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Residents call on Inner West councillors to reject Labor鈥檚 pro-developer housing plan

Sept 22 outside IWC meeting
Hall Greenland from Better Future Coalition speaking outside the Inner West Council meeting, September 22. Photo: Rachel Evans

Two hundred people joined a spirited protest 鈥 organised by Better Future Coalition (BFC) 鈥 outside the Inner West Council鈥檚 (IWC) extraordinary meeting on September 22, demanding it scrap its pro-developer  plan.

Only 120 people could enter the allocated small meeting space, but many stayed in 鈥渙verflow鈥 rooms. The meeting lasted five hours, with about two-thirds of all contributors in favour of the developer-friendly plan, in what seemed to be an organised effort on the part of the Labor majority in council.

The misnamed plan involves the private development of 31,000 apartments, with just 2% rising to 3% of all new homes being 鈥渁ffordable鈥.

After it became public in May, resident groups in almost all of affected suburbs of Marrickville, Leichhardt, Petersham, Ashfield and Dulwich Hill formed the BFC and it, alongside  (AfPH), are calling for the plan to be scrapped.

Residents from across the inner west and resident action groups, such as Save Dully, Save Marrickville, Save Callan Park, Labor for Ending Homelessness, Socialist Alliance, members of the Greens and NSW Socialists, are involved in the BFC.

The NSW Nurses and Midwives Association, Sydney Yimby and the Property Council NSW support the IWC鈥檚 plan.

IWC asked for feedback and received a record , mostly oppositional.

The pointed out the council鈥檚 plan could increase dwellings by 4425 鈥 a rise of 68%. It would include a tiny amount of green space, the high rises would block sunlight for others and they would eradicate Dulwich Hill鈥檚 biodiversity corridor.

It said the IWC鈥檚 claim to support affordability is hollow, pointing out that only a fraction of the new homes are 鈥渁ffordable鈥. It also criticised the apartment allocation for being weighted towards poorer suburbs. For example, Marrickville has been allocated 9390; Dulwich Hill, 4245; Leichhardt, 4887; Ashfield, 7682; and Lewisham-Petersham, 1794.

Balmain, Birchgrove, Lilyfield, Roselle, Annandale and Haberfield escaped the high-rise allocation, as did the densely populated suburbs of Tempe and Newtown.

In addition, the IWC and NSW Labor decided on September 14 to rezone parts of Parramatta Road to allow for an , the bulk of these slated for Leichhardt.

Right now, a two-bedroom rental apartment in Marrickville costs between $700鈥900 a week. Two bedroom apartments are selling for between $700,000鈥$1.5 million.

鈥淎ffordable鈥 housing rent is capped at 80% of market rent, which means an 鈥渁ffordable鈥 Marrickville apartment would be about $540 a week. When you consider that a single mum on a Centrelink benefit receives about $700 a week, this is not affordable.

A report by  released last year found nearly two thirds of local government areas reported homelessness having 鈥渟ignificantly increased鈥 since 2019鈥20, with agencies reporting the number of 鈥渘ewly homeless persons鈥 they assisted over 2023鈥24 rising to more than 10,000 a month.

A genuine community consultation meeting, organised by BFC in late July, attracted more than 300 people who gathered to discuss their concerns about Labor鈥檚 plan. However, following that meeting, Greens councillors Andrew Blake and Isabella Antoniou moved to amend Labor鈥檚 plan at the August council meeting, provided it lift its affordable housing component to 20%. Labor voted against it.

BFC and AfPH are calling on all the Inner West councillors to vote against Labor鈥檚 developer-friendly plan and for the IWC to begin a real community consultation.

[Action for Public Housing has called a  before the IWC鈥檚 meeting on its housing plan. Rachel Evans is active in Action for Public Housing and is a member of Socialist Alliance.]

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