The legislation for the Australian Government’s build-to-rent (BTR) scheme seeks to boost the number of rental homes in the Australian market, but housing advocates have been left disappointed by the Senate Economics Legislation Committee’s report on the legislation.
In reaction to a Labor-led Senate committee report recommending the legislation’s passage in its current form, members of both the Coalition and the Greens submitted dissenting reports.
Senator Pocock, supported by key independents in both houses, provided a strong statement of support for the amendments proposed by the Property Council, CHIA and National Shelter.
The CHIA, National Shelter and the Property Council joint submission to the Committee proposed changes to the legislation that would provide the right tax settings to encourage the growth of BTR housing, and to better target requirements for 10 per cent affordable housing within existing and new BTR projects to ensure those who need it most can benefit.
EY analysis shows these changes could result in 105,000 rental homes and extending the proposed changes to existing BTR projects would incur a minimal cost to government over a 10-year period of $9.3 million.
Property Council of Australia Chief Executive Officer Mike Zorbas said the report shows the legislation clearly cannot pass without further negotiations.
“It is disappointing the Committee couldn’t find common ground in the middle of a national housing supply crisis,” Mr Zorbas said.
“For sheer new housing supply, the compromise proposal beats the welcome 40,000 homes from Housing Australia Future Fund hands down.
“There is no cheaper, better way available to the parliament to add 105,000 new homes to our national supply over the next decade.
“Providing more housing choice, especially rental choice, is critical to solving the housing crisis. Now is the time for good faith good policy negotiations to replace entrenched political positions,” he said.
Wendy Hayhurst, CHIA CEO said “there was an opportunity in this report to make recommendations that would enable a steady pipeline of genuinely affordable rental housing for nurses, disability care workers and staff working in the retail industry, all at very little extra cost to government”.
“With the National Rental Affordability Scheme fast coming to an end, our joint proposal would immediately inject a much-needed shot of 1200 affordable rental homes to help people facing a big rent hike. It is not too late for good faith negotiations that could let this happen,” she said.
Emma Greenhalgh, National Shelter CEO said, “we do not have the luxury in a national housing crisis to continue to waste opportunities to work together to deliver a range of housing solutions for our communities,” she said.
“There was a real opportunity through this inquiry to consider amendments to the legislation to make renting in Australia a much better experience for tenants by considering amendments to provide greater security of tenure with longer leases and the use of ‘no cause’ evictions and better targeting of affordable rental homes through build-to-rent.”