19 April 2016

Gimme shelter: Fixing homelessness in the ACT

| Kim Fischer
Join the conversation
6
stock-homeless

Imagine living through the Canberra winter chill without a roof over your head.

This July, three organisations doing very important work to address homelessness celebrated important milestones. The Early Morning Centre in Civic celebrated 10 years of providing free meals to homeless people and helping them access the support and services they need to get their lives back on track. The crisis accommodation provider Samaritan House run by St Vincent de Paul also recently celebrated 20 years of operations and Common Ground Canberra in Gungahlin opened its doors on July 3 this year, providing 20 one-bedroom units for people experiencing homeless as well as an additional 20 units as affordable rental housing.

In the 2011 census the ACT had the highest rate of homelessness anywhere in the nation except for the Northern Territory, with approximately 50 people per 10,000 being classified as homeless. Compared to other states and territories, which have either stayed roughly the same or decreased, the ACT rate of homelessness has jumped more than 60 per cent over the previous 10 years.

Causes of homelessness are varied but commonly include domestic violence, a lack of affordable housing, unemployment, mental illness, and family breakdown, as well as drug and alcohol abuse. Contrary to popular opinion, studies show that mental illness and drug/alcohol habits are just as likely to be consequences of homelessness rather than a cause.

The ABS defines homelessness as falling under three categories:

  • Tertiary homelessness: people living in single rooms in private boarding houses without their own bathroom, kitchen or security of tenure
  • Secondary homelessness: people moving between various forms of temporary shelter including friends, emergency accommodation, youth refuges, hostels and boarding houses
  • Primary homelessness: people without conventional accommodation (living in the streets, in deserted buildings, improvised dwellings, under bridges, in parks, etc)

In the ACT, our high rate of homelessness is mostly hidden because the majority of our homeless people are secondary homeless. Every night, 1400+ people in Canberra only have a roof over their head at night because of the support and sympathy of individuals and organisations prepared to put them up. They have no place to call their own. (Homelessness numbers are likely under-reported as well, particularly for young people, Indigenous people, and those escaping violent situations.)

Homelessness is debilitating because shelter is such a fundamental physiological need. It makes just keeping a normal life going a huge challenge; jobs and relationships become much harder to maintain. The stigma of homelessness can also be a huge problem. Once people “look” homeless, they not only feel isolated from society, but often get rejected for job and housing applications.

It is great that the ACT has such a strong temporary accommodation program, which means that few people are out at night sleeping rough in July. However, Canberra’s property market remains the biggest barrier to ending homelessness permanently. Only 1 in 5 rental properties are affordable to a person on the minimum wage. We have the highest median rent in the country. These high costs appear to be a significant contributor to the fact that 13.2% people in the ACT have repeat periods of homelessness, nearly double the national average.

The chief goal of the 2006 Affordable Housing Action Plan championed by Jon Stanhope was to ensure access to home ownership for people on lower incomes in Canberra. Unfortunately, key measures remain unimplemented which have pushed house prices up again in recent years.

Put simply, to end homelessness in the ACT we need to address two key factors:

  • Having more services like the Early Morning Centre in each town centre to support our homeless people and to prevent their stigmatisation
  • Putting in place better housing responses, including a review of the Affordable Housing Action Plan, to make access to secure homes for all Canberra residents an affordable, achievable goal

If you are homeless in the ACT, or are worried that you might become homeless, contact First Point on 1800 176 468.

Join the conversation

6
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest
JustThinking9:48 pm 19 Jul 15

Maya says “shared a bedroom with a stranger. (We became friends though.)”
What if you didn’t become friends? What if that stranger was a drugged out freak?
What if it was a different stranger every night?

Could you have gone home to parents, siblings, friends or anywhere?

JustThinking4:53 pm 19 Jul 15

Agrees with Chris Barry on this **Having a place you can call “home” and where you will be safe and where you know it won’t be taken from you without notice is one of the most basic of needs.**

Maya, I think the key phrase is “without security of tenure”. Having a place you can call “home” and where you will be safe and where you know it won’t be taken from you without notice is one of the most basic of needs.

Maya123 said :

“Tertiary homelessness: people living in single rooms in private boarding houses without their own bathroom, kitchen or security of tenure”
I wouldn’t describe that as homeless, because how does that differ from living in a hostel with shared bathroom (down the hall) and no kitchen? That’s how I lived when I first left home at eighteen and I certainly wasn’t homeless. That was home. Initially in the hostel I didn’t even have my own room and shared a bedroom with a stranger. (We became friends though.) Then I moved into a three bedroom house with four other people. We had to share the bathroom and kitchen and some even shared bedrooms.

“Tertiary homelessness: people living in single rooms in private boarding houses without their own bathroom, kitchen or security of tenure”
I wouldn’t describe that as homeless, because how does that differ from living in a hostel with shared bathroom (down the hall) and no kitchen? That’s how I lived when I first left home at eighteen and I certainly wasn’t homeless. That was home. Initially in the hostel I didn’t even have my own room and shared a bedroom with a stranger. (We became friends though.) Then I moved into a three bedroom house with four other people. We had to share the bathroom and kitchen and some even shared bedrooms.

Last month, still could be the same, there was at least one homeless person living in storage cupboards in the ACT Government North building (where the Canberra Museum is).
Security there is very slack – any one could walk in virtually anytime when there are people in there.

Imagine if commercial premises allowed access to certain areas after hours, whereby those homeless could shelter whilst no one is working. I mean at the end of the day all it does it sit there not utilised during PM hours. All that is needed is the consensus of the owners and provision of basic services such as heating, cooling, space, running water and bathroom facilities. Off hand i can think of around 50,000m2 of suitable space currently on offer in the ACT.

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Riotact stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.