
Subsidies fuelling high Guernsey private rents, minister says
Williams said he also wanted to look at ways to stop "unreasonable increases" in rent from a minority of landlords.Landlords should be able to increase rent to cover things such as rising "bill and maintenance costs", he said, but only in line with "something close to... normal inflation".Williams said: "We don't want to be draconian... but there are areas where you just feel that some people are being taken advantage of."We can't have people being charged unreasonable amounts of money when they're all struggling and it has a knock-on impact on the whole population, the working population."
Williams said emergency housing was "a priority"."We know there's a [hidden homelessness] problem, we know we need to do something about it," he said.He hoped new emergency housing pods could be ready within 12 months, but that it was important to "under-promise and over-deliver".Williams said he also wanted to explore alternative emergency housing options to "increase the supply" in the short term, such as temporary shelters for rough sleepers.He said: "There must be buildings out there [we could use temporarily] to try and alleviate the problem... ideally at a minimal cost."I am about delivery. I'm not here to do this job as pushing paper around and building up some reports that sit on the shelves."
Williams said the housing market had become "seized up".He highlighted a 2017 report by KPMG which found there were "enough bedrooms in the island if we could divvy them all up"."There are people who have got spare bedrooms in their property whilst other people are scrabbling around trying to find one," he said.The last States had introduced a £10,000 tax break for people renting out spare rooms to lodgers, he said.However, there had been a "slow take-up" on the rent-a-room relief scheme because it "probably [needed] more publicity".He said there was also "the difficulty of people downsizing from larger properties into smaller ones and freeing them up".
Knock-on consequences
Williams said the States needed to be cautious of "unforeseen" effects of any new policies.However, he said there were a "whole raft of other benefits" to reducing the "log jam" in the housing market.He said: "People will be inevitably stuck in properties and relationships where they've gone sour, or they're sticking by because there's nowhere else to go and it just heightens all the problems."Having "decent-quality, secure accommodation" would reduce health costs to the island and improve education, Williams said."It's much, much wider than just having a roof over your head".

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