Showing posts with label Housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Housing. Show all posts

Saturday, 24 February 2018

QUAKER (RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS) CONCERN FOR LAND REFORM




Quaker concern for land reform

 22 Feb 2018 | by Rebecca Hardy



Friends concerned with housing equality 
have been urged to join a campaign to start a Land Value Tax
Friends concerned with housing equality have been urged to join a campaign to start a Land Value Tax (LVT). Jocelyn Gaskell, from Yealand Meeting, hopes to start a campaign within British Quakerism.
LVT is a method of raising public revenue by means of an annual charge on the rental value of land. She told the Friend that her motivation came out of a longstanding concern for peace and justice: ‘I have been in housing need in the past myself and am aware that this problem has been building for years. I’m horrified and saddened by the homelessness we have now. We need a radical way to tackle it.’
Jocelyn Gaskell explained that the idea of LVT is that people and businesses pay a contribution for the benefit of investment in that land. She said: ‘Canary Wharf went hugely up in value when the Jubilee Line was extended. Private landlords benefitted from public money going into infrastructure.’
She believes that LVT would make the system fairer.
Jocelyn Gaskell developed her interest in LVT in November 2017 at Quaker Peace & Social Witness (QPSW)’s new economy training weekend in Manchester. She was prompted to act and has now written an in-depth briefing, with a blog on the Quakers in Britain website. She is urging other Friends to join her and has had a positive response.

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Thursday, 1 February 2018

Detroit finds its way back - from ruins to tiny houses and the Rev Faith Fowler.

Readers may recall seeing photos of urban decay like the one below of The Ruins of Detroit - what was left after the car industry collapsed and people were ripped off in the subprime mortgage crisis.



And now comes this story of Tiny Homes - quality tiny homes - being built in Detroit.


and energising this project is the Rev Faith Fowler.



Please note the rolled up sleeves of the Rev Faith Fowler.
Clearly, she means business.


More interesting reading here:

John McKnight is co-director of the Asset-Based Community Development Institute (link is external)and professor emeritus of communications studies and education and social policy at Northwestern University.
He and his longtime colleague John Kretzmann created the asset-based community development (ABCD) strategy for community building. Together they wrote a basic guide to the approach called “Building Communities From the Inside Out: A Path Toward Finding and Mobilizing a Community’s Assets.”





Friday, 14 July 2017

Interfaith meeting in Sydney about housing affordability

The story below is from the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Commission). 

Blog Editor's Note:  When housing affordability becomes the topic of an interfaith meeting, one knows there is a problem beyond deniability.


Pictures below are from ABC News: Siobhan Fogarty
Single mum Nadine Carrick was among 600 people from across Sydney last night who came together to make impassioned pleas for the housing affordability crisis to be tackled.
Ms Carrick, a full-time student studying town planning, said she was paying 70 per cent of her income towards rent.
"We all have a right to this city and to be part of the community and we demand action, for the Government to take action, because what else are they there for?" she said.
Ms Carrick said the cost of living in Sydney outstripped her income by about $200 per week.
"I can't even really afford to run my car at the moment," she said. 
"The priority is a roof over our head, food and some petrol for the car to get around."


The Catholic Archbishop of Sydney attended and mingled with other faith groups, single mums, business leaders, trade unionists and former homeless drug addicts.

Magnus Linder, executive officer of Churches Housing and the chair of the Sydney Alliance Housing Team, said people were deserting Sydney because of the cost of housing and rent.
He said some were foregoing expenses in areas most of us would take for granted.
"People are choosing not to go to the dentist because they have to choose to pay the rent and so they'll just let the tooth rot and fall out," he said.
"Some people are choosing not to eat because they need to pay the rent or make the decision, 'well I'll feed the kids and I'll go without'."