Vulnerable renters face evictions in regional areas as inflation pressures build

09 Dec 2021

By Contributor

Sky view of a regional town in central western New South Wales. Renters in regional Australia are facing forced evictions as inflation pressures push up the cost of housing and COVID 19 forces mass exodus from bigger cities. Photo: Adobe.

Renters in regional Australia are facing forced evictions as inflation pressures push up the cost of housing and COVID 19 forces mass exodus from bigger cities.

Booming rental prices in regional areas have led to an increase in tenants being evicted without cause according to the Chair of Catholic Social Services Australia, Francis Sullivan.

“We are hearing reports from tenancy support services, particularly in New South Wales, that they are being overwhelmed with calls for help as a growing number of tenants are evicted without cause,” Mr Sullivan said.

“Booming rent prices have pushed families out of the cities and into reginal areas. This has pushed the cost of rental accommodation up in regional towns and forced lower income families onto the street.”

According to research undertaken by SGS Economics and Planning for National Shelter and The Brotherhood of St Laurence, rental affordability has deteriorated in every state with Victoria, NSW, and Queensland the worst affected.

The recently released report found the regional areas of these states are now at their most unaffordable since similar research was first undertaken by SGS in 2015.

Mr Sullivan said without a dramatic increase by governments in the social housing stock the marginalised, mentally ill and disadvantage face a grim future.

“Beyond that, the Commonwealth needs to increase rent assistance, look at the impact of Air B&B and short-term letting and consider putting in place rent and lease protections,” Mr Sullivan said.