Boggles wrote: » Like I all ready explained it's best practice for the council to replenish housing stock, newer for older. Retro fitting 50-60 year old houses is very expensive as in on going maintenance, if the tenant is merely renting the council is responsible for this maintenance. Also areas of social housing where they can be anti social behavior will organically rise out of that if more people start to own their own homes. It's not just the cost, it's the value. The benefits completely out weigh the negatives. Anyway AFAIK they have stopped the scheme which is a pity.
lola85 wrote: » The 2016 Incremental Tenant Purchase Scheme was introduced under the Housing (Sale of Local Authority Houses) Regulations 2015, and came into effect on 1 January 2016. To qualify for the scheme, you must have: ***Been getting social housing support for at least a year*** An annual income of at least €15,000 per year. (Your annual income can be a combination of your gross income from wages and your income from some social welfare payments. You will not qualify if your income is only from social welfare payments.) You may be able to get a local authority mortgage. You will get a discount of 60%, 50% or 40% off the purchase price of the house. The level of the discount depends on your income. An incremental charge, equivalent to the discount, will be placed on the house. Over a specified period of years, this charge will reduce to nil in annual increments of 2% of the total value of the house, unless you resell the house or breach the conditions of sale during this specified period.
An incremental charge, equivalent to the discount, will be placed on the house.https://www.citizensinformation.ie/en/housing/local_authority_and_social_housing/buying_your_local_authority_house.html
bubblypop wrote: » But if they don't actually need to build new stock, then keeping old stock in good condition becomes much easier. No need for more land, no need to pay for new houses.
lola85 wrote: » Do you mean housing for everyone? Why should some people have to buy off a private developer and be fleeced as you say while others don’t? Housing for everyone provided by the government I’m all for. I’d personally have a lot more money in my pocket each week.
Matt Barrett wrote: » Found the details. I was familiar with the tenant purchase scheme. You get a discount based on income. You have to pay back any discount you get over a number of years and it reduces over time. I don't see the problem? It's basically affordable housing for people on low incomes.
bubblypop wrote: » But if they don't actually need to build new stock, then keeping old stock in good condition becomes much easier.
Boggles wrote: » that made you laugh out loud?
Deleted User wrote: » You don't pay back the discount. That only happens if you sell the house. If you stay in the house for a prescribed time (15, 20 or 25 years, depending on discount you received) you never pay back the difference.
Matt Barrett wrote: » Sounds fair enough. A lot of this goes back to the idea that people with less money can buy or rent a house when others of us with more money cannot.
Gatling wrote: » Tell working families sorry you might never be able to buy your own home ,then tell them a family in social housing can buy their LA house after 24 months in it at a big discount ,
Scoundrel wrote: » :rolleyes:this is absolute nonsense no one wants free housing just affordable state built housing in return for paying our tax yes there are perma dole wasters but they are a statistically insignificant amount of people. The private sector only build houses in order to make obscene profit often cutting corners to do so and successive governments have lazily dumped housing into their laps I'm arguing simply that in return for all the tax we pay the very least a government should do is provide housing for its people.
bubblypop wrote: » Not when there are not enough social houses it doesn't. There are huge amounts of single people who bought their council houses cheap & now live alone in 3 bed houses. Would make more sense for those people to rent a social house for an long as they need to, until such a time as they can afford their own home. If they stay in social housing for their whole life, they get downsized to an appropriate residence at their needs change.
Matt Barrett wrote: » Rent is based on income. The whole point is they pay next to nothing if they earn next to nothing. You can't buy if you are in arrears or have a history of non-payment. The discount below market is calculated based on how many years you payed rent there. People who lived in properties built in the 30's and 40's for decades, got offered a discount on current market value. I would guess in many cases the council made any money spent in construction back a number of times over.
Matt Barrett wrote: » Sounds fair enough.
Matt Barrett wrote: » The only issue there is the cap. What income is too high for social housing?
FTA69 wrote: » I don’t get this “foreva home” b*llocks that comes up everytime someone suggests building social housing.
Gatling wrote: » Currently €42,000 (open to correction) is the cap in Dublin income wise for social housing , but a couple already in social housing could in theory earn double that and still pay a small subsidised rent , When they could actually afford to get a mortgage
kowloon wrote: » I hear it all the time when it comes to adopting cats and dogs. Are people using it to describe houses purposely comparing the inhabitants to dogs or have I gotten this wrong?
Gatling wrote: » Tell working families sorry you might never be able to buy your own home ,then tell them a family in social housing can buy their LA house after 24 months in it at a big discount , Meanwhile the working families face multiple hour commutes from outside Dublin or elsewhere while Johnny sit on his hole gets to choose what part of Dublin he chooses to live for next to nothing
Boggles wrote: » People who live in Social work
Matt Barrett wrote: » True. How many couples do we think are earning over or double €42,000, and have not been rent assessed since they start earning that much? Rent is based on income. They assess income from time to time.
Matt Barrett wrote: » Found the details. I was familiar with the tenant purchase scheme. You get a discount based on income.You have to pay back any discount you get over a number of years and it reduces over time. I don't see the problem? It's basically affordable housing for people on low incomes.
blanch152 wrote: » Eh, no, you don't pay back the discount, the council writes it off, 2% a year.https://www.housing.gov.ie/sites/default/files/publications/files/2016_02_19_-_tenant_information_booklet_-_tips_2016.pdf It's all in the booklet - see pages 12 and 13. It's a foreva house for half-price scheme.
We are engaged in a race to the bottom. 'If I can't afford it, why is somebody worse off getting it at a discount?'. Should be looking to policy makers to improve everyone's lot, not take from those worse off.
Scoundrel wrote: » Yes absolutely the government should be providing housing for everyone payed for through tax and of course an affordable mortgage would be payed each month by householders. IMO private development is the cause of the crisis
BattleCorp wrote: » You are living in cloud cuckoo land if you think the government should be providing houses for everyone. Is there even a country in the world that does that.......Oh yeah, North Korea does. It is absolutely unaffordable for the government to provide houses for everyone. There isn't enough tax revenue available to pay for it. I don't see how private development caused this crisis either. Why do you think private development caused the crisis?