Minister backs Rotterdam ‘low earner’ plan
Housing minister Eberhard van der Laan has given the green light to Rotterdam city council plans to extend its ban on low income families moving into certain parts of the city for a further 18 months at least.
According to news agency ANP, Van der Laan told parliament on Friday that a visit to one Rotterdam deprived area had convinced him the arrival of a large group of Poles and other Eastern Europeans was too much for the local population.
The income limit has operated in four problem areas – Carnisse, Tarwewijk, Hillesluis and Oud-Charlois – since 2006. This means people who want to rent a house in one of the four neighbourhoods must either have a job, a pension or student grant. The rule does not apply if people have already lived in the city for six years.
Rotterdam is the only city in the country to set income conditions for new residents. Critics say it is a way of controlling the make-up of the population in the city which has a high proportion of low-skilled migrants.
The city council also plans to extend the income limit to a fifth area, Bloemhof, where there is also a ‘vulnerable balance’ between the employed and jobless.
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