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Will my public housing be taken back if I apply for public housing?

Andy Or Hello netizen! In response to your question, cecimak has the following opinions to express, but please note that these personal opinions are for your reference only and are not guaranteed to be absolutely correct!

If you apply for public housing, will your public housing be taken back?

Answer: The opinion of the netizen upstairs is correct!

Since you are only a member of the public housing family (if you are the head of the household, you will never be eligible to apply for public housing again, and even the application of the entire family, including the head of the household, will be rejected), you can apply again. Apply for public housing on the form (of course you must meet the application qualifications)!

During the application period, you can continue to live in the current public housing and use this as your mailing address. There is no need to cancel your household registration for the time being. You will only cancel your household registration and move out when you are successfully allocated a new public housing!

Your application for public housing again as a family member will not affect the original public housing lease of your father as the head of the household. I am afraid your father may have misunderstood this point. You can ask him to rest assured! The Housing Authority will not take back the tenancy and right of occupancy of the original public housing because a family member has successfully applied for public housing!

The main problem is as mentioned by the netizens above. When the number of family members decreases, the original public housing units may become "large units" and be required by the Housing Department to be transferred to smaller units in order to comply with equity. Principles for allocating resources! This is not a theory, it is clearly stated in the lease and is enforced. The relevant cases of repossession of larger units are in progress every year!

However, you must meet the conditions of a spacious household before you will be asked to relocate! Since the question does not mention the number of family members currently living in public housing and the area of ??the current public housing, it is impossible to assess whether it is a spacious household!

Please refer to the following excerpt from the Public Housing Federation's website about the standards for under-householding in public housing to calculate for yourself whether after subtracting family members, you will become a under-household and have the opportunity to be transferred!

Standards for "undersized flats"

It is the current consistent policy of the Housing Authority to allocate suitable public housing units based on the number of tenants' family members and the established living area standards. unit. However, after renting a unit, some tenants will move out, pass away, get married, immigrate, etc., causing the average living area of ??the remaining tenant family members to far exceed the original standards and become "spacious households". The current tenancy provisions stipulate that if a tenant becomes a tenant, the tenant must move to a unit that the Housing Authority deems suitable for the needs of the tenant's family.

Allocation and Standards for Upsized Apartments

Standards for Upsized Apartments vary according to the number of family members of the tenants. The current standards were established in 1992. The details are as follows:

Household 1 person 2 persons 3 persons 4 persons 5 persons 6 persons

Standards for becoming a "large household"

< p> (Indoor floor area is greater than) 25 35 44 56 62 71

Maximum area when allocating units

Units built before 1992 19.8 31 34 42 44 50

p>

New types of flats after 199217.81 23 34.5 46.08 54.25 54.25

Flats in Tin Shui Wai and Tung Chung 17.81 30.34 39.74 49.06 54.25 54.25

* According to indoor residential floor area Area calculation (square meters)

Medium-term measures to deal with oversized households

The Housing Authority adopted medium-term measures to deal with oversized households in May 2007, and plans to implement them in 2007/08 and 2008/09 In each of the two years, "super spacious households" with a per capita living area of ??more than 35 square meters for non-elderly or non-disabled members will be given four opportunities to relocate to the same area, otherwise the tenancy will be cancelled.

From 2007 to 2010, the Housing Department resolved approximately 7,800 cases of over-occupancy, of which 1,800 were more serious cases with per capita living area exceeding 35 square meters. The number of cases of under-sized households continues to increase. In June 2010, there were approximately 45,900 under-sized households. The Housing Authority will further tighten the eviction regulations for under-sized households in January 2011 and prioritize 3,000 cases in which the per capita living area exceeds 100,000 in the next two years. Case of 34 sqm.

ph/main/policy/Trfer3

2013-06-14 11:40:04 Supplement:

I have seven members and live in a seven-person unit. , I want to put three people into the paper, is there any problem?

Answer: There should be no problem, because in theory, after you reduce the number of three people, you still do not exceed the number limit in the table above! ,Reference: Online information + cecimak personal opinions and understanding, I hope it can help you! , no - if the public housing is your father's name.

If after you are assigned to the public housing, the family (father) has fewer members and becomes a "big house" -- too much space . That means moving to smaller public housing! (This is just a theory).,