{"id":99541,"date":"2023-10-03T08:18:57","date_gmt":"2023-10-03T08:18:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebritycovernews.com\/?p=99541"},"modified":"2023-10-03T08:18:57","modified_gmt":"2023-10-03T08:18:57","slug":"lidia-thorpe-grew-up-in-public-housing-towers-now-she-wants-to-save-them","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebritycovernews.com\/world-news\/lidia-thorpe-grew-up-in-public-housing-towers-now-she-wants-to-save-them\/","title":{"rendered":"Lidia Thorpe grew up in public housing towers. Now she wants to save them"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Senator and former public housing tenant Lidia Thorpe is throwing her weight behind a campaign against the state government\u2019s plan to redevelop 44 public housing towers, labelling former premier Daniel Andrews\u2019 announcement of the plan just before his resignation a \u201cdog act\u201d.<\/p>\n
Thorpe\u2019s intervention came as Labor MP Harriet Shing was announced on Monday as the new state housing minister, overseeing the Big Housing Build, which includes what the government has dubbed Australia\u2019s largest urban renewal project.<\/p>\n
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Independent senator Lidia Thorpe on Tuesday at the Hoddle Street housing towers in Collingwood where she lived during her early years.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>Wayne Taylor<\/cite><\/p>\n The opposition by Thorpe and a public rally this month will reignite a long-running inner-city fight between the Greens and Labor over the future of public housing, which critics say has been handed over to developers without a promise to significantly increase public or community housing stock.<\/p>\n Andrews revealed the state\u2019s Housing Statement six days before his surprise resignation. The high-rise redevelopment plan will lead to 10,000 current public housing tenants being progressively moved elsewhere, demolition of the towers and the building of mixed social and private housing precincts in partnership with the private sector. The new precincts are intended to house a total of 30,000 people.<\/p>\n The government has promised a 10 per cent increase in social housing (an umbrella term that includes public housing and non-government community housing) across the sites as a result of the rebuilds, meaning about 11,000 community or public residents will eventually live at the sites, along with 19,000 private residents (some in so-called affordable units).<\/p>\n \u201cIt\u2019s basically a dog act what [Daniel Andrews has] done in quitting after displacing thousands and thousands of people, poor people who rely on public housing,\u201d Thorpe said.<\/p>\n She is to be the keynote speaker at an October 21 rally at the Collingwood flats alongside Greens Yarra councillor Anab Mohamud, who lives in the Fitzroy towers.<\/p>\n Andrews and Shing have been approached for comment.<\/p>\n Thorpe, now 50, was brought home from hospital as a baby to the Carlton towers \u2013 among the first three estates due to be redeveloped by 2031 \u2013 and spent her adolescence living on and off at the Collingwood towers in Hoddle Street.<\/p>\n While visiting the Collingwood flats with The Age<\/em> on Monday, Thorpe pointed out her old home at No. 56 on the fifth floor of one of the towers, and to the next door Collingwood College, where she went to school with other children in the towers.<\/p>\n \u201cWhat I got from living in public housing, I got a hand up,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n \u201cIt was like someone grabbed my hand and said, \u2018Righto, here\u2019s a safe place for you for a little while. You can go to that school, and you can be connected to this community,\u2019 and if I didn\u2019t have that, then I wouldn\u2019t be a senator today.\u201d<\/p>\n Thorpe rejected a key justification for the redevelopment program, that the flats \u2013 built after World War II \u2013 were \u201creaching the end of their useful lives and no longer fit for modern living\u201d. She said that when she lived in the flats, they were comfortable but they had suffered from a lack of investment over time.<\/p>\n The government says refurbishment is not an option, due to the design and age of the towers, most of which have no balconies and small windows. It argues there is ample space for more people to live on the conveniently located sites.<\/p>\n In her previous role as a Victorian Greens MP, Thorpe and the Greens unsuccessfully advocated that public land sales be frozen until a treaty had been signed off with Victoria\u2019s First People\u2019s Assembly, a position Thorpe still believes has merit.<\/p>\n \u201cThis is where treaty, if done right, could come into effect but also [be a] benefit for people like people in public housing,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n She said she was most concerned about the \u201cripple effect\u201d on the elderly and multicultural young people who would be relocated as part of the plan and their connections to local schools and medical services.<\/p>\n Andrews had said Homes Victoria would do its best to keep people close to their current communities.<\/p>\n Although Thorpe is no longer part of the Greens, her position on the towers echoes that of her former party, which laments the slow conversion of public housing over time to community housing run by non-government organisations.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Premier Jacinta Allan yesterday with Harriet Shing, Victoria\u2019s new housing minister.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>NCA NewsWire<\/cite><\/p>\n Many of the 44 towers fall within Greens electorates Melbourne, Prahran, Brunswick and Richmond.<\/p>\n Independent Yarra councillor Stephen Jolly, who has organised the rally, said that unlike previous redevelopments, the plan to knock down the towers had touched a nerve beyond people who live in public housing.<\/p>\n The Victorian Greens will introduce a motion to parliament on Tuesday demanding the government produce all documents relating to the project, party leader Samantha Ratnam said.<\/p>\n \u201cOur new premier [Jacinta Allan] has an opportunity now to come clean on this project, and commit to building the public housing our state desperately needs,\u201d she said. \u201cAnd that means 100 per cent of housing rebuilt should be public housing.\u201d<\/p>\n State opposition housing spokesman Richard Riordan also called for transparency on the project on Monday, including on the number of bedrooms in social housing units that would be created under the project and how the developments would be funded.<\/p>\n Get the day\u2019s breaking news, entertainment ideas and a long read to enjoy. <\/i><\/b>Sign up to receive our Evening Edition newsletter here.<\/i><\/b><\/p>\nMost Viewed in National<\/h2>\n
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