'Our
way of life destroyed'
Most
homes fail affordability test for households on median income
26
October, 2012
MOST
Melbourne homes are too expensive for households on a median income,
and only a handful of suburbs - mostly on the city's fringe - pass
the affordability test, a government report reveals.
The
report shows households earning the city's median annual income of
$70,300 have few suburbs to choose from. Even the cheapest suburbs
require an annual household income of between $67,000 and $90,000 to
pay the mortgage and other bills.
Up
until now Matthew Guy's plan has been to create a concrete jungle,
making Melbourne a less attractive place to invest by destroying our
envied way of life.
In
many inner Melbourne suburbs - which have better access to public
transport and services - a household requires an income of between
$120,000-$200,000 a year.
The
state government report, Melbourne, let's talk about the future,
predicts Melbourne will need an extra million homes in the next 30 to
40 years as the population increases to more than 6 million.
The
need for more homes will be compounded by an ageing population as the
number of people over 65 is expected to double in the next 20 years
and the percentage of households that have children declines.
Many
of these new homes could be built around the CBD, with plans for
almost 250,000 more homes stretching from Carlton to Fishermans Bend.
The
report is a discussion paper encouraging public feedback on how
Melbourne should be planned and developed over the coming decades.
The Baillieu government is expected to release its long-term
blueprint for Melbourne next year in place of the Melbourne 2030
planning statement.
The
full discussion paper will be released today.
The
section made available to The Age raises tough questions, including
how Victoria will pay for the next-generation transport network.
''There
is a clear desire to identify a comprehensive vision for the
transport system, in a similar way to how the road plans in the 1960s
identified a long-term vision. However, we can't keep funding the way
we have been and we need to explore new approaches,'' the report
notes.
It
says new funding options could include a broad-based metropolitan
improvement levy, user-pays tolls and asset sales.
The
report includes community attitudes to the different funding models,
with strongest support for government bonds and private sector
partnerships and least support for new tolls and raising taxes.
Planning
Minister Matthew Guy said the government wanted a community
discussion on what was the best funding measure for new facilities.
The
report also identifies the need to increase job options in
Melbourne's growth areas so fewer people are compelled to drive long
distances to work.
''The
key issue is that a large proportion of people use their car to
access employment. Even short trips under one kilometre in the outer
suburbs are made by car,'' it says. ''Around 90 per cent of people in
the outer areas and 40 per cent of people in the inner areas drive to
work.''
Long
journeys were leading people to choose less-skilled jobs.
A
recent study found the separation of residential areas from areas of
employment meant some residents took lower-skilled jobs closer to
home in order to meet the family's responsibilities. This
particularly affected highly educated and skilled women, the report
notes.
The
state opposition criticised the discussion paper, arguing the
Baillieu government was already undertaking major changes to
Victoria's planning system before it had a clear vision for
Melbourne's growth.
''Up
until now Matthew Guy's plan has been to create a concrete jungle,
making Melbourne a less attractive place to invest by destroying our
envied way of life,'' opposition planning spokesman Brian Tee said.
Public
feedback on the planning discussion paper closes on March 1.
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