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Rent Controls

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 6 April 2017

Thursday, 6 April 2017

Ceisteanna (19, 28)

John Brady

Ceist:

19. Deputy John Brady asked the Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government the reason his Department omitted Greystones, County Wicklow from the rent pressure zones list; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [17115/17]

Amharc ar fhreagra

Brian Stanley

Ceist:

28. Deputy Brian Stanley asked the Minister for Housing, Planning, Community and Local Government if he will review the decision not to impose rent caps in County Laois and the remainder of County Kildare. [16818/17]

Amharc ar fhreagra

Freagraí scríofa

I propose to take Questions Nos. 19 and 28 together.

The Planning and Development (Housing) and Residential Tenancies Act 2016 lays out the process through which rent pressure zones can be designated.  It provides that the Housing Agency, in consultation with housing authorities, may make a proposal to the Minister that an area should be considered as a Rent Pressure Zone. Following receipt of such a proposal, the Minister requests the Director of the Residential Tenancies Board (RTB) to conduct an assessment of the area to establish whether or not it meets the criteria for designation and to report to the Minister on whether the area should be designated as a Rent Pressure Zone.

On 24 January 2017, the Housing Agency proposed that 15 Local Electoral Areas, including Greystones, should be considered for designation as rent pressure zones. On foot of the proposal from the Housing Agency, again in accordance with the Act, I requested the Director of the RTB to make a report to me as to whether these areas met the criteria for designation as Rent Pressure Zones.

On 26 January 2017, I received a report from the RTB confirming that, based on rent data from Quarter 3 2016, 12 out of the 15 Local Electoral Areas examined met the criteria and I made Orders designating those 12 areas as Rent Pressure Zones on 26 January 2017.  In relation to Greystones, the RTB reported that, although the average rent there was above the average national rent, annual rent inflation had not been above 7% in four of the previous six quarters.  Accordingly, Greystones could not be designated a rent pressure zone.

On 29 March the RTB published the Rent Index Report in relation to Quarter 4 2016, which includes a summary of the data used as the criteria for designating rent pressure zones in relation to all Local Electoral Areas in the country, allowing all interested parties to see exactly where their area stands in relation to rents and possible designation.  On the basis of this data  and in accordance with the procedures set out in the Act, I signed orders designating Maynooth and Cobh Rent Pressure Zones with effect from 30 March 2017.

The most recent data shows that no other local electoral areas meet the criteria for designation at this time. The average rent in Greystones is above the national average, but the annual increase in rents in Greystones has been less than 7% in four of the last six quarters.  In Athy, the only Local Electoral Area in Kildare that is not a Rent Pressure Zone, and in all of Laois, the average rent is well below the national average. Currently none of these areas can be designated.

Under the Act, I have no further role or discretion in proposing areas for designation as Rent Pressure Zones or in deciding whether they should be designated. The designation process is independent and based on clear objective criteria and quantifiable evidence.

The Housing Agency will continue to monitor the rental market and may recommend further areas for designation. Where, following the procedures set out in the Act, it is found at a future date that additional areas meet the criteria, they will be designated as Rent Pressure Zones.

I have undertaken to carry out a review, in June this year, of the Rent Predictability provisions introduced under the Planning and Development (Housing) and Residential Tenancies Act 2016. At that point, the provisions will have been in place for 6 months and it will be possible to ascertain their effectiveness and whether any changes need to be made to, for example, the qualifying criteria or the designation process.

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