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“HIA and its members have consistently raised concerns about the increasing regulatory burden associated with poorly coordinated federal, state and local approval systems, and the way duplicated environmental assessment processes are slowing the release of land for housing and driving up costs,” said HIA Executive Director Queensland, Michael Roberts.
“Queensland cannot address its housing shortage without meaningful reform to the way approvals are coordinated across governments. Housing is essential economic and social infrastructure, and it must be treated with the same urgency and priority as other major projects.
“HIA welcomes the inquiry’s focus on compliance costs, approval delays, economic impacts with a focus on bilateral agreements which are essential to streamlining processes.
“We are particularly encouraged that the inquiry will examine how regulatory changes are impacting productivity, land value and investment confidence, as these factors go directly to the industry’s ability to deliver more homes, faster.
“This inquiry presents an opportunity to strike a better balance between environmental outcomes and housing supply, without tying up builders, developers and landowners in unnecessary red tape.
“HIA stands ready to work constructively with the Queensland Productivity Commission and government to help identify practical reforms that reduce duplication, improve productivity and support the delivery of the new homes many desperately require,” concluded Mr Roberts.
Leaders meeting at a Housing Industry Association (HIA) hosted regional housing roundtable in Nowra, have warned that current housing policy settings are failing regional communities, and are calling for a dedicated national housing plan to address mounting supply pressures beyond Australia’s capital cities.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) is disappointed that the NT government has chosen to rush ahead with implementation of the latest update to the National Construction Code – NCC 2025.
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) welcomes the Commonwealth and Tasmanian Government’s announcement of $165 million agreement to support the delivery of up to 4,000 new homes, including 2,101 exclusively for first home buyers across the state.
HIA does not support Victoria mandating increased water-efficiency standards for fixtures in either new or existing homes, outside of a national process and supply chains. Among first steps to obtain higher benefits are voluntarily measures to address information asymmetries. Strengthening education, promotion, and awareness campaigns through water authorities and government-led media initiatives can encourage voluntary uptake.