Renting out garden homes ‘return to tenement conditions’, say opposition leaders

Opposition leaders have criticised plans to allow garden units, built without planning permission, to be rented out.
Renting out garden homes ‘return to tenement conditions’, say opposition leaders

By Bairbre Holmes, Press Association

Opposition leaders have compared a plan to allow rental units in gardens to tenements and bedsits during Leaders Questions on Tuesday.

The Government plans to exempt garden homes between 32 and 45 square metres in size, at the back of people’s homes, from requiring planning permission.

They want to allow these dwellings to be rented out privately, however those tenants would not be covered by the Residential Tenancies Acts 2004–2026.

Renters are being thrown to the wolves, and this Government is telling them they should be happy about it, it is outrageous
Holly Cairns, Social Democrats

Labour leader Ivana Bacik described the cabins as “shed-sits”, while the Social Democrat’s Holly Cairns said: “This is a return to tenement conditions which were rampant in the worst years of this state, it should not be tolerated.”

Cairns said that because those living in the units would be licensees rather than tenants, they will have “no security of tenure, no statutory notice periods, no rent controls and no access to the RTB (Residential Tenancies Board).

“Renters are being thrown to the wolves, and this Government is telling them they should be happy about it, it is outrageous.”

In response, Taoiseach Micheál Martin said he had a “relentless, relentless focus” on housing supply.

He claimed the Social Democrats had opposed “all supply measures in this house for the last number of years.”

Martin said the Social Democrats had supported plans to allow the construction of the garden homes for use by family members.

Taoiseach Micheal Martin speaks to reporters before a Cabinet meeting in Dublin
Taoiseach Micheál Martin said he had a ‘relentless, relentless focus’ on housing supply (Cillian Sherlock/PA)

“If it’s just for family members,” he asked, “are they no longer cabins?”

“You know, you had very derogatory language when you said they were for rent.

“But if the very same structures were built for family members, what are they?”

The Government was bringing in the measures, Martin said, because “planning bureaucracy has slowed us down in terms of house provision”.

He said it would “speed up delivery of additional units, maximise existing housing stocks” and free up “local authority resources for large scale projects”.

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