logo
Housing industry leaders urge Coalition not to block 80,000 new homes

Housing industry leaders urge Coalition not to block 80,000 new homes

News.com.au2 days ago
Housing industry leaders have urged the Opposition to reconsider its objection to policy reforms, arguing it would block an estimated 80,000 new homes from being built.
Shadow Minister for Housing Andrew Bragg announced on July 29 that the Coalition will table a motion to disallow changes to the Labor Government's build-to-rent scheme.
The proposed changes would see tax cuts provided for foreign investors.
Mr Bragg said the Labor Government's proposed tax reforms did not align with 'The Australian Dream' and argued that it went against the national interest.
'Labor's foreign investor tax cut promotes the Australian nightmare of lifelong renting over the Australian dream of home ownership,' he said.
'Labor's obsession with foreign landlords and big super taking over Australian housing once again prioritises vested interests over Australia's national interest.
'The Australian Dream is about people - not corporations.'
Mr Bragg said the Coalition's priority is for Australians of all ages to own their own home.
'While the Coalition strongly supports foreign investment, it needs to fit with Australian culture and expectations,' he said.
'Labor should … be working with the home building sector to turn around the slump in housing construction which has coincided with the largest population surge since the 1950s.'
Property Council of Australia chief executive Mike Zorbas opposed the Shadow Minister's motion, saying members of parliament had an obligation to prioritise the supply of new homes to rent and buy.
'This is wrecking ball policy,' he said. 'The main game, the only game in Australia right now, should be the rapid supply of new housing ... we need to make owning a home as easy as we can.
'Equally, people need different housing choices throughout the stages of their lives.'
Mr Zorbas said the supply gap for housing was 'huge', with the nation building homes half as quickly as it was in 1995.
'Australians expect the Parliament to pull every supply lever we can to make homes less expensive for people who need to buy or rent,' he said.
'Threatening to knock out 80,000 new rental homes will directly raise the cost of new homes for everyone in the market.'
Urban Taskforce Australia CEO Tom Forrest said the Opposition's disallowance motion was 'a throwback to the failed housing policies of the Dutton leadership' and 'should be ignored'.
'The Liberal Party is taking an ill-conceived, ideological stance, made worse by a none-too-subtle xenophobic attack on foreign investment,' he said.
'Australia needs all the investment it can get when it comes to housing supply.'
Mr Forrest said when it came to housing, people benefitted from the construction of both build-to-sell and build-to-rent dwellings.
The Coalition's announcement comes three days after developers apt.Residential confirmed that it had secured three prime development build-to-rent sites in Bondi Junction, set to provide a proposed 900 apartments.
The developer also purchased a lot for a build-to-rent site in Ultimo back in May.
Mr Bragg said the Coalition 'invites a serious debate about the government's housing record in the Senate and we seek the chamber's support for our disallowance motion.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ATM supplier atm2go begins removes machines from stores linked to illicit tobacco trade
ATM supplier atm2go begins removes machines from stores linked to illicit tobacco trade

ABC News

time29 minutes ago

  • ABC News

ATM supplier atm2go begins removes machines from stores linked to illicit tobacco trade

A second ATM supplier – whose machines were once used by a cannabis kingpin – has begun pulling out its devices from stores linked to the illicit tobacco trade. The move by Queensland-based atm2go follows an ABC investigation which revealed how ATM companies were fuelling predominantly cash sales of illegal cigarettes by placing their private machines in stores. Rival supplier Next Payments publicly acknowledged the problem late last month and began removing 40 machines it believed were linked to the illicit trade. Major payments processing company EFTEX, which industry sources said handled transactions for atm2go, has vowed to cease handling transactions for tobacco stores from September following media scrutiny. Atm2go refused to discuss the matter when contacted by the ABC. "No comment," one senior member of the company said this week, before hanging up. The ABC had found atm2go machines in a string of stores selling illicit cigarettes — with sales occurring even after some shops in Queensland had been suspended by health authorities for breaching tobacco laws. Court documents also showed atm2go had cut deals to install ATMs with a man charged and later convicted with proceeds of crime and tobacco offences. In another case in Darwin, a man jailed for massive cannabis dealing had atm2go machines that he told an underling to load with drug cash. The ABC this week revisited four south-east Queensland locations that had been selling illegal cigarettes. In the past two months, atm2go machines were found inside but the machines were gone this week from three shops. A sign outside one of the stores in Oxley, on Brisbane's southside, said: "The ATM has been removed. Please use the ATM located inside where Woolies is." People with knowledge of the machines said the removalists had come suddenly. The fourth store in inner Brisbane's West End had a sign plastered across the atm2go machine saying it was not working and implored customers to: "please bring cash next time as the ATM will be out for awhile!" Atm2go was once heavily focused on events and used a franchise system, but industry sources said COVID-19 and ensuing lockdowns had disrupted its model. The company had in recent years been crowing in social media posts about putting machines in stores selling tobacco. Federal Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke's office has asked regulators to examine private ATMs.

Coriolanus star Hazem Shammas on the futility of making art at a time of crisis
Coriolanus star Hazem Shammas on the futility of making art at a time of crisis

ABC News

time29 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Coriolanus star Hazem Shammas on the futility of making art at a time of crisis

Hazem Shammas doesn't see the point in making art at a time like this. "I feel the futility of it more and more," he tells ABC Arts. It's a disappointing and troubling feeling for the Palestinian Australian actor, best known for roles in TV shows Safe Harbour, Underbelly and The Twelve. Shammas is grappling with this as he prepares to play the title role of Coriolanus in a new production by Bell Shakespeare in Melbourne. The rarely performed play — it's Bell's first staging in almost 30 years — is about the corrosive influence of power and politics. Shammas plays Coriolanus, a soldier who returns to Rome victorious after war with the Volscians. Called upon to be the city's next consul, he faces opposition from both the city's elected tribunes (played by Matilda Ridgway and Marco Chiappi) and ordinary citizens. He rallies against the idea of popular rule, saying citizens having any power over politicians allows "crows to peck the eagles". Consequently he is banished from Rome, and soon seeks revenge on the city by joining forces with the Volscians. Coriolanus — marking Shammas's return to Bell Shakespeare after starring in Macbeth in 2023 — is landing rave reviews, but the actor had to be convinced to take on the role. "It's not the crowd-pleaser that, say, Macbeth is, and it's not known so much," he says. "And the language: I get a real sense of Shakespeare's maturity in his writing; the poetry is denser." While parallels have been drawn between the character of Coriolanus and US President Donald Trump, the far more disturbing link for Shammas is to the war in Gaza, where 146 people including 88 children have died of malnutrition and the death toll has passed 60,000 people since Hamas' attack on Israel in October 2023. "We're studying power in a time when there are horrific abuses of power and that affects me," Shammas says. "I'm a Palestinian, playing a role where the actor walks around talking about wiping people out as a solution. "I'm playing a role where a man walks around talking about essentially ethnic cleansing. "Of course I'm going to think about that constantly." Making theatre at this time, Shammas says, is "dabbling in whimsy" and an "intellectual privilege". "[Coriolanus] is a play about the abuses of power, but when we're living in a climate of utter, horrific abuse of power and our arts community is silenced, and we remain silent, it troubles me." Since the beginning of the war in Gaza, Australian artists whose work has referenced the Arab-Israeli conflict, or who have spoken out about human rights abuses, including the killing of journalists, have had performances cancelled and awards rescinded. Those artists include Khaled Sabsabi, who, after being dropped was recently reinstated to represent Australia at the Venice Biennale; and Jayson Gillham, who is suing the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra for his cancelled performances. Expressions of support for the Palestinian cause have also ended in censorship. Writer K A Ren Wyld lost a $15,000 fellowship over a social media post following the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar in October last year, which was deleted shortly after it was posted. Kellee Green's win at the Queensland Music Awards for an instrumental song titled 'River to Sea' led to the Brisbane City Council withdrawing funding for the awards; workshops by Omar Sakr and other writers at the State Library Victoria were cancelled over "child and cultural safety"; and when some of the cast of The Seagull at Sydney Theatre Company wore keffiyehs to a curtain call, a number of donors and board members withdrew. "How are we OK with our artists and our writers being constantly silenced?" Shammas says. "How are we OK with things being defunded or threatened [to be defunded] constantly? "We're in a perpetual state of fear, and we're walking around not talking about it, only worried about our next job and whether we've got a job or not, while people are being f**king slaughtered." Shammas argues government intervention "can stop our voices". "But it's happening everywhere and to everyone right now purely because of a f**king genocide that is being allowed to happen in Palestine. "[That intervention] is more troubling now than it was [in the past]." Israel has repeatedly denied it is pursuing a campaign of genocide in Gaza, accusing Hamas in turn of trying to wipe out the Jewish population in Israel. Shammas does not intend to stop working in the arts. "That's who I am; it's what I do," he says. "That's why I'm so troubled by this." And while he is frustrated by the failure of the Australian arts community to speak up against against the war in Gaza and what he argues is censorship, he is also at times heartened by solidarity in the wider community. For example, current and former collaborators — including Coriolanus co-stars Jules Billington and Matilda Ridgway — have signed an open letter of more than 4,000 artists to the federal government calling for unimpeded humanitarian access to Gaza, potential sanctions of Israel, and recognition of Palestinian statehood. "I don't doubt the people I work with and their capacities for engagement in this," he says. "I don't doubt any individual audiences' capacities for engagement in this. "But I doubt our collective will for engagement in this." Still, Shammas remains proud of the work he and his collaborators at Bell Shakespeare have done on Coriolanus. "We've created an exceptional piece of art," he says. But he fears the ideas about power and politics in the play fail to reach beyond the theatre. That impelled him to speak up. Coriolanus is at Arts Centre Melbourne until August 10.

The Geelong suburbs where homes sell every single day
The Geelong suburbs where homes sell every single day

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

The Geelong suburbs where homes sell every single day

A rise in people hunting new homes sees a group of Geelong suburbs where a property effectively sells each day of the year. Armstrong Creek, Lara and Highton, along with Torquay each scored more than 365 residential sales in the 12 months to July, new PropTrack figures reveal. Sellers in Geelong's biggest-selling suburbs are also enjoying the injection of competition from investors as buyers seek affordable entries, good yields and long-term growth prospects. Armstrong Creek is Geelong's biggest market, with 455 home sales in FY25 almost 100 greater than the same time 12 months ago. The median house price has sat around $650,000 at Armstrong Creek over the year, while the rental yield improved to 4.24 per cent. House and unit sales combined to crack more than 400 sales in Lara, while 367 homes transacted each in Highton and Torquay. McGrath, Armstrong Creek agent Sam Parsons said a good portion of sales in the suburb are to investors in the $650,000 to $700,000 range. He estimated investors now represent up to 40 per cent of buyers in the growth corridor. 'The big portion in that price range is first-home buyers, or people with that budget to get in the market, because there is now that true fear of missing out in that price range,' Mr Parsons said. 'There's genuine competition against them now, which wasn't there nine months ago.' He suggests some investors may have 'jumped the gun' when they sold up as the state government hiked land taxes and other compliance costs. 'They do add up, but that's part and parcel of owning an investment property,' Mr Parsons said. 'The ones that held on, or that (will) hold on to them long term, are always going to be better off. Land tax and other things are not great for an investor when the bill comes, but when the investor looks at the bigger picture, their investments are doing well for them.' Mr Parsons said buyers were seeking homes aged between one to five years, which required less maintenance and the ability to claim depreciation against their taxable income. He said the best time to claim depreciation on an investment property was in the first 10 years. The PropTrack data shows a 5.6 per cent drop in Highton's median house price over the past 12 months to $861,000. But Hayeswinckle, Highton agent Michelle Winckle said while more locals were downsizing, contributing to the decline, there was a real lack of stock in the lower price brackets now driving competition. 'To be honest, people are misreading the market – they don't realise how good the Highton market is,' Ms Winckle said. 'A lot of people believe Highton has dropped, but there's actually not enough stock in Highton – we've got more buyers than we actually have sellers.' That was evident last weekend when a three-bedroom house in Strickland Ave attracted 10 bidders. The house was listed with a $640,000 reserve price, but sold to an investor for $751,000. Ms Winckle said plenty of people were looking to downsize in Highton, while family buyers were also a sizeable portion of the market. Investors and families tended to compete for similar properties in Highton, because the fundamentals driving interest in the suburb were good schools, access to shopping and the Geelong Ring Road. 'It's a very popular family area because it's close to all the schools. There's so many schools around us, so Highton is good for that.' Elite Buyers Agents' Geelong buyers agent Vicky Whittaker said people waiting for the market to rise were contributing to the shortage of sub-$900,000 homes in Highton. 'I think there is a lot of vendors thinking the price is going to go up, they're going to get more growth on the property, so they're sitting on their hands.' Ray White Lara agent Matthew Wade-Taylor said another cut to interest rates after better inflation figures this week would increase competition in the market. Lara's $682,000 median house price had slipped 2.7 per cent over 12 months, but showed more signs of improvement over the short term as the average time to sell a house has also been slashed. 'We were getting two, three people at an open homes, sometimes zero (12 months ago). Now properties at a price below $700,000 we're getting to the first open sometimes 10 to 15 people.' Mr Wade-Taylor said families were the biggest demographic for mid-range properties, with investors typically keen below $650,000. First-home buyers are typically coming out on top if they're coming up against investors, he said. 'Advocates are coming with a lot of conditions whereas first-home buyers know there's a bit of competition so it's putting them in a position where they have to tighten up their conditions.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store