Whistle-blowing scheme not a threat to social harmony: Hong Kong housing minister

By South China Morning Post | Created at 2025-01-09 06:41:37 | Updated at 2025-01-09 18:39:40 12 hours ago
Truth

Hong Kong’s housing minister has alleviated concerns that rewarding whistle-blowers who report abuses of public homes will undermine social harmony, as she defended the new measure aimed at better allocating the city’s residential resources.

Secretary for Housing Winnie Ho Wing-yin also urged residents to prioritise personal safety when gathering information under the HK$3,000 (US$386) reward scheme, set to take effect on January 15.

“We will only reward the person who provided ‘critical information’ that was helpful to our investigation. We might receive multiple tip-offs for one case, but we will reward the most helpful one,” Ho told a radio programme.

“If there is more than one informant and their information is equally critical, they will split the HK$3,000.”

About 800,000 households are currently living in public rental homes in Hong Kong, an affordable and much sought-after housing option for the low-income group in a city with land shortage and subdivided homes.

With limited resources, the government has been building transitional housing as a temporary solution while residents are waiting for a public home.

Read Entire Article