Thursday, 4 December 2025

NT remote housing rent reversal: what are the policy ramifications?


O, it is excellent

To have a giant's strength; but it is tyrannous

To use it like a giant

Measure for Measure, Act two, Scene two.

A decision by the High Court yesterday (link here) overturned a series of ministerial determinations by the Former ALP Government in 2021, 2022 and 2023 which purported to introduce a new rent system for the 5000 plus remote social housing units across the NT. An associated decision dealt with an associated matter that had been incorrectly dealt with by the NT Court of Appeal (link here).

The ABC news article published yesterday (High Court strikes down remote NT public housing rent rises: link here) and a previous article published in 2022 (Rent hike looms for many Northern Territory residents under new remote rent system: link here) provide good and accessible summaries of the issues involved.

The High Court summary released yesterday is included below as an addendum.

The Decision itself is legally complicated and largely deals with the circumstances in which ministers and agencies are required to provide procedural fairness to individuals affected by government decisions. I wont attempt to summarise the decisions here and would merely note that the decision (which was unanimous) is reasonably easy to read and follow.

The following comments are observations on some of the policy issues that fed into and are likely to flow from the Court’s decision.

The former NT Housing Minister made an initial determination to change rental arrangements and a number of subsequent determinations which were required to either address errors in the original determination, and/or to make adjustments to the reach of the determination. There is a strong sense of administrative hyper-complexity exacerbated by a degree of administrative incompetence in the management of the rental system applying to remote social housing. The remote housing stock (which was the subject of this Court decision) is almost universally made available to Indigenous community tenants.

It is unclear how the current NT Government will respond to the Court’s decision. There are two obvious elements requiring attention:

First, how to retrospectively correct and make amends to tenants who have been charged rents collected on the basis of the determinations which have now been quashed (and presumably must be held to have been of no effect from the start).

Second, how to proceed going forward.

There are clearly a number of options available to the NT Government in relation to both these issues, include (a) retrospective legislation validating the determinations (although this would inevitably attract further litigation); (b) seeking to remake the determinations in some form following a process of procedural fairness though the fact that the Court identified that the circumstances of individual tenants were important factors would make such a process extremely time consuming, complex and expensive; and (c) deciding to adopt an identical tenancy and rental framework as applies in urban areas of the NT (though this too may need to involve the provision of procedural fairness to existing remote tenants (unless it was grandfathered); and (d) reverting to the status quo ante.

There are arguments for and against each of these options, and they all involve complex administrative and political factors. There may be elements of each that could be adopted.

The bottom line is that the NT Government cannot do nothing, it must act. The question for Indigenous interests is obvious: can they trust the NT Government to treat them fairly going forward in a context where both parties have demonstrated in recent years the capacity to ignore the interests of remote communities, and to pander to powerful interest groups such as mining and petroleum interests, gambling interests, the alcohol industry and the urban majority in Darwin, Katherine and Alice Springs in ways which systemically disadvantage Aboriginal Territorians.

The Commonwealth too has a stake here given that it has provided over $4 billion for remote housing and associated infrastructure funding over the past 15 years, and of course is the source of the bulk of the NT’s general-purpose funding via the GST and various special purpose funding arrangements.

My strong suggestion is that to protect its ongoing investments, the Commonwealth should get on the front foot here. In conjunction with the NT Government, the Commonwealth should convene a process that involves key Aboriginal interests linked to remote community housing (APONT and the four NT land councils and perhaps local governments spring to mind) to develop a way forward that both simplifies and strengthens the current policy arrangements governing remote housing provision and administration and importantly that treats all tenants respectfully and with fairness.

While the issues discussed in this post are an NT issue, the overcrowding crisis in remote Australia is not limited to the NT, and there is a case for the Commonwealth to step back into this policy space in a much more proactive way. There are no guarantees that the administrative and policy failures that have emerged in the NT and led to this litigation are not being replicated in one form or another in other jurisdictions.

One of the realities of remote service provision for Indigenous communities is that the risk that their real and substantive needs become invisible is ever-present. It is past time in my view that the Prime Minister and his Minister for Indigenous Australians asked themselves: what was the point of the 1967 referendum amending the Australian Constitution to grant the Commonwealth a head of power in relation to First Nations people?

 

Addendum (link here)

High Court of Australia 3 December 2025

Summary Note: BADARI & ORS v MINISTER FOR TERRITORY FAMILIES AND URBAN HOUSING & ANOR [2025] HCA 47

Today, the High Court of Australia allowed an appeal (in proceeding D7/2025) from a judgment of the Court of Appeal and the Full Court of the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory (the "Court of Appeal"). The appeal was heard on 3 September 2025, together with a related application (in proceeding D1/2025) for special leave to appeal, in which the High Court delivered judgment separately.

The appeal concerned three determinations made variously by the Minister for Territory Families and Urban Housing and the Minister for Housing and Homelands – on 23 December 2021, 27 April 2022 and 2 September 2022 respectively – pursuant to s 23 of the Housing Act 1982 (NT). The determinations prescribed the rent payable for over 5,000 dwellings in various remote communities, and took effect despite anything to the contrary contained in existing tenancy agreements entered into in respect of those dwellings. The Ministers made the determinations without giving notice to any tenant or inviting any tenant to make submissions regarding the proposed change of rent.

The appellants, who each were party to tenancy agreements entered into in respect of dwellings affected by the determinations, applied to the Supreme Court of the Northern Territory for judicial review of the three determinations on two grounds: first, that they were not afforded procedural fairness; and second, that each determination was legally unreasonable. The primary judge dismissed the application for judicial review, and an appeal from that judgment was subsequently dismissed unanimously by the Court of Appeal. The appellants appealed to the High Court.

The High Court unanimously held that the exercise of the power to make determinations under s 23 of the Housing Act is conditioned by an obligation to observe procedural fairness. The Court further held that the appellants were denied procedural fairness, and that the denial was material. Accordingly, the making of each determination was infected with jurisdictional error. Given that conclusion, it was unnecessary for the Court to address whether the determinations were legally unreasonable.

 

4 December 2025

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