Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,841
http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/2000-offers-of-social-housing-turned-down-362579.html
"Figures compiled from 30 of the country’s local authorities show there was 1,990 refusals of an offer of social housing last year, including a number of cases in which an applicant refused an offer at least twice.
the main reasons for refusal, as was the case in most of local authorities, was either the location of the accommodation or a change in preferences regarding where the applicant wanted to live. Another common reason for refusal was that the type of accommodation offered was too small or not suitable."
A local councillor had told me that a person in Ringsend had turned down an offer of social housing in Pearse Street because they did not want to leave their community. I assumed it was just a tall story, but now I wonder.
When my friends bought houses in their late 20s, they bought them wherever they could afford to buy them. They all moved well out of their communities and ended up with long commutes to work. They gradually traded up and moved closer to where they were born as they paid down their mortgages and their earnings rose.
"Figures compiled from 30 of the country’s local authorities show there was 1,990 refusals of an offer of social housing last year, including a number of cases in which an applicant refused an offer at least twice.
the main reasons for refusal, as was the case in most of local authorities, was either the location of the accommodation or a change in preferences regarding where the applicant wanted to live. Another common reason for refusal was that the type of accommodation offered was too small or not suitable."
A local councillor had told me that a person in Ringsend had turned down an offer of social housing in Pearse Street because they did not want to leave their community. I assumed it was just a tall story, but now I wonder.
When my friends bought houses in their late 20s, they bought them wherever they could afford to buy them. They all moved well out of their communities and ended up with long commutes to work. They gradually traded up and moved closer to where they were born as they paid down their mortgages and their earnings rose.