CLARE, MCALLISTER & PHILLIPS – MEDIA RELEASE - HOUSING COSTS THROUGH THE ROOF IN GILMORE – WEDNESDAY, 10 NOVEMBER 2021

5.03pm | November 10, 2021

JASON CLARE MP
SHADOW MINISTER FOR HOUSING AND HOMELESSNESS
MEMBER FOR BLAXLAND

SENATOR JENNY MCALLISTER
SHADOW ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR COMMUNITIES
AND THE PREVENTION OF FAMILY VIOLENCE
LABOR SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES

FIONA PHILLIPS MP
MEMBER FOR GILMORE

 

HOUSING COSTS THROUGH THE ROOF IN GILMORE
 

Housing costs in Gilmore have skyrocketed in the last 12 months.
 
House prices in the region have jumped by 35.3 per cent[1], much more than the national average of 21.9 per cent.
 
The cost of rent has also skyrocketed. Rent in Sydney has increased 5.5 per cent in the last 12 months. In some parts of Gilmore, it has jumped by three or four times that.
 

HOUSE PRICES

SUBURB

MEDIAN PRICE

ANNUAL INCREASE 

Gerringong

$1,310,000

49.7%

Kiama

$1,160,000

26.1%

Tuross Head

$664,000

33.1%

Berry

$1,266,787

29.5%

Vincentia

$920,750

24.8%

Sanctuary Point

$552,000

22.7%

Moruya

$620,000

27.6%

 

Source: Domain House Price Report, September 2021
 

COST OF RENT

SUBURB

MEDIAN PRICE

ANNUAL INCREASE

Kiama
Berry
Bomaderry
North Nowra
Nowra
Gerringong  

$600
$725
$450
$470
$420
$580

11.1%
20.8%
18.4%
13.3%
7.7%
11%

 

Source: Domain Rental Report, September 2021
 
This makes it harder and harder for young people to buy a home in Gilmore.
 
It’s no wonder the number of first home buyers signing up for loans has dropped by 20 per cent since the beginning of the year.
 
Twenty years ago, the average home cost four times the average salary. Now, it’s almost twice that. 
 
It’s harder to buy than ever before, it’s harder to rent than ever before and there are more homeless Aussies than ever before.
 
One of the leading causes of homelessness is domestic and family violence. After years of neglect and underfunding by the Morrison Government, local domestic violence shelters are under resourced and unable to tackle the scale of this crisis.
 
Every year across the country, more than 10,000 women and children fleeing violence, including woman and children in Gilmore, are turned away from shelters because there isn’t a bed.
 
After almost a decade in Government, housing affordability has only got worse under the Liberal-National Government.  
 
There is no single thing we can do to fix this, but one of the most obvious things we can do is build more housing.
 
That’s what Labor’s Housing Australia Future Fund will do - build 30,000 social and affordable homes right across the country help reduce homelessness across Australia. Over the first five years, it will build:

  • 20,000 new social housing properties, including 4,000 homes for women and children fleeing domestic and family violence and older women on low incomes who are at risk of homelessness; and
  • 10,000 affordable homes for the heroes of the pandemic – frontline workers like police, nurses and cleaners - that kept us safe in the covid pandemic.


WEDNESDAY, 10 NOVEMBER 2021