This first bill – which will belatedly allow Tasmanian first home-buyers to access the federal Help-to-Buy Scheme – passed the House of Assembly on Tuesday.
Also on the notice paper is the government’s bill to place a levy on short-stay accommodation and a bill to allow tenants to more easily make safety upgrades to their rental accommodation.
The state’s housing crisis has been worsening for the last decade, marked in particular by high unmet demand for social, affordable and rental housing along with rapidly deceasing affordability.
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Minister for Housing and Planning Kerry Vincent told parliament he was losing sleep trying to find solutions.
“We need to concentrate and work as a parliament as a whole to make sure we tick as many of those boxes as we can, and I’m happy to take any suggestions from anybody on it,” he said.
“I’m lying awake for many hours at night reading, understanding, and listening to everything I possibly can to fine-tune everything that is in my ministry.”
Mr Vincent hailed the passage of the Help-to-Buy Bill.
“Help-to-Buy will complement our highly successful MyHome Shared Equity Program, which has already helped over 1,000 households,” he said.
“I want to again thank the constructive approach from my Federal colleagues for helping us get to this point.”
The government took on notice a question from independent Helen Burnet about why information required to be provided by operators under the 2019 Short Stay Accommodation Act appears to no longer be published.
Independent for Franklin David O’Byrne said the government needed to take more decisive action on short stay accommodation.
“According to the latest Anglicare Tasmania rental Affordability Snapshot, there are only 770 properties currently advertised for rent in the whole of Tasmania,” he said.
“In the past year, there has been a nine per cent decline in rental availability driven by an 18 per cent decline in Southern Tasmania.
“Over the past decade, the number of rentals has halved.
“In contrast, the number of short stays has skyrocketed, with over 8000 properties listed.
“Given the undeniable crisis in the private rental market, it is now incumbent on the government to come up with a coherent strategy to ameliorate the impact of short-term stays.”














