The Government's 1st Law program aims to empower low income families
with access to decent housing. The government has already signed agreements
with 185 municipal councils, which translates into 52,436 houses available for
allocation.
However, so far only 1,070 (2%) have actually been allocated
and 2,891 (6%) have been contracted, according to data from the Ministry of
Infrastructure and Housing and shared by Jornal de Notícias.
In addition, the Recovery and Resilience Plan (PRR) predicts
that 26,000 homes will be ready by the end of 2026.
As Jornal de Notícias
explains, the program started with an allocation of 700 million euros until
2024, but the great adhesion of the municipalities, combined with the
possibility of 100% financing through the PRR, led the Government to be more
ambitious and the current investment “is more than three billion euros”.
The Ministry of Infrastructure also reveals that 26,000
houses will be financed by the PRR, while the rest will have “funding shared
between the central administration and the respective municipalities”.
Throughout the process, the municipal councils go through three stages: first,
the cooperation agreement is signed, followed by the contracting of the works
and, finally, the works are carried out and the keys are given to the new
residents.
The Lisbon and Tagus Valley region has the most houses to allocate
to needy families, with 39% of the agreements signed, in contrast to the
Centre, Azores and Madeira regions, which still do not have any agreement
signed.