They say this town is full of
cozenage:
As nimble jugglers that deceive the eye,
Dark-working sorcerers that change the mind,
Soul-killing witches that deform the body,
Disguised cheaters, prating mountebanks,
And many such-like liberties of sin.
The
Comedy of Errors, Act 1, Scene 2.
On 28 February, the front page of The Australian published
a story and graphic photograph (link
here behind paywall and Sky News link
here) of a family from Utopia who had been living on a concrete slab
fifteen minutes’ walk from the Alice Springs CBD for two years (‘Invisible, yet they live in plain sight’). The
Australian also published an editorial (‘It’s time to change the picture’)
arguing that what it termed ‘housing failure’ is yet another wake-up call from
remote Australia.
The news stories quote South Australian Senator Kerryn
Liddle raising the plight of the family, mentioning nine children, and asking
why no-one has done anything over the past two years. The family had come to
Alice Springs to access dialysis treatment for a family member. Graphic proof
of the human cost housing crisis not just in Alice Springs, not just in the NT,
but across remote Australia.
This blog has given the housing crisis in remote Australia
significant attention over the past five years (link
here and link
here and link
here and link
here and link
here and link
here and link
here and link
here and link
here) but the issue continues to bedevil the nation. In those posts I have
documented how the Rudd Government allocated $5.5bn to the National Partnership
Agreement on Remote Housing (NPARIH) in 2008, how the end of program review
orchestrated by then Minister Scullion was deeply flawed, and characterised by
an inability to come clean about the real agenda, how then Minister Scullion oversaw
cuts of a couple of hundred million for Repairs and Maintenance (as it would
not adversely impact statistics on new house builds), and eventually allowed NPARIH
to lapse across all jurisdictions except the NT where the Commonwealth is the
landlord for 5230 housing dwellings across 72 town camps and remote communities
(PC 2022:429 link
here).
I also documented reports by Infrastructure Australia that initially
excluded housing as social infrastructure, then included it, and how it was
then directed by the former Government to exclude it from their analysis (link
here and link
here and link
here and link
here). Those posts also demonstrated that NPARIH had a tangible and
positive impact on reducing overcrowding, but that there remained an
outstanding need (see below). In a more academic context (link
here), I have documented how these changes were part of a deliberate and
more comprehensive effort to reduce Commonwealth expenditures on Closing the
Gap, and to shift funding and policy responsibility for outcomes to the states
and territories. To repeat, my research documented how these strategies were
intentional, and have in large measure been successful in shifting funding responsibility
(and thus political responsibility) away from the Commonwealth, and to the
states and territories.
The effective removal of virtually all funding for remote
housing, relying on the fig leaf that mainstream programs will somehow fill the
void, will have already ensured declines in the quality and number of housing
assets across remote Australia, and concomitant increases in overcrowding. These
entirely predictable consequences (and their less predictable ramifications) will
continue to play out for at least five years and probably a decade even were governments
to initiate a major investment effort today. The likelihood of such a policy
reversal occurring seems highly unlikely anytime soon.
So what is the current state of play?
In this post, I can only address the most salient developments
and point to the relevant reports and processes that are influencing current policy
developments.
In August 2022, the Productivity Commission published its
Study Report on the mainstream National Housing and Homelessness Agreement
(NHHA) (link
here). Its headline finding was
The
National Housing and Homelessness Agreement — intended to improve access to
affordable, safe and sustainable housing — is ineffective. It does not foster
collaboration between governments or hold governments to account. It is a
funding contract, not a blueprint for reform…
The
focus of the next Agreement should be on improving the affordability of the
private rental market and the targeting of housing assistance. Improving the
capacity of low-income renters to pay for housing and removing constraints on
new housing supply are key to making housing more affordable… … State and
Territory Governments should commit to firm targets for new housing supply, facilitated
by planning reforms and better co-ordination of infrastructure…. The $16
billion governments spend each year on direct housing assistance could achieve
more if it was better targeted to people in greatest need...
The Study Report includes a chapter which provides a
comprehensive overview of the state of Indigenous housing policy nationally,
sets out a persuasive case for reform and makes a series of largely sensible
recommendations. To highlight just one data point amongst many, the report
notes (page 33) that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, compared
with other Australians are 16 times more likely to live in severely overcrowded
dwellings. One of the crucial issues with adopting a mainstream approach in
remote Australia is that the interplay of Aboriginal tenures and the housing
system means that there is very little affordable and private housing
provision. Social housing is the predominant mode of housing provision. A
further point noted in the Study Report, but perhaps not given adequate
emphasis is that housing (and essential services) are crucial social
determinants of health, including mental health, and thus play into a much
wider policy domain than the mere supply of accommodation (important as that
is).
The next National Housing Agreement is currently
being negotiated between the Commonwealth and the States and territories.
Accompanying this are major changes to the mainstream policy architecture
including a legislated $10 billion Housing Australia Future Fund (HAFF) designed
to assist in financing 30,000 new housing units nationally over five years, a
new statutory Housing Supply and Affordability Council, and a new National
Housing and Homelessness Plan. When first announced, the Greens criticised
the 30, 000 new houses commitment as inadequate (link
here). In her media release announcing passage of the HAFF legislation
through the lower house, Minister Collins announced that $200m of the
investment returns from the Fund would be allocated to repair and maintenance
of housing in remote communities (link
here). While welcome, it is not clear what the national quantum of necessary
maintenance investment is in existing and projected remote community housing
stock. It is thus impossible to determine whether this is in fact a significant
investment or mere tokenism. In particular, were the Government to provide
greater national context this would indicate whether this investment can or
will be used to leverage increased investment from the states and territories.
The Indigenous Australians Minister has recently released
the Commonwealth Closing the Gap
Implementation Plan 2023 (link
here). It lays out the Commonwealth strategy in relation to Outcome 9a and
9b which relate to reducing overcrowded housing and the provision of essential
services in discrete communities. The Implementation Plan lists Minister Julie
Collins (whose portfolio is situated within the Treasury portfolio) as
responsible for target 9a and Ministers Catherine King (Infrastructure) and Assistant
Minister Anthony Chisolm (Regional Development) as responsible for target 9b.
Target 9a is specified in the following terms: By 2031,
increase the proportion of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living
in appropriately sized (not overcrowded) housing to 88 percent. This is a
national target that, in theory, can be fully met without necessarily
addressing the deep housing needs across remote Australia. There is thus an
imperative for explicit policy focus on allocating resources based on levels of
need.
The ABS estimates that in 2031, there will be 1.1 million
Indigenous Australians. If the target is met but not exceeded, that will leave
12 percent (or 132, 000 people) in overcrowded housing. The highest levels of Indigenous
overcrowding are in remote Australia including the NT, the Kimberley and north
Queensland.
The new target 9b is specified
as follows: By 2031, all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households: #
within discrete Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities receive
essential services that meet or exceed the relevant jurisdictional standard; # in
or near to a town receive essential services that meet or exceed the same
standard as applies generally within the town (including if the household might
be classified for other purposes as a part of a discrete settlement such as a
“town camp” or “town based reserve”.) There is considerable devil in the
detail of this target, for example, just what are the ‘relevant jurisdictional standards’.
I don’t have space to explore these issues here.
The Implementation Plan for targets 9a and 9b might best be
described as establishing a holding pattern rather than a clear plan for
achieving the target. The Plan highlights a small number of funding packages
($200 million from the HAFF; $100 million to the NT Government for homelands housing
possibly from the ABA; and $150 million from the National Water Grid Fund for
regional and remote water infrastructure projects). The major risk to meeting
these two targets is that the sum total of resources from all sources will not
be adequate. The Implementation Plan makes no effort to cross-reference or
identify the levels of housing and essential services related investment in the
remote state and territory jurisdictions, so there is no way that readers of
the Plan can make their own assessment of risk related to targets 9a and 9b.
Should any readers be inclined to go seeking this information in the state and territory
Implementation Plans, they would find that they are for one year only, and
comprise a bewildering array of process issues and minor funding commitments,
but no accessible information assisting in understanding how the implementation
process is progressing.
For example, the first (undated) NT Closing the Gap Implementation
Plan finalised in August 2021 (link
here) focusses only on the Priority Reforms, and provides no information on
how the NT proposes to meet specific targets. It does mention (p.4) that
61.6% of NT Aboriginal people live in overcrowded housing. The 2021/2022 Closing
the Gap Implementation Plan Annual Report (link
here) provides more data on households (not individuals) (p.16) which
indicates a reduction of 2.3% in remote community public household overcrowding
between 2019 and 2022 — from 57% to 54.6%. This data is accompanied by a
footnote warning of potential undercounting of occupancy figures. Again, there
is no information on how the NT is seeking to reduce overcrowding.
The Commonwealth Implementation plan appears to have been
developed independently of any hard headed assessment of the adequacy and
projected funding from the states and territories, and perhaps more
importantly, of the adequacy of the strategies adopted by the states and
territories. This reflects and continues the former Government’s approach under
the National Agreement on Closing the Gap of positioning the Commonwealth as (a
lesser) one among equals, rather than a first among equals, or more appropriately,
as the ringmaster oversighting the performance of the state and territory
circus. A similar issue applies across the Commonwealth: the Implementation
Plan gives primary responsibility to relevant Ministers (often multiple) yet
nowhere does it state that the Minister for Indigenous Australians has an
overarching remit and the authority to pull together, coordinate and in the
ultimate resort to ensure compliance with the various cross agency
responsibilities. Without such an explicit and formal remit, the coordination
task across the Commonwealth will inevitably slide into a miasma of process.
Finally, the Commonwealth Implementation Plan mentions the
National Housing and Homelessness Plan, but fails to commit to adopting the
Productivity Commission Study Report recommendations (it will merely take them
into account), in particular regarding needs based funding allocations. In my
view, this is a major gap in the Implementation Plan.
So Where to from Here?
In 2018, in an article for Inside Story (‘Tactics
versus Strategy in Indigenous Housing’) (link
here), I identified a remote housing funding shortfall of $9 billion over
the decade to 2028 if the then levels of overcrowding were to be effectively
addressed. In the event, the Commonwealth walked away from the national remote housing
program reducing its outlays to approximately $110 million pa focussed solely on
the NT where the Commonwealth has direct landlord responsibilities for 5230
dwellings in town camps and remote communities.
Notwithstanding the demonstrable levels of need, the current
Commonwealth Government shows no signs of reversing the previous Governments
cuts. Not only will this ensure that current levels of deep disadvantage across
remote Australia continue for at least a decade, it will constrain improvements
in health and social well-being and likely exacerbate existing demographic
shifts towards urban centres. While adequate and maintained housing is not the
entire solution to the appalling conditions in many remote communities, and
needs to be complemented by other infrastructure such as clean water, sewerage,
power, it is a prerequisite for sustained improvements in health, employment,
education, and for reductions in alcohol and drug abuse and family violence. Unfortunately,
our political system is finely attuned to meeting the needs of the best organised
interests and the broader electorate, within a zero-sum budgetary envelope. In
these circumstances, it is worth considering what options there might be with a
more constrained budgetary impact.
The following suggestions are high level and thus involve a
degree of devil in the detail. Nevertheless, it is incumbent on advocates for improved
housing, and indeed the current Government to think more laterally about such
options if the option of increased investment is not feasible.
First, in my Inside Story article,
I canvassed the idea of a Government owned corporation being established (which
might joint venture with Indigenous corporations) with access to an effective Commonwealth
guarantee and the capacity to borrow funds from private sector sources to
build, own and rent out housing in remote communities. Such an initiative would
tackle the shortage of housing, and of staff housing, in remote communities (which
acts as a disincentive to attract and retain both locally engaged and external
staff) and would open up new sources of private-sector capital for investment
in remote locations.
Second, in a new environment where
the majority of housing investment must be sourced from either mainstream Commonwealth
programs, and / or state and territory programs, it is incumbent on the Commonwealth
to adopt a much more focussed and robust approach to ensuring that these sources
of investment are responding to the needs of remote communities. So for
example, this would suggest that the Commonwealth Indigenous Affairs portfolio
should step up and take a much more active role in encouraging states and
territories to maximise their investments in remote housing, and take a much
more robust ‘coordination’ role vis a
vis relevant Commonwealth agencies and programs such as the National Housing
and Homelessness Agreement, and the operations of the Housing Australia Future
Fund. Similarly with the operations of the Infrastructure portfolio. There is a
case for looking much more closely at the operations of the North Australia Infrastructure
Facility (NAIF), and whether there are any operational changes that might be made
to increase investment in one of the major infrastructure assets across northern
Australia, the totality of the remote housing and community infrastructure asset
base.
Third, it is time the Commonwealth
established a truly independent and forward looking review of the remote
housing challenge the nation faces. The 2017 NPARIH Review (link
here unfortunately without a link to the actual report) was fundamentally
flawed (link
here), and even so was then ignored. It was backward looking, whereas what
is now required is a review that sets out the extent and parameters of the
challenge, assesses the likely demographic changes and implications of various
scenarios, identifies emerging risks arising from climate change and other
societal trends, and examines in detail options for the most effective
architecture of the remote housing sector (social housing, community housing,
or both?) as well as innovative financing of remote housing. In proposing such
a review, I am seeking to focus on the systemic and structural drivers of housing
exclusion and disadvantage rather than the lived experience that flows from
those systemic constraints. While there is an argument that such an independent
review should be given a broader remit, the risk of a deeper crisis in the
narrow housing sector emerging in the coming decade are such that I would
suggest a narrow focus would be best at this point. That is not to downplay the
broader challenges facing remote Australia, though I would argue that they are in
most respects amenable to clear sighted policy development by policymakers.
Fourth, the poorly conceptualised
and drafted Closing the Gap housing and essential services targets 9a and 9b need
to be revised to ensure that government focus on closing the full gap, not part
of the gap. The Implementation plans that have been adopted to date are next to
useless and require a major overhaul. They need to be strategically focussed on
the targets identified and list proposed actions. Not data, not miniscule funding
grants, not good intentions, not more process. Housing and essential services
are tangible and susceptible to clear measurement. Five yearly updates in the
census will not cut it. Nor will national data sets that are not broken down at
least into urban, regional and remote.
In conclusion, the policy choices made over the past five
years in relation to remote housing are retrograde and will have very real
consequences: for taxpayers, for the population of remote Australia, both Indigenous
and non-Indigenous, and most importantly
for the residents of these overcrowded and under-maintained houses across
remote Australia. Over fifty percent of those individuals are under 25 and the
overcrowding will have lifelong consequences for the opportunities that are within
their reach. These issues are just one part of the wider cataclysm (link
here) impacting remote Australia. I am certain that within a very few
decades, Australians across the political spectrum will pass an extremely
negative judgment on these decisions, and the decisionmakers that shaped them.
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