Housing Ireland magazine 2023

  • 18th July 2023

    Housing Minister Darragh O’Brien TD: ‘No silver bullet on housing’


    Midway through the second full year of implementation of the Government’s Housing for All plan, Minister for Housing, Local Government and Heritage Darragh O’Brien TD sits down in his Leinster House office to reflect on the ubiquitous challenge of housing delivery with Ciarán Galway. “We had a good year [in […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Cover: Defined by delivery


    Beauchamps’ partner and head of its specialised housing team, Fidelma McManus, discusses cost rental housing, forward funding, and accelerating delivery of true mixed tenure schemes through collaboration. Beauchamps LLP is a full-service law firm comprising commercial real estate, construction, banking and finance and public procurement lawyers. Its housing team is […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Housing for All exceeds annual target for new homes


    Total housing completion figures for 2022 show that the State exceeded its target for new homes by over 5,000 homes, a positive sign as the Government seeks to revise targets set under Housing for All. Delivery  Just under 30,000 homes – 29,851 in Housing for All progress reports compiled by […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Departmental priorities for 2023


    At the beginning of 2023, the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage released its high-level priorities, listed in the table below and divided into categories. There has been reasonable progress made against these high-level priorities, although the phrasing in the document makes it unclear as to what the specific […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    The Housing Agency and Housing for All: Perspectives on progress


    Founded in 2012, The Housing Agency is a state-funded body of housing specialists, with a strong focus on problem-solving. The Housing Agency supports the development of sustainable communities across Ireland. We work mainly with the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, local authorities, approved housing bodies, and other state […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    107 actions ‘to facilitate disabled people to live independently’


    Following the publication of the National Strategy for Disabled People 2022-2027, an implementation plan of some 107 actions has now been published. The overall aim of the National Housing Strategy for Disabled People 2022 – 2027 aims ‘to facilitate disabled people to live independently with the appropriate choices and control […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Unlocking state land and opening doors to affordable homes


    Following the publication of the inaugural Report on Relevant Public Land 2023, The Land Development Agency (LDA) hosted a round table discussion with key stakeholders from across the public and private sectors to discuss the delivery of affordable homes on state lands. What are the most significant challenges associated with […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Focusing on construction to deliver social and cost rental homes


    Respond is a leading Approved Housing Body in Ireland, directly managing the construction of social and cost rental homes. Through a forward funding model, Respond has successfully developed previously unviable sites, enabling the delivery of lifetime homes for people who need them. The ongoing projects in Charlestown (138 homes), Sandyford […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    A sustainable housing system


    Following the first annual review of Housing for All, Feargal Ó Coigligh, Assistant Secretary in the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage, discusses the priority actions for the year ahead. Published in September 2021, Housing for All commits to increasing the supply of housing to an average 33,000 per […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Collateral warranties: Understanding their importance and implications


    Construction projects are complex ventures with multiple parties involved. Considering the ongoing shortage of housing units, stakeholders are under increasing pressure to complete developments in a timely manner. Leaving aside the challenges in the construction sector related to inflation, cost of materials and lack of qualified labourers, many developers are […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Decarbonising residential heat: Housing and CAP23


    Emitting over 10 per cent of Ireland’s greenhouse gas emissions, the decarbonisation of residential buildings is a major focus of Climate Action Plan 2023 (CAP23). While greenhouse gas emissions from Ireland’s built environment sector are decreasing (down from 13.6 per cent in 2020 to 13.3 per cent in 2021), emissions […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    LOETB: Providing construction skills with currency in existing and future labour markets


    Skills shortages, rising material costs, and the need to embed the principles of sustainability and circularity into future built environment projects are prompting the construction sector to prioritise smart offsite manufacturing by leveraging modern methods of construction (MMC). Modern methods of construction (MMC) describes an approach to constructing buildings using […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Good governance is key for AHB success


    An important focus for the Approved Housing Bodies Regulatory Authority (AHBRA) has been the development of the regulatory framework, including our approach to monitoring and assessing AHBs and the application of risk-based regulation, writes Susanna Lyons, Chief Executive of AHBRA. Regulatory framework AHBRA’s regulatory framework sets out our overall approach […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Increased housing delivery and the net zero challenge


    Deputy Secretary of Housing, Urban Regeneration and Local Government at the North’s Department for Communities, Mark O’Donnell, discusses progress on the draft Housing Supply Strategy, expansion of the Social Housing Development Programme, and the challenge of net zero. The draft Housing Supply Strategy was formed in the context of recognisable […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    A retrofit one stop shop for AHBs and local authorities


    Electric Ireland Superhomes is an SEAI registered one stop shop looking after all the key stages of a home energy retrofit, from design, contractor selection, project completion and management of SEAI grant funding to bring houses and apartments to a minimum of a B2 BER standard. Electric Ireland Superhomes is […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Supporting the delivery of new homes


    The delivery of new homes has many different elements, it needs lots of willing market participants and a broad range of different stakeholders to get the final product delivered, writes Darragh Lennon, Head of Commercial at Home Building Finance Ireland. One thing that is needed to deliver homes is finance. […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Addressing the rise of youth homelessness


    Homelessness among young people has risen by 57 per cent in the past five years, prompting the Government to develop a strategy working towards ending homelessness for young people aged between 18 and 24. Recent figures showing young people aged between 18 to 24 make up some 17 per cent […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Breathing new life into derelict and vacant properties across Fingal


    While Fingal County Council is committed to continuing the construction of new properties to help meet ever increasing demand in one of Ireland’s fastest growing and youngest regions, the Council is also taking significant strides in addressing dereliction and vacancy in the county. Fingal has a high demand for housing […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Uisce Éireann enables communities to thrive by supporting housing delivery


    As the Irish population grows, the need for more homes increases, which in turn puts pressure on existing infrastructure, including the water and wastewater system. Uisce Éireann has a critical role to play in developing water infrastructure to support economic growth including the delivery of housing across the country. Investment […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Climate Action Plan 2023 consolidates retrofit delivery ambition


    Government ambitions to retrofit one-third of the State’s housing stock by 2030 have been given fresh emphasis under Climate Action Plan 2023 (CAP23), the framework to deliver economy-wide carbon budgets and sectoral ceilings. Published in December 2022, the third iteration of the Climate Action Plan (CAP) encompasses an objective to […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    A growing trend meeting diverse and emerging needs


    Donal Mc Manus, CEO of the Irish Council for Social Housing (ICSH) writes about one of the growing areas in social housing delivery that has a significant multiplier effect in meeting other government objectives in relation to planning, the environment and climate action targets, supporting local services as well as, […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Social housing challenges: A European perspective


    General Secretary of Housing Europe, Sorcha Edwards, outlines the top challenges for affordable non-profit housing tenures across Europe and globally. The first challenge, Edwards believes, is that of building public understanding of cost rental housing, so as to maximise engagement and interest in what she believes is a “potentially very […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    A tipping point for modern methods of construction: Key procurement and contractual issues


    On 22 February 2023, Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Simon Coveney TD hosted a construction sector stakeholder event focused on identifying ways to drive innovation and boost productivity in residential construction, including through the adoption of modern methods of construction under Housing for All. It is understood that feedback […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Intermediate rent: A new policy


    A new affordable housing policy aimed at longer-term rents at least 20 per cent below market value has been geared at increasing housing supply in the North. The Intermediate Rent Policy, published by the Department for Communities, is tailored towards those earning above the social housing affordability threshold but struggling […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Is it time for radical thinking on housing provision?


    Over the last few months, our housing and homelessness figures have continued to fall short of the targets that have been set. With more than 12,000 households now living in emergency accommodation, tens of thousands of people seeking international protection and a significant growth in our population, we cannot continue […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Barcelona’s social and affordable housing policy


    Housing Manager for Barcelona City Council, Javier Burón, outlines the city’s mission orientated model to inclusionary housing. In Catalonia, rents have risen three times faster than household incomes in the last two decades, on the back of bubbles in both real estate and the rental market. In Spain, housing is […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Ireland needs to foster the right conditions for new housing supply


    Ireland has a dysfunctional property market. The scars of the downturn of 2008 have meant that the country has struggled to scale up housing supply to meet the requirements of the population. The consequences are particularly acute for apartment development, where there are multiple complexities and risks that have resulted […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Adapting for the future


    Co-operative Housing Ireland (CHI) is changing to improve the services it delivers to its tenants (members). Within the coming months, the organisation, which provides more than 4,500 affordable social-rented homes across Ireland, will roll out a specialist structure to ensure greater consistency in its housing service delivery. The shift will […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Market Development Association: ‘An alternative vision for housing’


    In April 2023, the North’s Department for Communities (DfC) acquired the vacant Stewart Street site in Belfast’s Market area for housing-led regeneration. In this context, Ciarán Galway visits the area and speaks with Fionntán Hargey, Director of the Market Development Association (MDA), about his community’s longstanding grassroots housing and community […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Not just bricks and mortar


    2023 heralds a significant time in the history of North & East Housing Association as we celebrate our 30th anniversary. The association was established in 1993 by a small group of volunteers and our growth since then has been built on a clear focus of providing quality homes for our […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Cost rental: European best in class


    A study performed by Housing Europe for The Housing Agency sheds light on how cost-based social renting operates in Austria and Denmark, in order to inform The Housing Agency on different cost rental models, as Ireland steps up its delivery under the tenure model. Austria Social housing in Austria, 2020: […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    ‘Just in time’ delivery process ‘unrealistic’


    Construction targets are “unrealistic” as Ireland has an average household size which is considerably higher than the European average, an Oireachtas committee has been told by a senior housing expert. Sitting on 13 June 2023, the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Housing, Local Government and Heritage, Conor O’Connell, Director of the […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Grant heating solutions helping to decarbonise homes


    Leading heating technology manufacturer Grant has been providing innovative, efficient, and carbon reducing heating solutions for over 45 years. In recent years, Grant, which is based in County Offaly, has largely transformed into a renewable heating company and its award-winning heating technologies are playing an important part in helping homes […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    MMC in Ireland


    Modern methods of construction (MMC) will play a key role in both construction at large in the coming decades and the delivery of Housing for All specifically. The Housing Ireland Magazine examines how MMC is being implemented in Ireland. A 2022 Construction Industry Federation (CIF) report states that timber frames […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Empowering customers to live simply, affordably, and sustainably


    As the industry confronts the challenges of disruptive change, it is an exciting time in the sector, and in Bord Gáis Energy in particular; both upstream and downstream. We are crossing the Rubicon to net-zero and Bord Gáis Energy is committed to lead the way. How? By investing in upstream […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Repurposing vacant homes can reduce homelessness


    Ireland has 13 vacant homes for every homeless individual. A new action plan is seeking to recover vacant properties. Census 2022 outlines that there are 166,792 vacant homes in the State, which is considerably higher than the homeless population of 12,259 (as of April 2023). Whilst the number of vacant […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Four years of the OPR


    It is now over four years since the Office of the Planning Regulator (OPR) was established, and four years on, our work of independently overseeing the planning system in Ireland is already having a positive impact. Assessing development plans Last year alone, as part of our responsibility for assessing all […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Capital’s house building costs among highest in Europe


    A report released by the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage has found construction is more expensive in Dublin than comparable cities in Germany, the United Kingdom, Denmark, and the Netherlands. Published in May 2023, the Residential Construction Cost Study Report compares the cost of construction in Ireland’s capital […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Housing sector legislative update


    Having now entered summer 2023, there are recent and proposed legislative changes that are likely to impact the housing sector. In March 2023, Section 13 of the Planning and Development and Foreshore (Amendment) Act 2022 was commenced together with supporting regulations. These had the effect that the Part 8 approval […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Improving Ireland’s housing system


    Chair of the Housing Commission, John O’Connor, discusses the key considerations for delivering sustainable policies and outcomes to improve housing. Established by the Government to independently examine and review the housing system in Ireland, the Housing Commission has been tasked with making long-term and sustainable policy recommendations that will improve […]

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  • 18th July 2023

    Inclusion Ireland: ‘Two sides of the supported independent living coin’


    Following the launch of the National Housing Strategy for Disabled People 2022-2027 Implementation Plan, Derval McDonagh, Chief Executive Officer, Inclusion Ireland advocates for a more cohesive approach to supported independent living. In late June 2023, the long-awaited implementation plan for the housing strategy for disabled people was published. Having attended […]

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Other publications

eolas Magazine

agendaNI

Housing Ireland 2024

Housing Ireland 2024 took place on Wednesday 6th March at Croke Park, Dublin. The event was held in association with The Housing Agency and sponsored by Beauchamps and The Land Development Agency. Over 350 delegates attended the  event which was opened with an address from Darragh O’Brien TD, Minister for Housing, Local Government & Heritage.

Delegates in attendance heard from 26 speakers, both visiting and local, from organisations including Housing Europe; Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage; Circle VHA; Northern Ireland Federation of Housing Associations; Irish Congress of Trade Unions and Monaghan County Council.

To stay in touch about next year’s event, please email info@eolasmagazine.ie

3rd May 2013

Tenant Inspection in practice

How the Oaklee Tenant Inspector Project is improving services for all Oaklee tenants. Oaklee Homes Group’s Tenant Inspector Project has been going from strength to strength since it began back in September 2010. The Tenant Inspector Team consists of residents from different areas and backgrounds and of all ages who […]
3rd May 2013

Building homes, providing support and creating possibilities

Triangle is a registered Housing Association with the Department for Social Development. It provides nearly 600 units of accommodation, with a further 300 in the development programme over the next three years. The majority of these new units will be delivered as part of the Bamford Review’s recommendations to provide […]
3rd May 2013

Welfare reform: lessons from Wakefield’s pilot

Kevin Dodd, Chief Executive of Wakefield and District Housing (WDH), shares his experience of how welfare reform will affect tenants and the need for the housing sector to adapt to change. Wakefield and District Housing (WDH) was formed on 21 March 2005, when over 75 per cent of tenants voted […]
3rd May 2013

Party policy summary: welfare reform

Welfare reform will have a major impact on housing over the coming years. The Bill is now approaching its consideration stage in the Assembly. agendaNi summarises the parties’ approaches. DUP Minister: Nelson McCausland MLA Assembly Private Secretary: William Humphrey MLA Assembly Spokesman: Gregory Campbell MP MLA Westminster Spokesman: Ian Paisley […]
3rd May 2013

Facing an uncertain future

Jim Dennison chaired the 2013 Northern Ireland Housing Conference. Here, he shares his perspective on a sector in transition and the key factors for delivering a successful long-term future in housing. Over the past number of months, housing has been in a state of transition. This transition has been caused […]
3rd May 2013

Strengthening communities through housing

Clanmill is creating and maintaining homes, sustaining communities and supporting the economy. “A good home is so much more than simply ‘a roof over your head’ or a place to raise a family, important though that is,” explains Clare McCarty, Chief Executive of Clanmil Housing Association. “A warm, well maintained […]
3rd May 2013

The state of social housing

Social housing is under severe pressure but the sector has the skills to identify innovation solutions, Paddy Gray tells the Northern Ireland Housing Conference. Housing professionals need to think outside the box on increasing supply and prove the benefits of housing in other policy areas, according to Paddy Gray. The […]
3rd May 2013

The future of housing funding

Housing associations should prioritise their cash flow, help tenants to pay their rents and take a realistic view of their finances, consultant James Tickell told delegates at the Northern Ireland Housing Conference. “I think we’re seeing the start of the end of what we call social housing,” James Tickell predicted […]
3rd May 2013

Pressing trends for housing

The Chartered Institute of Housing explains the key drivers for change in housing policy and their impact on householders. There is an intrinsic link between building houses and creating homes which support the development of sustainable communities and strong economies. There is increasingly an awareness of the impact of the […]
3rd May 2013

A new model

Housing Executive Chief Executive John McPeake outlines to Owen McQuade some options for reforming social housing and how a new model could lead to innovation in housing services. Reforming the Housing Executive could open up new opportunities for social enterprises and create new avenues for funding social housing, according to […]
2nd September 2013

TYC must ensure a life outside caring says Carers Northern Ireland

Carers – people who look after friends and family who need support because they are frail, ill or have a disability – will be key to the success of Transforming Your Care. For that reason, Carers Northern Ireland gave the TYC proposals a cautious welcome, but issued a strong warning […]
2nd September 2013

Gathering the public’s views

Poor communication resulted in a week of negative news stories this spring, when health and social care trusts announced their plans to close residential care homes across Northern Ireland. The announcements took place over several days and, in some cases, referred to the closing of all homes in a trust’s […]
2nd September 2013

Managing conditions at home

Telemonitoring and changes to memory services are helping to improve services for patients in the community. Sixty-five year old John Hicks lives in the County Down village of Rostrevor and suffers from the respiratory disease emphysema which causes coughing and shortness of breath. His experience of telemonitoring, over the last […]
2nd September 2013

Delivering change in health

Hilary Thomas highlights how our health and social care system is already empowering patients and carers, setting an example for the rest of the UK and a good precedent for local reform. Don Berwick, the legendary patient safety guru who led the recent report ‘A promise to learn – a […]
2nd September 2013

Bryson: Ready for the challenges

Northern Ireland’s largest social enterprise is preparing for the shift towards more care in the community. Bryson Care, part of the Bryson Charitable Group, Northern Ireland’s leading social enterprise delivers a wide and innovative range of caring support. In the last year we provided over 223,700 hours of care and […]
2nd September 2013

Views sought on care home closures

The Health Minister and Health and Social Care Board are taking a fresh look at how to implement Transforming Your Care but the new plans have been described as unclear. Health Minister Edwin Poots has asked the Health and Social Care Board to gather the views of residents of state-owned […]
2nd September 2013

Integrating care: a pilot case study

Nuffield Trust fellow Holly Holder talks to Owen McQuade about the North West London integrated care pilot. The North West London integrated care pilot is a large-scale programme aimed at improving the co-ordination of care for people over 75 years of age and/or adults living with diabetes. Holly Holder, a […]
2nd September 2013

A health glossary

An overview of the main public bodies involved in health and social care in Northern Ireland, their responsibilities and history. Department of Health, Social Services and Public Safety The Minister has overall responsibility for the Health Service and is accountable to the public through the Assembly for its performance. His […]
2nd September 2013

Care standards pivotal to TYC

Colum Conway, Chief Executive of the Northern Ireland Social Care Council, highlights the importance of regulating and improving social care standards as TYC focuses on moving services into a community setting. The purpose of the Northern Ireland Social Care Council is to regulate the social care workforce and provide professional […]
2nd September 2013

Progress in acute services

The expansion of cardiac cath labs is one of the signs of improvement for acute services as the reform programme moves ahead. The shift in services from hospitals to community settings is one of the major changes being implemented by Transforming Your Care. However, the health reform programme is also […]
2nd September 2013

Psychiatry transforming your care

Dr Diana Day-Cody outlines how transforming your care could improve local mental health services. Psychiatric illness is a significant health issue in Northern Ireland, with prevalence rates 25 per cent higher than the rest of Britain. The reasons for this include our traumatic past and social and economic deprivation. Transforming […]
2nd September 2013

Joining up and improving care

Integrated care partnerships are an important new structure for the health and social care system. Peter Cheney meets a range of people involved in setting them up and hears how joining up the system should improve care for patients. From next April, the 17 integrated care partnerships (ICPs) will be […]
21st October 2013

Lost homes: housing fraud highlighted

Tackling fraud will free up homes for the most vulnerable people in society. Fraud is keeping up to 2,400 vulnerable families out of a stable home, a hard-hitting report from the Northern Ireland Audit Office has found. Social housing tenancy fraud includes giving false information in an application, abandoning a […]
3rd April 2014

Public subsidies and private finance

Full private financing of social housing has not proved possible in Britain, Stewart Smyth writes. Nearly eighteen months since the Minister for Social Development announced his intention to remove the Housing Executive (NIHE) from the public sector, there remains little detail on the financing of this operation. This is surprising […]
3rd April 2014

Selection scheme under the microscope

Michael McKernan considers the proposed changes to the scheme. Notwithstanding minor adjustments over time, the housing selection scheme has governed the once highly controversial process of allocating social housing in Northern Ireland for the last thirty-five years. Although it is considered to have served its purpose well during that time, […]
3rd April 2014

Social Development Committee: progress report

Peter Cheney reviews the Social Development Committee’s work since 2011, which has majored on welfare, housing and regeneration. The term ‘social development’ is rarely used by members of the public but it is defined, in official and academic circles, as helping poorer people in society to improve their lives. Housing, […]
3rd April 2014

Transforming Glasgow’s communities

Glasgow Housing Association’s Andy Ashcroft discusses how its work is changing the face of the city with agendaNi. While once considered a failing organisation, Glasgow Housing Association (GHA) has transformed itself over the last five years and, in doing so, has helped to regenerate some of the most deprived parts […]
3rd April 2014

Building homes and developing communities

Registration with the Charity Commission affirms the quality of Ulidia Housing Association’s work, including its focus on good cross-community relations. Ulidia Housing Association has achieved another “first” in Northern Ireland by becoming the first housing association to be registered with the Charity Commission for Northern Ireland. It is anticipated that […]
3rd April 2014

Building Northern Ireland’s future

Cameron Watt, Chief Executive of the Northern Ireland Federation of Housing Associations (NIFHA), sets out how working together we can ensure everyone has access to a decent and affordable home. 22,000 households are in housing stress. Only around 7,000 of the 11,000 homes needed annually are being built. And in […]