistic irrelevant force in Australian politics.
Did 'Macadamus' predict the Coalition band getting back together? They won't pull a crowd, but they don't have to; the band just has to sit back and watch Albo turn into Milli Vanilli.
I WONDER if Steve Barnett ("Insurgents are survivors somehow", Letters, 27/5) knows he is talking about old Israeli propaganda, suddenly replaced by 'Hamas is using the food to buy weapons.' From who? The surrounding Israeli Army. Then it changed to 'They are using it to buy war materials'. What, rubble? Then it morphed into selling it to get money from Palestinians. Why, when they can just take the money? None of these things can happen if there is enough food in Gaza to begin with.
TO those who pen long, biased political dissertations, I say there's none so blind as those who do not want to see.
SINCE 2022, there have been regular flooding events occurring along the entire Australian east coast, from north Queensland through NSW to Victoria. They have resulted in tens of thousands of homes damaged or destroyed.
Houses damaged and destroyed in the Lismore floods of 2022 are still being repaired or rebuilt so that their owners can live in them once more. Flood events since then have occurred in Cairns, Ingham, Townsville, Brisbane, Kempsey, Port Macquarie, Taree, the Hunter Valley, the Sydney Basin and areas down the south coast into Victoria. That's all within just two and a half years. All areas hit by such disasters require renovation and rebuilding of people's homes.
In the most recent floods, authorities estimate 10,000 houses have been affected. Thousands of tradespeople are engaged in the repair and reconstruction of these homes. With so many tradespeople occupied in these rebuild programs as disasters keep coming, the workforce required to construct the large numbers of new houses to address the general housing shortage just doesn't exist. Trying to train substantial numbers of new tradespeople to address the scale of the shortage seems impossible.
It is reasonable to presume that more disasters, such as floods and fires, will provide plenty of ongoing reconstruction work and take large numbers of tradespeople away from new home builds. In two or three years, I expect they will still be repairing and rebuilding homes in Kempsey and Taree.
Substantially reducing immigration into Australia for a number of years to allow a catch-up in the workload is required. The problem with that, of course, is that to maintain our economy and standard of living, it is reliant on an ever-increasing level of migration into this country.
Many people would be surprised by how important it is to have a high level of immigration occurring on a constant basis. It's very much like an ongoing Ponzi scheme. If you stop, the whole system (economy and living standard) goes into decline.
Things are bad enough now, but I believe house prices are going to go up substantially, while availability will plateau, or at least not increase substantially.
THE Davidson Report found Newcastle council meetings were too long and overly political, from what I understand. So, at the first council meeting after the report, it felt like all the party politicians lined up to spend two hours attacking the lord mayor. One hour was devoted to recognising the University of Newcastle. It's not that hard to recognise; it's huge.
Perhaps a positive is that our elected party politicians are now all voting together, albeit on everything, to drive out any 'non-party' views. They seem united in backing the opposite of lord mayor Ross Kerridge to me. Wow, maybe party politics is dead in Newcastle.
HERE go the Boomers again, trying to kill off a proposed tax on super accounts over $3 million. They were successful in defeating changes to negative gearing, franking credits and capital gains tax concessions, so why not? This is a generation for whom university was free, jobs were plentiful, houses were cheap and for many, an era of two-income households. A lot of wealth was created.
They are also being supported by the taxpayer in retirement and have their hands out for whatever is on offer. This comes at a terrible cost to younger generations, who see the future as a continual struggle and unfairly carry the tax burden. We have real poverty in Australia, with children who go without, which limits their potential. We have homelessness growing, and people living with insecurity over food, housing and healthcare. It is not good enough and can only be addressed through fair and sweeping tax reform. The Labor government has six years to turn the growing inequality gap around and we must all pay where we can afford to do so. The vulgar displays of wealth in this country show a cohort who have not paid enough tax and don't seem to think they owe society, from which they have done very well, any recompense. The pressure on public hospitals, schools, social housing and welfare is not sustainable. End the bleating from those who can afford to pay.
TWO recent opinion pieces made some good points. One by Mark Kenny on party politics, and another on super changes by Jack Thrower. Thrower is an economist with the Australia Institute, which claims to be non-partisan. It was started by former Greens candidate Clive Hamilton and its director, Richard Denniss, is a former senior strategic advisor to Australian Greens leader Bob Brown, who taught at the Newcastle University and the Australian National University (ANU). Mark Kenny also writes for The Canberra Times, a left-centre paper. He is a professor at ANU and a former Fairfax and ABC employee. He is the director of the National Press Club. Their opinions are relevant, but thanks to the Herald, we can look at those opinions with more insight. Mind you, if you want a left-wing opinion, on just about anything, you can get it from the ANU.
Even if the City of Newcastle was considered high performing, clearly some common sense is missing in the hard rubbish collection section ("Flooding leads to fight over rubbish", Newcastle Herald 23/5) if poor residents affected by flooding are told to wait and take their rotting rubbish inside. How about organising a priority collection for them? I'm sure those not affected by flooding could wait another week. It's not rocket science.
MICHAEL Hinchey is spot on ("The centre is where you must hold", Letters, 28/5). The near-defunct Coalition needs to stop pandering to the climate change deniers (an ever-diminishing minority) and state clearly and categorically that they accept the reality of anthropomorphic climate change. Until they do so, they'll remain an anachronistic irrelevant force in Australian politics.
Did 'Macadamus' predict the Coalition band getting back together? They won't pull a crowd, but they don't have to; the band just has to sit back and watch Albo turn into Milli Vanilli.
I WONDER if Steve Barnett ("Insurgents are survivors somehow", Letters, 27/5) knows he is talking about old Israeli propaganda, suddenly replaced by 'Hamas is using the food to buy weapons.' From who? The surrounding Israeli Army. Then it changed to 'They are using it to buy war materials'. What, rubble? Then it morphed into selling it to get money from Palestinians. Why, when they can just take the money? None of these things can happen if there is enough food in Gaza to begin with.
TO those who pen long, biased political dissertations, I say there's none so blind as those who do not want to see.
SINCE 2022, there have been regular flooding events occurring along the entire Australian east coast, from north Queensland through NSW to Victoria. They have resulted in tens of thousands of homes damaged or destroyed.
Houses damaged and destroyed in the Lismore floods of 2022 are still being repaired or rebuilt so that their owners can live in them once more. Flood events since then have occurred in Cairns, Ingham, Townsville, Brisbane, Kempsey, Port Macquarie, Taree, the Hunter Valley, the Sydney Basin and areas down the south coast into Victoria. That's all within just two and a half years. All areas hit by such disasters require renovation and rebuilding of people's homes.
In the most recent floods, authorities estimate 10,000 houses have been affected. Thousands of tradespeople are engaged in the repair and reconstruction of these homes. With so many tradespeople occupied in these rebuild programs as disasters keep coming, the workforce required to construct the large numbers of new houses to address the general housing shortage just doesn't exist. Trying to train substantial numbers of new tradespeople to address the scale of the shortage seems impossible.
It is reasonable to presume that more disasters, such as floods and fires, will provide plenty of ongoing reconstruction work and take large numbers of tradespeople away from new home builds. In two or three years, I expect they will still be repairing and rebuilding homes in Kempsey and Taree.
Substantially reducing immigration into Australia for a number of years to allow a catch-up in the workload is required. The problem with that, of course, is that to maintain our economy and standard of living, it is reliant on an ever-increasing level of migration into this country.
Many people would be surprised by how important it is to have a high level of immigration occurring on a constant basis. It's very much like an ongoing Ponzi scheme. If you stop, the whole system (economy and living standard) goes into decline.
Things are bad enough now, but I believe house prices are going to go up substantially, while availability will plateau, or at least not increase substantially.
THE Davidson Report found Newcastle council meetings were too long and overly political, from what I understand. So, at the first council meeting after the report, it felt like all the party politicians lined up to spend two hours attacking the lord mayor. One hour was devoted to recognising the University of Newcastle. It's not that hard to recognise; it's huge.
Perhaps a positive is that our elected party politicians are now all voting together, albeit on everything, to drive out any 'non-party' views. They seem united in backing the opposite of lord mayor Ross Kerridge to me. Wow, maybe party politics is dead in Newcastle.
HERE go the Boomers again, trying to kill off a proposed tax on super accounts over $3 million. They were successful in defeating changes to negative gearing, franking credits and capital gains tax concessions, so why not? This is a generation for whom university was free, jobs were plentiful, houses were cheap and for many, an era of two-income households. A lot of wealth was created.
They are also being supported by the taxpayer in retirement and have their hands out for whatever is on offer. This comes at a terrible cost to younger generations, who see the future as a continual struggle and unfairly carry the tax burden. We have real poverty in Australia, with children who go without, which limits their potential. We have homelessness growing, and people living with insecurity over food, housing and healthcare. It is not good enough and can only be addressed through fair and sweeping tax reform. The Labor government has six years to turn the growing inequality gap around and we must all pay where we can afford to do so. The vulgar displays of wealth in this country show a cohort who have not paid enough tax and don't seem to think they owe society, from which they have done very well, any recompense. The pressure on public hospitals, schools, social housing and welfare is not sustainable. End the bleating from those who can afford to pay.
TWO recent opinion pieces made some good points. One by Mark Kenny on party politics, and another on super changes by Jack Thrower. Thrower is an economist with the Australia Institute, which claims to be non-partisan. It was started by former Greens candidate Clive Hamilton and its director, Richard Denniss, is a former senior strategic advisor to Australian Greens leader Bob Brown, who taught at the Newcastle University and the Australian National University (ANU). Mark Kenny also writes for The Canberra Times, a left-centre paper. He is a professor at ANU and a former Fairfax and ABC employee. He is the director of the National Press Club. Their opinions are relevant, but thanks to the Herald, we can look at those opinions with more insight. Mind you, if you want a left-wing opinion, on just about anything, you can get it from the ANU.
Even if the City of Newcastle was considered high performing, clearly some common sense is missing in the hard rubbish collection section ("Flooding leads to fight over rubbish", Newcastle Herald 23/5) if poor residents affected by flooding are told to wait and take their rotting rubbish inside. How about organising a priority collection for them? I'm sure those not affected by flooding could wait another week. It's not rocket science.
MICHAEL Hinchey is spot on ("The centre is where you must hold", Letters, 28/5). The near-defunct Coalition needs to stop pandering to the climate change deniers (an ever-diminishing minority) and state clearly and categorically that they accept the reality of anthropomorphic climate change. Until they do so, they'll remain an anachronistic irrelevant force in Australian politics.
Did 'Macadamus' predict the Coalition band getting back together? They won't pull a crowd, but they don't have to; the band just has to sit back and watch Albo turn into Milli Vanilli.
I WONDER if Steve Barnett ("Insurgents are survivors somehow", Letters, 27/5) knows he is talking about old Israeli propaganda, suddenly replaced by 'Hamas is using the food to buy weapons.' From who? The surrounding Israeli Army. Then it changed to 'They are using it to buy war materials'. What, rubble? Then it morphed into selling it to get money from Palestinians. Why, when they can just take the money? None of these things can happen if there is enough food in Gaza to begin with.
TO those who pen long, biased political dissertations, I say there's none so blind as those who do not want to see.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Drop-in pitches laid down as international cricket to return to Darwin for first time in 17 years
Drop-in pitches laid down as international cricket to return to Darwin for first time in 17 years

Courier-Mail

time3 hours ago

  • Courier-Mail

Drop-in pitches laid down as international cricket to return to Darwin for first time in 17 years

Don't miss out on the headlines from Northern Territory. Followed categories will be added to My News. Cricket fever is ramping up in the NT with tickets going live for the return of the international game in August, as two drop-in wickets have been installed at TIO Stadium. International cricket was last played in Darwin 17 years ago when Australia took on Bangladesh, but this year the team finally returns for two blockbuster T20s against South Africa. Fans will have the chance to book the best seats in the house for the matches on August 10 and 12 at Ticketek with thousands already expressing interest on pre-sales. Ticket prices are $20 for adults, $5 for children and $43 for families of four. Prior to that series the Australia A side, featuring Territorian Jake Weatherald, will take centre stage against Sri Lanka in July. The Australia A series will feature three 50-over games and two four-day matches, with free entry for general public attendance and all matches streamed live on Kayo Sports and People, Sport and Culture minister Jinson Charls and Jake Weatherald as TIO Stadium's drop-in pitch is laid down. Weatherald was the leading run scorer in the Sheffield Shield with 906 runs and is the all-time leading run scorer for the Adelaide Strikers, with recent exposure to TIO at last year's Top End Series. 'I'm just immensely proud to be a Territorian and get to play for Australia in some facet, it's going to be cool to play on the ground as it's such a great facility,' he said. 'I watched test cricket here long ago when I was a young kid so to be back here representing myself is a critical moment for me. 'The stuff that has been done to support the growth of NT cricket is exciting and to have the teams coming that we do will be cool for Territorians to see, they've been starving for a long time now. 'For young Territorians it's good representation of what you can aspire to be, you don't always get that so hopefully it inspires a lot of kids to play more cricket and aspire to play for Australia.' People, Sport and Culture minister Jinson Charls and NT Cricket CEO Gavin Dovey as TIO Stadium's drop-in pitch is laid down. NT Cricket chief executive Gavin Dovey said it was an exciting year for the sport in the Top End following the recent visit from the Australian women's side. 'The installation of the two drop in wickets marks a significant milestone in the return of international cricket,' he said. 'International cricket offers the Territory a platform few sports can rival, thanks to its huge global audience and economic impact. 'Closer to home, cricket sits at the heart of Australia's national identity, so we can't wait to see a packed out TIO Stadium in August.' People, Sport and Culture minister Jinson Charls said the drop-in pitches was a critical step toward delivering world-class matches to the NT. 'In our year of action, certainty and security, we're incredibly proud to welcome international cricket back to the Territory and demonstrate that Darwin has the capability to host world-class sporting events,' he said. People, Sport and Culture minister Jinson Charls, Major Events minister Marie-Clare Boothby, NT Cricket CEO Gavin Dovey and Jake Weatherald as TIO Stadium's drop-in pitch is laid down. Major Events, Tourism and Hospitality minister Marie-Clare Boothby said major sporting events like international cricket provide a real boost to the Top End. 'Major events like the Australia v South Africa T20s bring huge energy to our region, boosting tourism, business and community pride,' she said. 'We are proud our government has brought back international cricket to the NT for the first time in 17 years. 'Events like this draw fans from across the country, and we look forward to seeing supporters from near and far pack TIO Stadium.' Originally published as Drop-in pitches laid down as international cricket to return to Darwin for first time in 17 years

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store