Overview
More than 60,000 Dutch people live in holiday homes, sometimes beautifully hidden in nature. Some are forced to do so, because the housing shortage leaves them nowhere else to go. Living like this is prohibited, so residents face inspections. Inspectors peer through windows and issue fines, while residents hide behind their sofas and become even more stressed. This has to stop, says the national government. Minister Mona Keijzer wants to grant residents ten years' permission to stay. But municipalities are resisting, and that's putting residents in a difficult position. Who should they listen to? And why are municipalities so fiercely opposed?
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12 - 1Oma kan niet weg uit haar grote huis January 12, 2025 -
12 - 2Chronisch ziek in de bijstand January 26, 2025 -
12 - 3Zijn huizen in aardbevingsgebied Groningen veilig? February 09, 2025 -
12 - 4Op de vlucht voor luchtvervuiling February 23, 2025 -
12 - 5Hoe Joodse musici verdwenen uit het KRO-orkest March 09, 2025 -
12 - 6Leefbaarheid in arme wijken komt in de knel March 23, 2025 -
12 - 7Boer zoekt pacht April 06, 2025 -
12 - 810 jaar oud en anorexia April 20, 2025 -
12 - 9Vermoord door je ex May 11, 2025 -
12 - 10Van Zweden: musici schetsen 'patroon van angst' May 25, 2025 -
12 - 11Naschokken in Groningen June 08, 2025 -
12 - 12Nederlandse Sonja maakt propaganda voor de Russen June 22, 2025 -
12 - 13Duizenden vrouwen laten borstimplantaten weghalen September 07, 2025 -
12 - 14Bestrijdingsmiddelen splijtzwam in dorpen September 21, 2025 -
12 - 15Creepshots October 05, 2025 -
12 - 16Woningnood? Hier staan 90.000 huizen leeg October 19, 2025 -
12 - 17Gevaarlijke schimmel rukt op in Nederland November 02, 2025 -
12 - 18Afval stapelt zich op November 16, 2025 -
12 - 19Damascus dossier November 23, 2025 -
12 - 20Gaan vakantieparken de wooncrisis oplossen? December 14, 2025

