A parliamentary question regarding the Department of Housing wait-list as of January 1, 2012, and the Minister's response, which includes a comparison of housing achievements between the current and previous governments. The response provides data on the number of applicants, their locations, and associated dependents.

AnsweredQoN 7058Legislative Assembly
Asked
1 December 2011
Portfolio
Housing

QuestionView source ↗

With reference to the wait-list for Department of Housing accommodation as at 1 January 2012 could the Minister advise the number of:
(a) applicants on the wait-list for Department of Housing accommodation;
(b) applicants on the wait-list per district;
(c) spouses and/or partners associated with the number of applicants on the wait-list for Department of Housing accommodation;
(d) children and dependents associated with applicants on the wait-list for Department of Housing accommodation;
(e) applicants on the priority housing wait-list;
(f) applicants on the priority housing wait-list per district;
(g) spouses and/or partners associated with the number of applicants on the wait-list for Department of Housing accommodation; and
(h) children and dependents associated with applicants on the priority housing wait-list?

AnswerView source ↗

Answered
20 February 2012
Responded by
Minister for Housing
Response time
81 days
The Liberal-National State Government has worked hard to reverse the neglect of social housing and general housing affordability by the previous Labor Government between 2001-2008. The former Labor Government failed to release land onto the market contributing to an almost 50 per cent increase in house prices. In relation to social housing, under the Labor Government the number of public rental dwellings increased by only 362 from June 2001 to June 2008.
Through sound policy initiatives and investment the Liberal-National Government has, since September 2008, increased social housing stock by more than 3000 houses, including working with the Commonwealth to deliver more than 2000 extra houses and refurbishing 1400 existing homes.
Despite the former Labor Government talking about it, but never delivering, the Liberal-National Government released the Housing Affordability Strategy, a new shared equity loan scheme and Keystart providing 2000 affordable home ownership opportunities for Western Australians on low to moderate incomes. The State Government has also entered into an agreement with a consortium of builders and land developers, to deliver 450 off-the-plan affordable properties across the Perth metropolitan area for low to moderate income earners.
A total of 5000 new homes will also be delivered through the National Rental Affordability Scheme after Western Australia was allocated funding for an additional 2300 properties.
The
Department of Housing
advises:
(a) As at 31 December 2011 there were 22 985 applicants on the waiting list, an overall reduction on the previous month.
(b) Applicants on the waitlist per district:
Metro North 8 859
Metro Fremantle 3 512
Metro South East 4 755
Southern 614
South West 1 388
Goldfields 485
Mid West/ Gascoyne 1 008
Pilbara 786
Kimberley 1 241
Wheatbelt 337
(c) 3 043
(d) 23 019 children and dependents (as at 31 December 2011). (Includes dependent children, adult non dependent children and shared custody children).
(e) 3 076
(f) Applicants on the priority housing wait list per district:
Metro North 1 271
Metro Fremantle 592
Metro South East 516
Southern 92
South West 40
Goldfields 40
Mid West/ Gascoyne 84
Pilbara 143
Kimberley 258
Wheatbelt 40
(g) 318
(h) 3 444
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com

Explore WA Government Data

Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.

Explore more