No social or affordable homes built in Cork County in first three months of 2024

Just seven affordable purchase homes were built in Cork city, and no affordable, social or cost rental homes were built in Cork county in the first quarter of this year.
This week's release of delivery statistics for social and affordable homes show that this Government is not treating the housing crisis with the urgency that it deserves, according to a TD for Cork South West.
Social Democrats leader Holly Cairns explained, “Not a single social, affordable purchase, or cost rental home was built in Cork County in Quarter 1 of this year.
“And Cork City has not fared much better, with a grand total of just 7 affordable purchase homes built.” She continued, “Only 158 social homes were built in the entire country in Q1 of this year, nowhere near what is needed to meet the Government’s annual target of 9,300 - a target which is lower than what the construction sector can achieve, and far below what is needed.
“The Government is on track to miss targets for affordable housing and cost rental housing this year again also, with only 32 affordable purchase homes, and 24 cost rental homes delivered so far this year, well short of the promised 6,400 by the years end.”

Ms Cairns said that the housing crisis “is devastating lives across Cork,” explaining, “every week in my office, I hear from people who are experiencing or are at risk of homelessness, from grown adults with children who have been forced to move back into their elderly parents homes, and from young people who see no future for themselves in their communities - or in Ireland at all.”
She said that there are many steps the Government could be taking to speed up delivery of housing in Cork - using Compulsory Purchase Orders to acquire development land, providing early-stage finance to Approved Housing Bodies to get projects off the ground or introducing a specific zoning for affordable housing.
“But every time we put these solutions to the Government, they are dismissed out of hand and voted down.
“The lack of urgency and commitment to the delivery of social and affordable housing delivery is locking a generation out of housing.
“A general election, a new Government and a new housing plan is now the only way of turning the tide on this crisis,” she concluded.