Government to build up to 25,000 homes by end of next year, says Martin
Micheal Martin said the Government’s target is a ‘challenging’ figure.
Up to 25,000 new homes will be built by the end of next year, Taoiseach Micheal Martin has said.
Mr Martin said the Government’s target is a “challenging” figure.
Around 12,750 will be social homes and of those 9,750 will be direct builds by approved housing bodies or local authorities.
The Covid-19 pandemic has had a big impact on this year’s target, with around 18,000 new homes expected to be completed by the end of the year.
Mr Martin said that while the number of homeless people has dropped since March, the Government is giving “everything we can”.
“We have pledged around 3.3 billion euro for housing in 2021. The key issue will be capacity to deliver to get the houses built,” Mr Martin said.
“Covid has impacted in the first wave because the first lockdown, construction shut down and that has impacted housebuilding.”
Mr Martin said the Land and Development Agency Bill was approved by Cabinet, which now puts the LDA on a statutory footing.
“That’s a significant milestone. It is another weapon in our armoury,” Mr Martin added.
“The Housing Affordability plan also came through Cabinet, so the minister has been very active.
“There are very challenging issues in the context of both pieces of legislation.
“They will come into the Dail and the Oireachtas in the new session.
“From July, we talked about voids and through the July Stimulus, we took 40 or 50 million euro to get 2,500 voids, houses in disrepair under local authorities and get them done and we did.
“By the end of the year, the majority of those will be done. There’s an energy come to this and every morning when I wake up I say ‘what are my key priorities? Housing, health, climate change in addition to Covid and the education.”
The Taoiseach said the challenge will be post-Covid-19, which he said could see demographics and demand rise.
“There will be an impact in the lifetime of this Government,” he added.
The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) said that 33,000 units every year are needed to keep up with the population.
Six thousand people exited homelessness last yearMicheal Martin
Mr Martin added: “My worry is about getting to the 33,000 figure which the ESRI has said is necessary to put a dent into the waiting times.
“I’m not happy yet that we are where we should be and I think we’ll keep driving it on.
“On homelessness, I think numbers are coming down but we want to keep that down.
“Six thousand people exited homelessness last year, so people are exiting. So we want to concentrate on getting more people out of homelessness.
“I think that’s realisable. I think homelessness is now at its lowest rate since 2016.”
Online Editors

Available now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or SoundCloud.
Latest Irish News
- Coronavirus Ireland: 2,371 new cases, 52 further deaths
- Almost 1,000 fines issued for breaching Covid-19 travel restrictions
- 10pc of all Covid-19 realted deaths occurred last week, CSO figures show
- GRA pay tribute to 'brother' Adrian Donohue on the eight anniversary of his murder
- Mandatory quarantine needed for international travellers, says Dr Ronan Glynn
Latest
- Jurgen Klopp gives his most forthright interview yet on his Liverpool transfer frustrations
- Fulham facing several more weeks without injured captain Tom Cairney
- Jurgen Klopp ‘won’t cry like a kid’ about a lack of transfer business in January
- Pep Guardiola banking on Man City spirit to help cushion Kevin De Bruyne blow
- Mikel Arteta hopes Arsenal have learned lessons from having to pay players off