on 19-05-2014 02:24 PM
SOME public housing tenants have declared they have assets worth hundreds of thousands of dollars while happily enjoying cut-price rent at the expense of more needy recipients.
More than 500 tenants of public housing have admitted rorting the system. Of those, 141 declared combined assets worth more than $11 million while 456 declared extra income worth a combined $10 million a year.
One man had $450,000 cash and 20 others declared land and property ownership.
The state government put tenants on notice last month, giving them until May 31 to dob themselves in for undeclared income and assets.
The move will bring more than $250,000 in extra rent into the state’s coffers each year.
Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton said 77 more people were reported by the public.
“As a result, their rents have been increased, leading to additional revenue which can be allocated to funding vitally needed public housing,” she said.
There are more than 58,000 people in NSW on the waiting list for public housing. A man called “Mr H” in public housing on the Central Coast declared $470,000 in cash to the amnesty hotline: a $310,000 term deposit, a $100,000 compensation payout and a $60,000 inheritance.
“Mr S”, 80, of Leichhardt, told the hotline about $60,000 in savings — $20,000 of which came from a casino visit after his wife banned him from gambling.
“Mr N” was reported by a member of the public who said he owned a property in Penrith from which he earned rental income. The man had illegally taken over a public housing property from a friend who had died but now must pay an extra $100 a week in rent until the lease runs out and he is evicted.
While the amnesty is in place, tenants doing the wrong thing can report themselves without being pursued for prosecution or back rent.
“Once the amnesty is over, quite substantial penalties can apply, including rent increases and eviction,” Ms Upton said.
The government’s previous amnesty held last year — on undeclared occupants in public housing properties — raised $8.9 million a year in rent, following more than 4000 reports from tenants and members of the public.
Lol @ "Mr S"!
Mr S”, 80, of Leichhardt, told the hotline about $60,000 in savings — $20,000 of which came from a casino visit after his wife banned him from gambling.
on 20-05-2014 01:10 AM
They should have kept selling the houses to the tenants so they could keep building more houses for new tenants, years ago.
on 20-05-2014 07:06 AM
@freakiness wrote:
@icyfroth wrote:That's nice, thank you 🙂
Which ID do I use to attack other posters with because they don't agree with me?
You'd know better than me if you have that habit or not 😄
Well you see I don't think I do have that habit.
I'm wondering if you know something I don't.
I really don't "go after" posters.
I find it hard to maintain grudges which I sometimes think is one of my many character flaws.
Certainly I can't be bothered "going after" posters just because they happen to have a different opinion to mine.
I think it's bad forum etiquette to carry a grudge from one post to another.
But that's just me.
on 20-05-2014 07:30 AM
on 20-05-2014 09:16 AM
@freddie*rooster wrote:It's a beat up, you only need drive around a Department of Housing area to see how many vacant neglected homes there are, it would appear to me a bomb under those who administer the Department would be the first step to puting and end to the need to claim the BS of this report.
Yep. anything to deflect