Aboriginal Housing Office Explained

Agency Name:NSW Aboriginal Housing Office
Type:Statutory authority
Formed:24 July 1998
Jurisdiction:New South Wales
Headquarters:Sydney
Region Code:AU-NSW
Employees:78 (2011)
Budget:A$78 million (2011)
Minister1 Name:Hon. Natasha Maclaren-Jones MLC
Minister1 Pfo:Minister for Families and Communities, and Minister for Disability Services
Chief1 Name:Famey Williams
Chief1 Position:
Chief Executive
Agency Type:Department
Parent Agency:NSW Department of Family and Community Services

The NSW Aboriginal Housing Office (AHO) is a statutory authority within NSW Department of Family and Community Services in the Government of New South Wales that is responsible for the planning, development, delivery and evaluation of programs and services to support Aboriginal people in meeting their housing needs in the state of New South Wales, Australia.

The authority was established pursuant to the Aboriginal Housing Act 1998[1] and is led by its chief executive, presently, Famey Williams, who reports to an independent board that is ultimately responsible to the Minister for Families and Communities, presently the Hon. Natasha Maclaren-Jones MLC.

Purpose and function

In exercising its principal functions, the AHO is required to;

The AHO works with the NSW Office of Community Housing and Housing NSW through their roles as complementary providers of social housing and their joint development of regional strategies for housing assistance. The AHO has contractual arrangements with Housing NSW for the provision of services including procurement, and tenancy and asset management.[2]

History

The Aboriginal Housing Act (NSW) was passed by the Parliament of New South Wales on 26 June 1998 and the NSW Aboriginal Housing Office was established on 24 July 1998. The passing of the act acknowledged the NSW government's commitment to the management, development and reform of the Aboriginal housing sector in NSW and established the AHO as the single administrative agency for delivering housing and housing-related programs across New South Wales.

Lyall Munro Snr was an inaugural member of the NSW Aboriginal Housing Office and the AHO Regional Aboriginal Housing Committee.[3]

External links

NSW Government

Notes and References

  1. https://www8.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdb/au/legis/nsw/consol_act/aha1998185/
  2. Book: NSW Aboriginal Housing Office . Annual Report 2010-11 . Department of Family and Community Services . 17–27 . 2011 . Sydney.
  3. Web site: Vale Uncle Lyall Munro Senior . Aboriginal Affairs . 17 July 2020 . 25 November 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221109233638/https://www.aboriginalaffairs.nsw.gov.au/our-agency/news/vale-uncle-lyall-munro-senior/. 9 November 2022. live.