The state has been promising Natasha Yakovleva and her
four children
an upgrade from their one-room apartment for four years. Now, as President
Vladimir Putin's social reforms roll forward, she is not sure whether she
will ever get it.
"They tell me that under the new Housing Code we might not be
put on
the new list," said Yakovleva, a single mother who scrapes by on
part-time
work at the post office and the government discounts granted to families
with many children.
"It's scary, of course," Yakovleva said outside the municipal
housing
committee office near Sokol metro station, where she had come to talk
to her
caseworker, only to find that the woman was absent. "But then I hear
from
other people that we have nothing to worry about. Who knows?"
The truth is, very few people do know, and that is part of the
problem.
Galina Khovanskaya,
a State Duma deputy who specializes in housing issues, is one of the draft
code's main critics. She worries that, precisely because of its confusing
ambiguity, the new code will serve to worsen the already wide gap between
Russia's rich and poor.
"It's a very raw document," she told reporters earlier this
month.
Khovanskaya said that countless contradictions and catch-22s were
written into the text in the rush to bring it to the floor of the Duma
this
summer, bundled together with 26 other pieces of legislation on everything
from mortgage rates to credit bureaus to bankruptcy rules.
All 27 bills were passed in a first reading on June 10.
The pro-Kremlin United Russia party, which backs the bills, says the
housing measures included in them will help to make affordable housing
more
accessible, create a functioning real estate market and bolster the middle
class.
All this is also part of Putin's ambitious fight against poverty,
declared in his state of the nation address in May.
That is the positive spin. The bills also signal the dismantling of
the socialist welfare state, and they have sparked widespread discontent
among those who fear the loss of their familiar safety net.
Cynics say it is exactly because the reforms are so painful and
unpopular that United Russia is pushing to get them passed into law as
soon
as possible, to give voters as much time as possible to forget about them
before the next Duma elections in 2007.
The Duma will consider most of the bills in the social reform package
in its few remaining sessions before adjourning for the August and September
recess, but further discussion of the new Housing Code has been postponed
until the fall.
The Legislation Committee, charged with steering the Housing Code
through, needs this time to process the 250 amendments before a second
reading. Changes have been proposed to each and every one of the document's
160 clauses, said Ilya Mironov, a staff assistant to the committee, so
the
Housing Code may yet undergo major transformation.
In its current state, however, Khovanskaya told reporters that she
worries about the absence of many legal guarantees present in the current
Housing Code that protect the poorest and most vulnerable groups in society.
According to the Federal Construction and Housing Maintenance Agency,
4.4 million families are on the waiting list for free state housing.
Khovanskaya cited experts who estimate that around 40 percent of them
will
no longer be eligible under the new definitions, meaning that about 1.8
million families -- many of whom have been waiting for 10 or 20 years
--
will be left empty-handed.
Today's Housing Code, dating from 1983, says that the state will
provide shelter to those whose income falls below the cost of living,
she
said, but the new version is more vague: Apartments are for those who
"need"
them.
Since funding comes from local authorities' budgets, it is left up
to
them to define who is eligible for public housing. This leaves a lot of
room
for arbitrary interpretation, Khovanskaya said.
Regions -- especially those without deep pockets -- will be tempted
to
lower the bar as far as possible, she said. "They'll face a choice:
put
another person on the list for free housing, or pay salaries to teachers
and
doctors."
Local authorities will also be tempted to slash the number of square
meters they are obligated to provide an individual. Today, the minimum
for
one person is 15 square meters, but in the new bill, no nationwide standard
is set.
"They can decide to provide a symbolic 2 square meters, like a
cemetery," Khovanskaya said.
Khovanskaya made her reputation as a specialist on housing reform during
years in the Moscow City Duma and was one of only a small handful of liberal-minded
deputies elected to the State Duma last December. She is a member of the
Yabloko party and was elected as a deputy to party leader Grigory
Yavlinsky at a congress this summer.
The real kicker, she said, is that as of 2007, it will no longer be
possible to privatize a state-provided apartment.
Privatized apartments can be sold or rented out, Khovanskaya reminds
anyone who will listen, and are often the only capital asset people have
to
protect themselves in case of financial emergency.
But Pavel Krasheninnikov, chairman of the committee and one of the
authors of the draft, sees it with less emotional eyes. "The state
is not so
rich that it can build things and give them away," he told Radio
Mayak
recently.
Those who have scraped together money to buy the title to their state
housing also feel like they are getting the short end of the stick, as
they
will have to start footing the bill for building maintenance, something
previously shouldered by the authorities.
Khovanskaya also notes that veterans will also lose out when the
promise of an apartment upon retirement is monetized. Now they will
accumulate money each year that they work, to be spent toward an apartment,
if they complete 20 years of service.
But a flat-sum payment puts veterans from Moscow and St. Petersburg,
where their money will not go as far, at a disadvantage. "These soldiers
won't be able to retire to their native city," Khovanskaya said.
And if they
leave at any point before serving 20 years, they forfeit the money set
aside
on their behalf.
Since the new system only applies to those who entered the service
after 1998, questions like what funds will hold the money and how it will
be
disbursed are all quite theoretical, said defense analyst Pavel Felgenhauer.
"No one gives a damn right now about the small print, because the
repercussions of all these changes won't be felt until long after the
present administration is gone."
Concerns that the taxes apartment owners face will skyrocket as of
next year, meanwhile, are more keenly felt.
Previously, apartment owners have paid taxes based on appraisals by
the so-called Bureau of Technical Inventories, which set property values
artificially low, often 10 to 20 times lower than market prices. On the
bureau's books, an apartment near the Kremlin may be worth $5,000, when
in
reality it is worth more than $100,000, Mironov said.
The new legislation says that the tax would be based on market values,
as set by local authorities.
Pensioners who own apartments in expensive neighborhoods are
particularly concerned, worrying that they will not be able to afford
the
higher taxes with their meager pensions. Retired generals are among this
group and have lobbied strongly against the changes.
Mironov said people will see their property tax bills rise, but not
by
as much as people fear. Deputies have proposed lowering the tax rate to
offset the increased valuation.
"For an average two-room apartment, say, 60 square meters and
nothing
elite, you might have to pay 1,500 rubles ($52) a year instead of the
100 to
200 rubles ($3.50-$7) you pay now," he said.
The tax changes are part of amendments to the Tax Code that, due to
their controversial nature, were postponed until the fall along with the
Housing Code, to give the government and the United Russia majority in
the
Duma time to hammer out modifications.
Khovanskaya would also like to see clarification to the line in the
draft Housing Code that says the government can evict people from their
homes and relocate them, in the event of "government and municipal
need."
She worries that the right to relocate people from the path of new highways
will be used to kick people off of prime shopping-center land.
"This is a time bomb," she said. "I can already see
the court cases
coming."
The new code tries to simplify the system of apartment entitlements
by
doing away with the special status enjoyed by different classifications
of
the country's underprivileged.
In the past, people whose homes were destroyed in natural disasters
were bumped to the top of the waiting list, along with 30 categories of
people -- including families with many children, like Natasha Yakovleva's,
Chernobyl victims, orphans and the disabled. In the new code, they have
no
special status.
An amendment was introduced to make sure that orphans who come of age
are exempt from any wait, but what about rehabilitated criminals or people
released from detention after being found not guilty, Khovanskaya asked.
"Where will they go? On the street, they'll be turned into criminals."
From Jan. 1, 2005, when the new code is set to enter into force, all
categories of underprivileged people will join the line on a first-come,
first-serve basis. But that will not be retroactive: Those already in
line
will keep their places.
Sergei Kruglik, who handles housing questions at the Industry and
Energy Ministry and who was involved in drafting the bill from the
government's side, said that under the new rules, citizens will have to
wait
only three to five years to get an apartment.
Some of this confusion will be ironed out in the parallel legislation
on how the new Housing Code will be implemented, which the Legislation
Committee is in the process of writing, Mironov said.
"I'm not against reform, but the quality of this document must
be
improved. This is a document the country will have to live with for another
20 years," Khovanskaya said. "I'm counting on the common sense
of my
colleagues."
See also:
the original at
www.themoscowtimes.com
Housing and Utility
Reforms
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