
Development fee waiver scheme to be extended with €250m fund
housing
.
The scheme was introduced in April 2023
. It waived development fees charged by local authorities for the cost of roads and other public infrastructure. The waiver scheme also pertains to a refund for Uisce Éireann water and waste water connection charges.
The proposed end for the waiver, which was due to occur in December this year, was widely blamed for a large fall-off in housing construction.
It was extended in April last year to December 2026
.
The money allocated to the waiver scheme is part of an allocation of €696 million announced by the Cabinet last week for housing.
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Some €184 million is being allocated for social housing, with €100 million to approved housing bodies and €84 million provided to local authorities to support their construction of new
social housing
.
A further €114 million will be directed to Approved Housing Bodies under the Cost Rental Equity Loan scheme. Another €14 million is being allocated for private sector cost-rental development under the Secure Tenancy Affordable Rental scheme.
An additional €38 million is being provided for the vacant property refurbishment grant, which has led to almost 2,900 vacant and derelict properties being brought back into use.
Local authorities are being given €50 million for second-hand acquisitions through the tenant in situ scheme. This allows local authorities to purchase privately owned homes where tenants are at risk of eviction, ensuring they can remain in their homes as social housing tenants.
Some €60 million will go to the
Enhanced Defective Concrete Blocks Grant Scheme. This will allow homeowners remediate properties damaged by
defective concrete blocks
.
[
How affordable housing in Dublin's north inner city has rapidly changed to homeless accommodation
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]
Minister for Housing
James Browne
said the funding will deliver 4,600 new social and
affordable housing
units.
'In recent years, we've made significant progress in delivering new housing and launching schemes that have provided secure homes for thousands of individuals and families at a scale not seen since the 1970s,' he said.
'The scale of the challenge we have demands continued and intensified effort. This funding allocation is a key part of that ongoing response.'
The Government is scrambling for measures to fix the
housing crisis
, with the
ESRI forecasting just 33,000 units to be built this year and 37,000 next year
– well short of the Government's target of 41,000 this year and 43,000 next year.
It is also well below the target of 303,000 new homes to be built by the Government between now and 2030.
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