481 notes
·
View notes
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ FEATURING: MARCUS BRUGGMANN // EVAN HAY // ZEV MAGASIS // GUILLAUME BERTHET // CELIAN CORDT-MOLLER// JORDAN QUEIJO // LUC BOIMOND // LILIAN FAURE-VINCENT // MANNY HERNANDEZ // GABRIEL ZUFFEREY // SIMON PERROTTET // LUC RAMOS // MEHDI "DI-MEH" BELKAÏD
2 notes
·
View notes
La liste des 343 signataires qui ont eu le courage de publier dans le Nouvel Observateur du 5 avril 1971 ce manifeste : "Je me suis fait avorter", alors qu'elles encouraient des peines de prison.
Merci Mesdames.
<3
"J. Abba-Sidick
Janita Abdalleh
Monique Anfredon
Catherine Arditi
Maryse Arditi
Hélène Argellies
Françoise Arnoul
Florence Asie
Isabelle Atlan
Brigitte Auber
Stéphane Audran
Colette Audry
Tina Aumont
L. Azan
Jacqueline Azim
Micheline Baby
Geneviève Bachelier
Cécile Ballif
Néna Baratier
D. Bard
E. Bardis
Anna de Bascher
C. Batini
Chantal Baulier
Hélène de Beauvoir
Simone de Beauvoir
Colette Bec
M.
Bediou
Michèle Bedos
Anne Bellec
Lolleh Bellon
Edith Benoist
Anita Benoit
Aude Bergier
Dominique Bernabe
Jocelyne Bernard
Catherine Bernheim
Nicole Bernheim
Tania Bescomd
Jeannine Beylot
Monique Bigot
Fabienne Biguet
Nicole Bize
Nicole de Boisanger
Valérie Boisgel
Y. Boissaire
Silvina Boissonnade
Martine Bonzon
Françoise Borel
Ginette Bossavit
Olga Bost
Anne-Marie Bouge
Pierrette Bourdin
Monique Bourroux
Bénédicte Boysson-Bardies
M. Braconnier-Leclerc
M. Braun
Andrée Brumeaux
Dominique Brumeaux
Marie-Françoise.Brumeaux
Jacqueline Busset
Françoise De Camas
Anne Camus
Ginette Cano
Ketty Cenel
Jacqueline Chambord
Josiane Chanel
Danièle Chinsky
Claudine Chonez
Martine Chosson
Catherine Claude
M.-Louise, Clave
Françoise Clavel
Iris Clert
Geneviève Cluny
Annie Cohen
Florence Collin
Anne Cordonnier
Anne Cornaly
Chantal Cornier
J.
Corvisier
Michèle Cristofari
Lydia Cruse
Christiane Dancourt
Hélène Darakis
Françoise Dardy
Anne-Marie Daumont
Anne Dauzon
Martine Dayen
Catherine Dechezelle
Marie Dedieu
Lise Deharme
Claire Delpech
Christine Delphy
Catherine Deneuve
Dominique Desanti
Geneviève Deschamps
Claire Deshayes
Nicole Despiney
Catherine Deudon
Sylvie Dlarte
Christine Diaz
Arlette Donati
Gilberte Doppler
Danièle Drevet
Evelyne Droux
Dominique Dubois
Muguette Dubois
Dolorès Dubrana
C. Dufour
Elyane Dugny
Simone Dumont
Christiane Duparc
Pierrette Duperray
Annie Dupuis
Marguerite Duras
Françoise d’Eaubonne
Nicole Echard
Isabelle Ehni
Myrtho Elfort
Danièle El-Gharbaoui
Françoise Elie
Arlette Elkaim
Barbara Enu
Jacqueline d’Estree
Françoise Fabian
Anne Fabre-Luce
Annie Fargue
J. Foliot
Brigitte Fontaine
Antoinette Fouque-Grugnardi
Eléonore Friedmann
Françoise Fromentin
J.
Fruhling
Danièle Fulgent
Madeleine Gabula
Yamina Gacon
Luce Garcia-Ville
Monique Garnier
Micha Garrigue
Geneviève Gasseau
Geneviève Gaubert
Claude Genia
Elyane Germain-Horelle
Dora Gerschenfeld
Michèle Girard
F. Gogan
Hélène Gonin
Claude Gorodesky
Marie-Luce Gorse
Deborah Gorvier
Martine Gottlib
Rosine Grange
Rosemonde Gros
Valérie Groussard
Lise Grundman
A. Guerrand-Hermes
Françoise de Gruson
Catherine Guyot
Gisèle Halimi
Herta Hansmann
Noëlle Henry
M. Hery
Nicole Higelin
Dorinne Horst
Raymonde Hubschmid
Y. Imbert
L. Jalin
Catherine Joly
Colette Joly
Yvette Joly
Hemine Karagheuz
Ugne Karvelis
Katia Kaupp
Nenda Kerien
F. Korn
Hélène Kostoff
Marie-Claire Labie
Myriam Laborde
Anne-Marie Lafaurie
Bernadette Lafont
Michèle Lambert
Monique Lange
Maryse Lapergue
Catherine Larnicol
Sophie Larnicol
Monique Lascaux
M.-T. Latreille
Christiane Laurent
Françoise Lavallard
G.
Le Bonniec
Danièle Lebrun
Annie Leclerc
M.-France Le Dantec
Colette Le Digol
Violette Leduc
Martine Leduc-Amel
Françoise Le Forestier
Michèle Leglise-Vian
M. Claude Lejaille
Mireille Lelièvre
Michèle Lemonnier
Françoise Lentin
Joëlle Lequeux
Emmanuelle de Lesseps
Anne Levaillant
Dona Levy
Irène Lhomme
Christine Llinas
Sabine Lods
Marceline Loridan
Edith Loser
Françoise Lugagne
M. Lyleire
Judith Magre
C. Maillard
Michèle Manceaux
Bona de Mandiargues
Michèle Marquais
Anne Martelle
Monique Martens
Jacqueline Martin
Milka Martin
Renée Marzuk
Colette Masbou
Cella Maulin
Liliane Maury
Edith Mayeur
Jeanne Maynial
Odile du Mazaubrun
Marie-Thérèse Mazel
Gaby Memmi
Michèle Meritz
Marie-Claude Mestral
Maryvonne Meuraud
Jolaine Meyer
Pascale Meynier
Charlotte Millau
M. de Miroschodji
Geneviève Mnich
Ariane Mnouchkine
Colette Moreau
Jeanne Moreau
Nellv Moreno
Michèle Moretti
Lydia Morin
Mariane Moulergues
Liane Mozere
Nicole Muchnik
C.
Muffong
Véronique Nahoum
Eliane Navarro
Henriette Nizan
Lila de Nobili
Bulle Ogier
J. Olena
Janine Olivier
Wanda Olivier
Yvette Orengo
Iro Oshier
Gege Pardo
Elisabeth Pargny
Jeanne Pasquier
M. Pelletier
Jacqueline Perez
M. Perez
Nicole Perrottet
Sophie Pianko
Odette Picquet
Marie Pillet
Elisabeth Pimar
Marie-France Pisier
Olga Poliakoff
Danièle Poux
Micheline Presle
Anne-Marie Quazza
Marie-Christine Questerbert
Susy Rambaud
Gisèle Rebillion
Gisèle Reboul
Arlette Reinert
Arlette Repart
Christiane Ribeiro
M. Ribeyrol
Delya Ribes
Marie-Françoise Richard
Suzanne Rigail-Blaise
Marcelle Rigaud
Laurence Rigault
Danièle Rigaut
Danielle Riva
M. Riva
Claude Rivière
Marthe Robert
Christiane Rochefort
J. Rogaldi
Chantal Rogeon
Francine Rolland
Christiane Rorato
Germaine Rossignol
Hélène Rostoff
G. Roth-Bernstein
C.
Rousseau
Françoise Routhier
Danièle Roy
Yvette Rudy
Françoise Sagan
Rachel Salik
Renée Saurel
Marie-Ange Schiltz
Lucie Schmidt
Scania de Schonen
Monique Selim
Liliane Sendyke
Claudine Serre
Colette Sert
Jeanine Sert
Catherine de Seyne
Delphine Seyrig
Sylvie Sfez
Liliane Siegel
Annie Sinturel
Michèle Sirot
Michèle Stemer
Cécile Stern
Alexandra Stewart
Gaby Sylvia
Francine Tabet
Danièle Tardrew
Anana Terramorsi
Arlette Tethany
Joëlle Thevenet
Marie-Christine Theurkauff
Constance Thibaud
Josy Thibaut
Rose Thierry
Suzanne Thivier
Sophie Thomas
Nadine Trintignant
Irène Tunc
Tyc Dumont
Marie-Pia Vallet
Agnès Van-Parys
Agnès Varda
Catherine Varlin
Patricia Varod
Cleuza Vernier
Ursula Vian-Kubler
Louise Villareal
Marina Vlady
A. Wajntal
Jeannine Weil
Anne Wiazemsky
Monique Wittig
Josée Yanne
Catherine Yovanovitch
Annie Zelensky"
Manifeste publié dans le “Nouvel Observateur” numéro 334, du 5 avril 1971.
53 notes
·
View notes
NPR News: 60 Years Ago, 'Fidelmania' Took New York City By Storm
NPR News: 60 Years Ago, ‘Fidelmania’ Took New York City By Storm
60 Years Ago, ‘Fidelmania’ Took New York City By Storm
On April 21, 1959, Fidel Castro arrived in New York to a crowd of 20,000 people. NPR’s Scott Simon speaks with author Tony Perrottet about the Cuban leader’s historic U.S. visit.
Read more on NPR
View On WordPress
0 notes
Simon Perrottet - Flip Front - Geneve
0 notes
It's time for the SWISS FINALS!!
O.G.Skate presents The Final of the Swiss Championship of Game of Skate on Sunday 24th in Geneva, place Châteaubriand, hosted by O.G.2000 Family. There will be a "242 Race" and a "Faust Best Tricks" open to everyone!!!
Here are the 12 skaters qualified from the 6 contests.
Gland, 1. Philip Küng, 2. Makusu Steven
Zurich, 1. Sven Kilchenmann, 2. Diego Thonney
Lugano, 1. Manolo Galvani, 2. Jonas Duclos
Basel, 1. Janos Herzog, 2. Chris Thevenot
Luzern, 1. Thomas Schmid, 2. Michel Müller
Bern, 1. Simon Perrottet, 2. Saphep Tang
The 4 "Wild Cards" will be announced very soon!
The concept is simple. It's a game of skate. To make it easy, we will use the "berrics rules" for the contests with one extra rule to add some fun.. The "Suraj". In each game, for the last letter, the skater who showed the trick is allowed to offer the defender a third try. ONLY ONCE BY GAME.
More info will be posted soon!
See you on Sunday 24th!
Peace, Love & Having Fun!
O.G.Skate
All events are supported by: 242shop, Faust Skate Co, Spitfire, Thunder Trucks, Modus Bearings
Music delivered by Sound Hustlers, Eagle and Madkid of SWC
1 note
·
View note
How renters could never leave under radical plan being pursued by the government The Sydney Morning Herald
Sydney renters could occupy their homes for decades or might even pass them down to their children under a proposal to increase the supply of affordable and stable housing for people locked out of Sydney’s surging property market the NSW government announced it was developing on Friday.
NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said the government was “very keen” to look at creating a “build to rent” sector of property development in NSW to make housing more stable and affordable for the one-third of Sydney-siders who rent.
Treasurer Dominic Perrottet says he will pursue the idea with industry. Photo: Geoff Jones
The build-to-rent sector has big investors build apartments to lease on a long-term basis, sometimes indefinitely. Investors receive steady returns; renters get steady living arrangements in turn, advocates say.
In a speech to the NSW Property Council Mr Perrottet said the government had already begun exploring options for incentivising investors to build for steady rental returns in favour of windfall profits, which some analysts say have held back the model especially in Sydney’s growing market.
“Current property prices make the dream of home-ownership more difficult than for past generations,” he said “But for long-term renting to be a viable alternative, it has to be affordable and it has to be secure.
Mr Perrottet said the government had already been examining options but would now create a taskforce to work with industry and examine the viability of an idea that is popular overseas but which he said would face challenges in Sydney.
The rent-to-build approach is popular in Europe, where it is not uncommon for rental properties to be occupied by a sole tenant for decades. In countries such as Germany or Denmark infinite leases are available and apartments are passed down between generations.
“It’s attractive there to companies who are interested in a reliable return rather than flipping [an apartment] every six to 10 years,” said Simon Cutcher from the Tenants Union of NSW. “They’re very happy to let a good tenant stay”.
You will now receive updates from AM & PM Update Newsletter
AM & PM Update Newsletter
Get the latest news and updates emailed straight to your inbox.
Fairfax Media understands offering zoning incentives, or (with federal cooperation) tax breaks or the right to redevelop prime state-government owned land on the condition that it is used exclusively to house renters are all ideas that have been floated within the government at an early stage.
Mr Cutcher said the very high proportion of small amateur investor landlords in Sydney made renting unstable as they were less interested in tenant relationships.
A third of Australian households rent and more than 40 per cent of those have been in the rental market more than 10 years or more.
In some suburbs in Sydney’s inner-ring that figure can rise to twice as much.
Mr Perrottet’s idea was welcomed warmly by the property development sector which has begun some small such projects in Melbourne.
“Mirvac believes that build to rent is a sector whose time has come,” said the CEO of the Mirvac builder Susan Lloyd-Hurwitz. “We see a great opportunity”.
But renters’ advocates stressed it was too early to say if the plan could change the experience of renting in Australia for the better.
Mr Cutcher described the speech as an “interesting shift in rhetoric” but said that unless Australia changed laws allowing landlords to readily evict tenants that renting in Sydney would remain a precarious existence.
“Finding ways to give renters that security without excessively curtailing the rights of property owners is a fine line to walk,” the Treasurer said.
A 2017 survey by consumer group Choice found that the short-term nature renters lived with widespread anxiety with one-in-five fearing eviction and nearly 10 per cent being evicted on a “no grounds” basis at least once.
The move comes as NSW Labor announced a scaled-back package of renters’ protections at its annual conference that would ban “no cause” evictions and which would oblige landlords to justify excessive rental increases. The party junked a plan for capping rent raises, however.
Under housing affordability measures aimed at owners announced in June, the state government said it would offer more than $1 billion in stamp duty concessions to buyers of cheaper properties to help level the playing field of the housing market.
Follow Sydney Now
from
https://highpowerclean.com.au/how-renters-could-never-leave-under-radical-plan-being-pursued-by-the-government-the-sydney-morning-herald/
from High Power Cleaning Melbourne - Blog http://highpowercleanau.weebly.com/blog/how-renters-could-never-leave-under-radical-plan-being-pursued-by-the-government-the-sydney-morning-herald
0 notes
How renters could never leave under radical plan being pursued by the government – The Sydney Morning Herald
Sydney renters could occupy their homes for decades or might even pass them down to their children under a proposal to increase the supply of affordable and stable housing for people locked out of Sydney’s surging property market the NSW government announced it was developing on Friday.
NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said the government was “very keen” to look at creating a “build to rent” sector of property development in NSW to make housing more stable and affordable for the one-third of Sydney-siders who rent.
Treasurer Dominic Perrottet says he will pursue the idea with industry. Photo: Geoff Jones
The build-to-rent sector has big investors build apartments to lease on a long-term basis, sometimes indefinitely. Investors receive steady returns; renters get steady living arrangements in turn, advocates say.
In a speech to the NSW Property Council Mr Perrottet said the government had already begun exploring options for incentivising investors to build for steady rental returns in favour of windfall profits, which some analysts say have held back the model especially in Sydney’s growing market.
“Current property prices make the dream of home-ownership more difficult than for past generations,” he said “But for long-term renting to be a viable alternative, it has to be affordable and it has to be secure.
Mr Perrottet said the government had already been examining options but would now create a taskforce to work with industry and examine the viability of an idea that is popular overseas but which he said would face challenges in Sydney.
The rent-to-build approach is popular in Europe, where it is not uncommon for rental properties to be occupied by a sole tenant for decades. In countries such as Germany or Denmark infinite leases are available and apartments are passed down between generations.
“It’s attractive there to companies who are interested in a reliable return rather than flipping [an apartment] every six to 10 years,” said Simon Cutcher from the Tenants Union of NSW. “They’re very happy to let a good tenant stay”.
You will now receive updates from AM & PM Update Newsletter
AM & PM Update Newsletter
Get the latest news and updates emailed straight to your inbox.
Fairfax Media understands offering zoning incentives, or (with federal cooperation) tax breaks or the right to redevelop prime state-government owned land on the condition that it is used exclusively to house renters are all ideas that have been floated within the government at an early stage.
Mr Cutcher said the very high proportion of small amateur investor landlords in Sydney made renting unstable as they were less interested in tenant relationships.
A third of Australian households rent and more than 40 per cent of those have been in the rental market more than 10 years or more.
In some suburbs in Sydney’s inner-ring that figure can rise to twice as much.
Mr Perrottet’s idea was welcomed warmly by the property development sector which has begun some small such projects in Melbourne.
“Mirvac believes that build to rent is a sector whose time has come,” said the CEO of the Mirvac builder Susan Lloyd-Hurwitz. “We see a great opportunity”.
But renters’ advocates stressed it was too early to say if the plan could change the experience of renting in Australia for the better.
Mr Cutcher described the speech as an “interesting shift in rhetoric” but said that unless Australia changed laws allowing landlords to readily evict tenants that renting in Sydney would remain a precarious existence.
“Finding ways to give renters that security without excessively curtailing the rights of property owners is a fine line to walk,” the Treasurer said.
A 2017 survey by consumer group Choice found that the short-term nature renters lived with widespread anxiety with one-in-five fearing eviction and nearly 10 per cent being evicted on a “no grounds” basis at least once.
The move comes as NSW Labor announced a scaled-back package of renters’ protections at its annual conference that would ban “no cause” evictions and which would oblige landlords to justify excessive rental increases. The party junked a plan for capping rent raises, however.
Under housing affordability measures aimed at owners announced in June, the state government said it would offer more than $1 billion in stamp duty concessions to buyers of cheaper properties to help level the playing field of the housing market.
Follow Sydney Now
Source: https://highpowerclean.com.au/how-renters-could-never-leave-under-radical-plan-being-pursued-by-the-government-the-sydney-morning-herald/
from High Power Cleaning Melbourne https://highpowercleanau.wordpress.com/2017/08/11/how-renters-could-never-leave-under-radical-plan-being-pursued-by-the-government-the-sydney-morning-herald/
0 notes
How renters could never leave under radical plan being pursued by the government – The Sydney Morning Herald
Sydney renters could occupy their homes for decades or might even pass them down to their children under a proposal to increase the supply of affordable and stable housing for people locked out of Sydney’s surging property market the NSW government announced it was developing on Friday.
NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said the government was “very keen” to look at creating a “build to rent” sector of property development in NSW to make housing more stable and affordable for the one-third of Sydney-siders who rent.
Treasurer Dominic Perrottet says he will pursue the idea with industry. Photo: Geoff Jones
The build-to-rent sector has big investors build apartments to lease on a long-term basis, sometimes indefinitely. Investors receive steady returns; renters get steady living arrangements in turn, advocates say.
In a speech to the NSW Property Council Mr Perrottet said the government had already begun exploring options for incentivising investors to build for steady rental returns in favour of windfall profits, which some analysts say have held back the model especially in Sydney’s growing market.
“Current property prices make the dream of home-ownership more difficult than for past generations,” he said “But for long-term renting to be a viable alternative, it has to be affordable and it has to be secure.
Mr Perrottet said the government had already been examining options but would now create a taskforce to work with industry and examine the viability of an idea that is popular overseas but which he said would face challenges in Sydney.
The rent-to-build approach is popular in Europe, where it is not uncommon for rental properties to be occupied by a sole tenant for decades. In countries such as Germany or Denmark infinite leases are available and apartments are passed down between generations.
“It’s attractive there to companies who are interested in a reliable return rather than flipping [an apartment] every six to 10 years,” said Simon Cutcher from the Tenants Union of NSW. “They’re very happy to let a good tenant stay”.
You will now receive updates from AM & PM Update Newsletter
AM & PM Update Newsletter
Get the latest news and updates emailed straight to your inbox.
Fairfax Media understands offering zoning incentives, or (with federal cooperation) tax breaks or the right to redevelop prime state-government owned land on the condition that it is used exclusively to house renters are all ideas that have been floated within the government at an early stage.
Mr Cutcher said the very high proportion of small amateur investor landlords in Sydney made renting unstable as they were less interested in tenant relationships.
A third of Australian households rent and more than 40 per cent of those have been in the rental market more than 10 years or more.
In some suburbs in Sydney’s inner-ring that figure can rise to twice as much.
Mr Perrottet’s idea was welcomed warmly by the property development sector which has begun some small such projects in Melbourne.
“Mirvac believes that build to rent is a sector whose time has come,” said the CEO of the Mirvac builder Susan Lloyd-Hurwitz. “We see a great opportunity”.
But renters’ advocates stressed it was too early to say if the plan could change the experience of renting in Australia for the better.
Mr Cutcher described the speech as an “interesting shift in rhetoric” but said that unless Australia changed laws allowing landlords to readily evict tenants that renting in Sydney would remain a precarious existence.
“Finding ways to give renters that security without excessively curtailing the rights of property owners is a fine line to walk,” the Treasurer said.
A 2017 survey by consumer group Choice found that the short-term nature renters lived with widespread anxiety with one-in-five fearing eviction and nearly 10 per cent being evicted on a “no grounds” basis at least once.
The move comes as NSW Labor announced a scaled-back package of renters’ protections at its annual conference that would ban “no cause” evictions and which would oblige landlords to justify excessive rental increases. The party junked a plan for capping rent raises, however.
Under housing affordability measures aimed at owners announced in June, the state government said it would offer more than $1 billion in stamp duty concessions to buyers of cheaper properties to help level the playing field of the housing market.
Follow Sydney Now
from End of Lease Cleaning Melbourne|Bond back cleaning|Bond Cleaning |Vacate cleaning Melbourne https://highpowerclean.com.au/how-renters-could-never-leave-under-radical-plan-being-pursued-by-the-government-the-sydney-morning-herald/
from High Power Cleaning Melbourne https://highpowercleanau.tumblr.com/post/164061532346
0 notes
Célian Cordt-Moller, Jordan Queijo, Simon Perrottet, Gabriel Zuffrey, Nicolas Boimond, Luc Boimond, David Goldsworthy, Marcus Bruggmann, Stefan Brodard, Guillaume Berthet, Nico Pasquali, Manny Hernandez, Florian Byrne-Sutton, Johnathan Dufour, Special guest: Livio Roux (Seen in OGZOOO)
MUSIC: YNGTARPEY - SOLARIUM (Prod. GUDSHI)
soundcloud.com/yungtarpei
soundcloud.com/kodjii
2 notes
·
View notes
How renters could never leave under radical plan being pursued by the government – The Sydney Morning Herald
Sydney renters could occupy their homes for decades or might even pass them down to their children under a proposal to increase the supply of affordable and stable housing for people locked out of Sydney’s surging property market the NSW government announced it was developing on Friday.
NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said the government was “very keen” to look at creating a “build to rent” sector of property development in NSW to make housing more stable and affordable for the one-third of Sydney-siders who rent.
Treasurer Dominic Perrottet says he will pursue the idea with industry. Photo: Geoff Jones
The build-to-rent sector has big investors build apartments to lease on a long-term basis, sometimes indefinitely. Investors receive steady returns; renters get steady living arrangements in turn, advocates say.
In a speech to the NSW Property Council Mr Perrottet said the government had already begun exploring options for incentivising investors to build for steady rental returns in favour of windfall profits, which some analysts say have held back the model especially in Sydney’s growing market.
“Current property prices make the dream of home-ownership more difficult than for past generations,” he said “But for long-term renting to be a viable alternative, it has to be affordable and it has to be secure.
Mr Perrottet said the government had already been examining options but would now create a taskforce to work with industry and examine the viability of an idea that is popular overseas but which he said would face challenges in Sydney.
The rent-to-build approach is popular in Europe, where it is not uncommon for rental properties to be occupied by a sole tenant for decades. In countries such as Germany or Denmark infinite leases are available and apartments are passed down between generations.
“It’s attractive there to companies who are interested in a reliable return rather than flipping [an apartment] every six to 10 years,” said Simon Cutcher from the Tenants Union of NSW. “They’re very happy to let a good tenant stay”.
You will now receive updates from AM & PM Update Newsletter
AM & PM Update Newsletter
Get the latest news and updates emailed straight to your inbox.
Fairfax Media understands offering zoning incentives, or (with federal cooperation) tax breaks or the right to redevelop prime state-government owned land on the condition that it is used exclusively to house renters are all ideas that have been floated within the government at an early stage.
Mr Cutcher said the very high proportion of small amateur investor landlords in Sydney made renting unstable as they were less interested in tenant relationships.
A third of Australian households rent and more than 40 per cent of those have been in the rental market more than 10 years or more.
In some suburbs in Sydney’s inner-ring that figure can rise to twice as much.
Mr Perrottet’s idea was welcomed warmly by the property development sector which has begun some small such projects in Melbourne.
“Mirvac believes that build to rent is a sector whose time has come,” said the CEO of the Mirvac builder Susan Lloyd-Hurwitz. “We see a great opportunity”.
But renters’ advocates stressed it was too early to say if the plan could change the experience of renting in Australia for the better.
Mr Cutcher described the speech as an “interesting shift in rhetoric” but said that unless Australia changed laws allowing landlords to readily evict tenants that renting in Sydney would remain a precarious existence.
“Finding ways to give renters that security without excessively curtailing the rights of property owners is a fine line to walk,” the Treasurer said.
A 2017 survey by consumer group Choice found that the short-term nature renters lived with widespread anxiety with one-in-five fearing eviction and nearly 10 per cent being evicted on a “no grounds” basis at least once.
The move comes as NSW Labor announced a scaled-back package of renters’ protections at its annual conference that would ban “no cause” evictions and which would oblige landlords to justify excessive rental increases. The party junked a plan for capping rent raises, however.
Under housing affordability measures aimed at owners announced in June, the state government said it would offer more than $1 billion in stamp duty concessions to buyers of cheaper properties to help level the playing field of the housing market.
Follow Sydney Now
from End of Lease Cleaning Melbourne|Bond back cleaning|Bond Cleaning |Vacate cleaning Melbourne https://highpowerclean.com.au/how-renters-could-never-leave-under-radical-plan-being-pursued-by-the-government-the-sydney-morning-herald/
0 notes
The new LFE video, featuring Guillaume Berthet, Luc Boimond, Mikael Lewertoff, Manny Hernandez, Alexis Caprona, Florian Byrne-Sutton, Stefan Brodard, Celian Cordt-Moller, Simon Perrottet, Nico Pasquali, Gabriel Zufferey, Jordan Queijo and many more.
Filmed and edited by David Goldsworthy
1 note
·
View note
Short edit featuring Luc Ramos, Simon Perrottet, Mikael Lewertoff, Jason Singer, Gabriel Zufferey, Jonas Duclos, Guillaume Berthet, Kevin Deschamps, Thibaud Humbert, Jordan Queijo, Nabil Slimani, Manny Hernandez, Ugo Mighali, Luc Boimond, Chris Thevenot, Marcus Bruggmann, Florian Byrne-Sutton, Stefan Brodard, Antoine Poupin, Guillaume Zwaan, Jalil Sommerhalder and Marcel Ricci.
1 note
·
View note
Simon Perrottet - KF - Geneve
0 notes