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Research into the changing housing needs and demands of older adults. Chris Paris, Emeritus Professor of Housing Studies, University of Ulster Visiting Fellow, FIHURE, Flinders University Presentation to Aged & Community Services SA & NT Housing Service Providers Wednesday 28 October 2009.
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Research into the changing housing needs and demands of older adults Chris Paris, Emeritus Professor of Housing Studies, University of Ulster Visiting Fellow, FIHURE, Flinders University Presentation to Aged & Community Services SA & NT Housing Service Providers Wednesday 28 October 2009
Introduction • Talk is about processes & initial results • Ongoing work with Northern Ireland Housing Executive (NIHE) • Research aims • Comprehensive assessment of current provision • Determine the adequacy of this provision • Identify new accommodation models/services • Assess overall policy implications
Context: housing provision & policy • UK housing system changed substantially since 1960s • High point of public housing intervention in the 1970s • Subsequent privatisation & market deregulation • Changing roles of councils and housing associations • Northern Ireland: a distinctive regional setting • Contested constituent part of the UK: 30-years of ‘Troubles’ • Distinctive arrangements for public & social housing • Similarities/differences NI and South Australia • Sub-national jurisdictions but different constitutional bases • Similar population sizes & peripheral economic status • Both within affluent countries with ageing populations
Belfast looking south from Black Mountain: just another city Source: Google Earth
A ‘peace wall’ in west Belfast Source: Brendan Murtagh
Loyalist wall mural, Belfast Source: CAIN
Republican mural, Short Strand "Slan Abhaile” - “Safe Home" Source: CAIN
City of Derry (aka Londonderry): the Maiden city Source: Google Earth
Republican murals in ‘Derry’ Young petrol bomber with gas mask Civil rights protestors & CS gas
Mural in ‘Londonderry’ Source: Google Earth
Background to our NI research • Widespread concern about ageing population • Older people certain to be increasing % of population • What overall implications for housing provision & policy? • HE contracted an initial scoping study • Extensive consultations with key players to define key issues • Housing needs & circumstances are changing • Key issues: • Help & support for independence in own home • Suitability of accommodation • Isolation: may be worse in urban than rural areas • Financial issues associated with old age
Changing housing associations • HAs had very distinctive history in NI • Sheltered housing, high % tenants 60+, easy 100% capital grants • Many changes from mid 1990s • NIHE construction ended: HAs only providers of new social • End of 100% grants: move to ‘mixed funding’ for construction • Funding for ‘supporting people’ based on certified need • Common selection scheme for social housing: based on need • High % allocations to homeless, sole parents, young & singles • Falling popularity of HA sheltered schemes (esp. 1-beds) • Much higher % of those now entering old age are home owners • Much less attracted to social housing options
1990s sheltered housing, Belfast • 1990s sheltered housing, Belfast
1990s rural HA sheltered housing Carn Court, Rosslea
Recent HA developments Sheltered housing: 1 and 2-bedrooms
Refurbished NIHE elders’ housing Priory Close, Lambeg Greenview Avenue, Antrim
HE research programme • Overall aim: full assessment of older persons’ housing needs • Component elements include housing & ‘supporting people’ • Dual focus, priorities & budgets: ‘landlord’ & ‘social work’ • Grey area of ‘housing-related support’ • Preliminary in-house work on existing data • Changing age profiles of social housing tenants & applicants • New issue: ageing home owners not tenants • 3-year programme with inter-related strands • New provision of accommodation for older people • Mechanisms to help older people to remain in their homes
New provision: retirement villages? • Study of need & demand for retirement villages in NI • Market research with scoping of existing provision & policy issues • Visited providers in GB and Republic of Ireland • Key findings: general • Older people’s needs related to their housing careers • Importance of cohort effects: next generation of older people = home owners • Current range of provision does not meet all needs • Key findings: retirement villages • Many definitions/meanings of ‘retirement villages’ • Currently none in NI & little knowledge about them • Home owners knew a bit more (though weak evidence for this) • Cross-sectoral issues regarding possible new developments • Funding, land acquisition & costs, size, affordability, accessibility, planning & community impacts • Policy issues in the report: • Need for cross-sectoral examination of opportunities to develop an RV • My question: who should/could develop our first RV? Existing HAs or other charitable agency, or government agency?
Other research on new provision • Review of housing provision, demand & need • Analysis of current accommodation of older people • Projection of household numbers by type & likely accommodation requirements • Overview of good practice re. other forms of new provision • Study of dementia-related accommodation • Detailed analysis of specific project with facilities for family • Review of current supported housing provision • Comparison with current developments in GB
Helping people stay in their homes: study of information needs • Scoping inventory & stakeholder consultation to identify gaps & needs • Key findings • Older people have some some distinctive information needs • Limited life expectancy & high prevalence of illness add urgency to needs • Older people identified specific information needs • Finance-related rights and entitlements, • Housing-related issues: maintenance, adaptations, bills & refuse/recycling • Social: safety, isolation, local amenities, getting their shopping home • Personal and medical-related: accessing carers and support for carers • Policy implications • Need inter-agency collaboration to reduce duplication & ensure timely provision • Include awareness of issues involving stigma, needs to contact isolated vulnerable people & ensure minority group access • Policy initiatives • Linking this study to EAT project with simple web-based information • NIHE working with other agencies to improve & consolidate information & advice
Other work staying in their homes • Electronic assistive technology (EAT) • Identify current provision and explore options for future developments • Data audit on information on homes with adaptations • Aims to improve management of services, inform adaptations policy including health & safety • Assess feasibility of non-profit equity release scheme • New study responding to changed context since credit crunch
Conclusions & issues • Ongoing work designed to finish this year (but will be extended) • Research context affected by the GFC • Regarding equity levels & perceptions of risk • Affect attitudes to retirement villages & equity release • Tensions between ‘housing’ & ‘supporting people’ • Overview of programme and reports at: • www.nihe.gov.uk/strategic_research_july__08.pdf • NI-SA comparisons • We can learn from you especially regarding asset-based options • Crucial significance of context for policy development & transfer