Latest News

Add My News • Search Old News

Gippsland › Latest news › Tim Bull MP

Tim Bull says East Gippsland faces a housing crisis, with social homes declining despite population growth

Victoria’s social housing crisis deepens as Labor policies drive rental providers away, reducing stock. Tim Bull warns record waiting lists and rising homelessness demand urgent government action.

By news@gippsland - 13th October 2025 - Back to News

The Allan Labor government is failing to deliver the social housing homes it promised and is implementing policy that is driving rental providers from the market, culminating in a massively ballooning social housing waiting list and increased homelessness. The latest Victorian Housing Register update has revealed the waiting list for a home in Victoria has reached a new record high of 66,881.

Tim Bull says government policies drive rising homelessness, social housing shortages, and rental stress, with Victoria lagging behind other states per capita

Tim Bull says government policies drive rising homelessness, social housing shortages, and rental stress, with Victoria lagging behind other states per capita

Housing crisis worsens

Gippsland East Nationals’ MP, Tim Bull, said it is little wonder we are at a crisis point in housing. "In East Gippsland, Wellington and Latrobe, there are currently 3,785 social housing residences. Back in 2017, there were 3,792. That’s a reduction of seven homes over eight years, despite strong population growth. These are the Department’s own figures."

"Meanwhile, Premier Jacinta Allan has hit rental providers with new taxes, including the Emergency Services and Volunteers Levy, and by lowering the land tax threshold to capture even more property owners."

"The fallout is predictable, and one of three things happens: (1) the new taxes are passed on to renters who pay more, (2) renters can’t afford the increases and are evicted or (3) the rental provider sells up and invests interstate or in the stock market, resulting in tenants losing their home. This is the reality, and it has seen a 13.5 per cent reduction in private rental properties in Victoria," Mr Bull said.

Rental market strain

Mr Bull added, "Most rental providers aren’t wealthy investors. They’re everyday people like nurses, teachers and sales staff with a single property. The State Government seems to think they are all wealthy and that is not the case, it is simply that they are investing in the housing market," he said.

"Local Upper House MP, Harriet Shing, has overseen this disaster and needs to take the responsibility. She continually talks about ‘new social housing homes’ and while we have had new homes built, older social housing stock has either been sold off or bulldozed at a greater rate," he said.

Social housing decline

Mr Bull also said, "How else do you end up with seven fewer social housing homes than we had eight years ago? This is a question Ms Shing refuses to answer. The massive increase we are seeing in the social housing waiting list, the people under rental stress and the increasing number of homeless has been significantly contributed to by government policy."

"Victoria now has more people per capita experiencing homelessness than New South Wales, Queensland or Western Australia. NSW has a social housing home for every 1.8 per cent of its population, while Victoria sits at just 1.2 per cent. Instead of encouraging private investment in rentals, the Labor Government is taxing rental providers into oblivion," Mr Bull said.

Pictures from Twitter website.


Source: www.gippsland.com

Published by: news@gippsland.com



Edit this news article




Related Articles

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Baw Baw Bass Coast Cardinia East Gippsland Latrobe City South Gippsland Wellington
© 2001-2026 gippsland.com Print this page | Subscribe to Newsletter | Feedback / Inquiries | Login
Care has been taken in compiling the component parts of this website. However, Gippsland.com does not warrant or represent that the website is free from errors or omissions, that the qualifications claimed by an advertiser are valid or that the published details of any advertiser are as stated on the website. Please review the full statement of our Terms and Conditions of Service and disclaimer.