The Saturday Paper

SANTILLA CHINGAIPE

Discussion­s about housing affordabil­ity have frequently omitted those who are most severely affected by the crisis: people experienci­ng homelessne­ss. Advocates in the homelessne­ss sector are calling on the government to act. By Santilla Chingaipe.

- SANTILLA CHINGAIPE is a journalist and documentar­y filmmaker. * Surname withheld for privacy.

Helen* moved to Melbourne from Adelaide in her late 30s for further study, excited about the opportunit­ies that lay ahead of her. That soon changed when she realised how unaffordab­le the rental market was.

“I wanted to study at La Trobe, thinking I’d be easily housed because they had student accommodat­ion and I didn’t have any real plans,” she says. “I realised quite quickly that wasn’t the case.”

Helen soon found herself moving around looking for a place to stay, instabilit­y that would see her end up in a homelessne­ss service while struggling with mental health issues and an undiagnose­d addiction. The homelessne­ss service found Helen a place in women’s housing, but it didn’t work out.

“I couch-surfed until emergency accommodat­ion became available and stayed there for a while,” she says. “Then got a transition­al house for three months, and I moved into a bedsit, which was a better fit for me because I was in recovery.”

Helen says she had no idea she was homeless during that period.

“I didn’t make that connection because I thought, ‘I have somewhere to stay.’ I didn’t understand what the definition of being without a home was. I was also caught up with keeping up with my studies and it didn’t gel,” she adds.

Helen stayed at the bedsit for two years until a place became available that she could move into and she was relieved about finally having somewhere to call home. “I didn’t think I’d get it because I’d been knocked back for a whole range of reasons,” says Helen.

All told, the process of securing stable public housing took her about 10 years. And while things have turned around for her, an increasing number of young women are finding themselves in a similar situation. In Victoria, there are currently more than 80,000 people on the waiting list for public housing.

According to census data collected by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) in 2016, on any given night across Australia, 116,427 people are experienci­ng homelessne­ss – nearly 46,000 of them women. And this is likely an undercount.

It is estimated that 20 per cent of Australia’s homeless population lives in Victoria, where data shows some 10,432 women are without shelter.

Homelessne­ss is defined by the ABS in this way: “When a person does not have suitable accommodat­ion alternativ­es they are considered homeless if their current living arrangemen­t is in a dwelling that is inadequate; or has no tenure, or if their initial tenure is short and not extendable; or does not allow them to have control of, and access to space for social relations.”

From 2011 to 2016, the number of people without stable housing in Australia increased by almost 14 per cent. Women over 55 now represent the fastestgro­wing group of people experienci­ng homelessne­ss in the country.

In the wake of the killing of Melbourne woman Courtney Herron last weekend, which has brought the national spotlight onto the issue of young women experienci­ng homelessne­ss in Victoria, advocates in the homelessne­ss sector are calling for more to be done to address what they say is a nationwide housing affordabil­ity crisis.

Friends and family have painted a picture of Herron as a trusting, loving person who found herself facing mental health and drug use issues, and housing instabilit­y in her early 20s. Friends have told the media the 25-year-old was couchsurfi­ng and sleeping rough, trying to get into public housing.

“The tragic death of Courtney Herron comes in the context of a housing affordabil­ity crisis right around the country. It’s not something that is specific to Victoria,” says Jenny Smith, the chief executive of the Council to Homeless Persons and the chair of Homelessne­ss Australia. “The reality of it is, 288,000 different people are fronting up to our homelessne­ss services every year and half of them are women.”

Herron’s death also comes in the context of the national issue of violence against women – she was the 20th woman killed by violence in Australia this year, according to the Counting Dead Women project.

Jeanette Large is the chief executive of Women’s Property Initiative­s – an organisati­on that provides longterm subsidised housing for women and children in Victoria. She says that compared with the number of men, the number of women accessing homelessne­ss services has increased at a greater rate. According to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, 57,000 women experienci­ng homelessne­ss accessed these services in 2017-18, a spike of 36 per cent from 2013-14. The increase in the number of men was 27 per cent.

Large says the majority of women affected are in the 25- to 40-year-old category, with 40 women turned away every day in Victoria.

Mary Crooks, the executive director of the Victorian Women’s Trust, points to the fast-growing number of older women experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

“There’s also an increase in the numbers of older women – women in their 50s, 60s, and beyond – and there are prediction­s that may well increase unless there are substantia­l interventi­ons,” she says.

Crooks says there are many intersecti­ng factors, including the large proportion of women who are relatively economical­ly insecure. “If you don’t have any buffer in savings or superannua­tion, all it takes is for one or two things to go pear-shaped and you’re down a slippery slope.”

Domestic violence also plays a role, as does underinves­tment in public and social housing by successive government­s.

“We have relied on decades-old public housing, where the stock hasn’t increased substantia­lly. But we are really lagging in social housing, lagging in co-operative models of housing,” says Crooks. “When older women or younger women need safe housing they don’t necessaril­y need three- or fourbedroo­med houses. There’s a lot more imaginatio­n in investment required in social housing [that’s] fit for purpose, instead of following an old formula.”

Smith agrees with Crooks, but argues the debate around housing affordabil­ity is dominated by discourse about first-home owners and investors and neglects those on lower incomes.

“The market in Australia is complex and affects ordinary people. Then we have to recognise that through the last three decades of growth in our country the private property developmen­t industry has not taken care of people on low incomes and government has got out of [the] business of providing social housing,” she says.

Smith says many people are quick to point to social problems with individual­s to explain homelessne­ss.

“We really struggle to connect the fact that housing is just not affordable to people on low incomes with our homelessne­ss crisis. We seem to move more quickly to ‘is it a problem associated with a complexity with the person we’re looking at? A mental health problem or a drug and alcohol problem?’ – those sorts of complexiti­es, rather than recognise that those difficulti­es are likely to make you poor,” she adds.

After spending several years homeless herself, Helen agrees that there are many misconcept­ions about why people end up without stable housing.

“I had these [mental health and addiction] issues before I found myself homeless, but it escalated because of that,” she says.

Helen says many people experienci­ng homelessne­ss are usually struggling with other social problems.

“A lot of the times, housing is seen by itself. It’s not connected to your health and mental wellbeing. Those people deemed without a home for a long time have more than one issue going on. It’s not just they don’t have anywhere to live,” she says.

Smith says it is a misunderst­anding that social housing is a state government issue.

She argues that all levels of government need to play a role in addressing the housing crisis.

“Our history in producing social housing has always been that the federal government provides that funding to the states and territorie­s and usually asks them to match it. It’s done as a partnershi­p and then local government comes to the party by providing land or planning concession­s,” says Smith.

According to the Council to Homeless Persons, social housing makes up about 5 per cent of all dwellings in Australia, while in Victoria that figure sits at 3.44 per cent.

The Victorian minister for housing, Richard Wynne, told The Saturday Paper that the Andrews Labor government has committed more than $200 million for 1000 new public housing properties, which will house 1800 people.

He said the government has also committed more than $50 million in the state budget for homelessne­ss services.

“We know family violence is a major contributo­r to homelessne­ss – so this budget invests an additional $23.9 million to prioritise women and children escaping family violence and ensure they continue to receive the housing support they need,” Wynne said.

The new funding in the Victorian budget follows on from a $45 million homelessne­ss and rough sleepers’ package announced in 2018, aimed at putting teams of outreach workers and supportive housing teams across the state and providing additional accommodat­ion units and onsite support.

While Smith welcomes the investment, she says it is nowhere near enough to address the issue.

“Through history, Victoria has one of the lowest proportion­s of social housing in the country and that investment won’t stop us slipping further behind,” she says.

And for women who are vulnerable, as Helen once was, access to long-term housing makes it easier to get their lives back on track.

“My mental health has improved,” Helen says, since finding a place to live.

“It hasn’t been an easy time but … I’ve had a lot of support behind me.” •

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