
The Inner West Council voted, by one vote, for Labor councillors鈥 pro-developer Fairer Futures Plan on September 30. Seven councillors, including five Greens, one Liberal and one Independent voted against.
There is significant opposition from residents in the Inner West to the plan for 31,000 new high-rise dwellings over 15 years with just 3% allocated to 鈥渁ffordable housing鈥.
Residents held a rally outside and then packed into the meeting room. YIMBY Sydney supporters also came to support the plan.
Speakers at the Better Futures Coalition (BFC) rally outside condemned the 鈥渟ham鈥 consultation process and called for better and real community consultation. They said, despite Labor鈥檚 attempt to sell the plan as providing housing for all, it does not improve housing affordability. They called for a redraft with real public housing, more green space and better amenities.
BFC activist and former Leichhardt Green councillor Hall Greenland Labor councillors were 鈥渄runk on their own rhetoric鈥. 鈥淭o hear them talk feverishly of their own 鈥榗ourage鈥, 鈥榝ar-sightedness鈥 and commitment to social justice, as they passed a developers plan to massively increase dwelling numbers in the Inner West to 鈥榮olve the housing crisis鈥, was to briefly exist in another dimension beyond reality,鈥 he said.
In a sop to the widespread concern about what 鈥渁ffordable housing鈥 means, Labor said its plan would offer tax exemptions and height bonuses to churches, in exchange for 30% affordable housing. It also promised 300 affordable housing units on council car parks.
However, set at 80% of market rates, so-called affordable housing is not affordable for most people. The plan does not include new green space or playing fields. It will involve extensive demolitions and displacements impacting biodiversity and urban heat.
An amendment by Midjuburi/Marrickville Ward Labor councillor Matt Howard to scale back, by 20%, development in Marrickville was voted up, excluding areas which were more than 800 metres from train stations. But this 20% was shifted to redevelopment targets around Parramatta Road, particularly in Leichhardt.
Greens councillor Izabella Antoniou said Labor had 鈥済ifted millions to developers鈥 and missed an opportunity to 鈥渂uild genuinely affordable homes in the middle of a housing crisis鈥.
Greens councillor Olivia Barlow said 鈥渉ousing supply won鈥檛 magically solve the affordability crisis鈥 and called for a 鈥渘eeds-based approach to planning鈥.
The ABC that the IWC will pocket $520 million in development contributions from the plan.
Action for Public Housing activist Rachel Evans said the plan will 鈥渄o nothing to reduce rents or house prices鈥, adding that rents will only be reduced with 鈥渂eautiful public housing鈥 and council cooperative housing.
