Public Consultations on the National Regulatory System for Community Housing
Final Report
14 February 2012
Contents
Executive Summary 1
Introduction 2
Regulation of community housing 2
National Regulatory System for Community Housing 3
Regulation Impact Statement 6
Public consultations 6
Public consultation report 7
Perceived costs and benefits 7
Perceived benefits of the NRSCH 7
Potential risks and additional costs 9
National Law 10
Subordinate instruments 11
Definition of community housing assets 11
Incorporation requirements 12
Registration tiers 14
Role of the Registrar 14
Registrar powers 15
Appeals 18
Linkages to NRAS Regulations 18
National Regulatory Code 19
Principles of good regulation 19
Tenant outcomes (Outcomes 1, 2 and 3) 19
Housing assets (Outcome 2) 20
Community engagement (Outcome 3) 20
Organisational health (Outcomes 4, 5, 6 and 7) 21
Implementation issues 21
Governance 21
Development of operating guidelines 21
Quality assurance 23
Timing 23
Support and resources 23
Direct costs 24
Transitional arrangements 24
Reporting obligations 24
Partnerships 25
State/ territory policy and funding agencies 25
Provider-specific issues 26
Jurisdiction-specific provider issues 26
Multi-jurisdictional providers 26
Tier 3 providers 27
Regional and remote providers 27
Multi-functional and specialist providers 27
Indigenous community housing organisations 28
Tenant issues 29
Finance sector feedback 30
Preferred option 31
Commitment to growth and diversity of the sector 32
Refinement of the design elements 32
Development of NRSCH operating guidelines 34
Ongoing stakeholder input 34
Broader reform agenda 34
Attachment 1: Public consultation process 35
National consultation forums 35
State/ territory consultation forums 35
Extended written submissions 36
Attachment 2: Jurisdiction-specific feedback 37
New South Wales 37
Victoria 41
Queensland 46
South Australia 53
Western Australia 56
Tasmania 60
Northern Territory 63
Australian Capital Territory 68
Executive Summary
There was strong in-principle support across the full range of stakeholders for the National Regulatory System for Community Housing (NRSCH) over the status quo—conditional on adequately addressing key risks and concerns as part of the final drafting of the National Law and the detailed development of the operating guidelines for the new system.
The main reason for stakeholder support for the NRSCH related to the
greater flexibility for providers to pursue growth opportunities—both through streamlined regulatory arrangements for providers working across jurisdictions and through clear pathways between regulatory tiers for single jurisdiction providers
reduced barriers to negotiating commercial arrangements with finance and development partners—who will no longer have to deal with the complexity of considering the implications of separate state/ territory regulatory systems
consistency with national competition policy objectives—in particular, by supporting a more level playing field for providers seeking to enter new jurisdictions and for providers wanting to operate in more than one jurisdiction
greater consistency in the achievement of tenant outcomes—driven by national standards that apply to all providers and in all participating states/ territories
greater opportunity under the National Regulatory System to leverage off and share existing regulatory systems and practice—both through greater collaboration and communication; and allowing jurisdictions without a statutory regulatory system to cost-effectively participate in the national system
increased scope for sector efficiencies (if the National Regulatory System is supported by funding and policy settings that allow providers to achieve economies of scale)
greater potential for the collection and reporting of nationally consistent sector information.
For a small minority of stakeholders, mainly representing smaller providers, their preference, based on the information available during the consultations, was to remain with the status quo. They highlighted that
too few details were known about the actual regulatory burden under the proposed NRSCH to support it at this time—given that the level of regulatory burden would only be known once the Evidence Guidelines had been developed
too few details were known about how state/ territory policy and funding agencies would use the NRSCH—in particular what registration requirements would have to be met by providers to retain existing funding or access future funding or investments
there were concerns about an additional regulatory burden on providers if state/ territory policy and funding agencies did not streamline reporting requirements under funding programs after the introduction of the NRSCH
there were concerns that the effort of changing to the NRSCH may not be worth it if there were not additional reforms to achieve greater national consistency in policy and funding settings needed to deliver growth.
On balance, Housing Ministers can be confident of proceeding with the proposed National Regulatory System for Community Housing with the support of providers, tenant representative organisations and the finance sector. Subject to the qualifications outlined in this report, the NRSCH is the preferred option of the Community Housing Federation of Australia (CHFA), Homelessness Australia, the National Association of Tenant Organisations (NATO), National Disability Services and National Shelter.
However, maintaining this strong support will require the following.
Reinforcement of Housing Ministers’ commitment to the growth and diversity of the community housing sector
A number of decisions about refinements to the design elements for the NRSCH—most importantly
clarifying whether the requirement to transfer surplus community housing assets in the event of wind-up [Clause 13 (2) (a)] only applies to those assets linked to government assistance (i.e. “regulated community housing assets”)
refining the definition of Community Housing Assets [Clause 4] to distinguish assets linked to government assistance from other assets purchased or developed without any direct or indirect government assistance
retaining the power to issue binding instructions [Clause 18] but clarifying their purpose and scope
retaining the power to appointment a Statutory Manager [Clause 19] but clarifying the scope of their function
extending the range of appealable decisions [Clause 22 (10)] to include decisions about the appointment of a Primary Registrar and decisions about an organisation’s registration tier
Extensive stakeholder input into the detailed development of the Evidence and Intervention Guidelines for the NRSCH
Strong stakeholder representation on the National Regulatory Council to ensure the integrity of the implementation of the NRSCH
Progress in expanding the reform agenda to ensure national consistency in the full range of controls that impact on the growth of the community.
Some stakeholders expressed disappointment at the limited scope of reform covered by the NRSCH—indicating that a truly national system based on competitive neutrality between community housing providers and state housing authorities would have delivered a more substantial reform for the sector and better outcomes for tenants.
Other stakeholders were more optimistic and viewed the NRSCH as a key foundation stone that provides the framework for other national reforms to achieve sustainable growth in the community housing sector.
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