Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Data reveals truth around lengths of time people are waiting

- KIRSTIN PAYNE

A GOLD Coast man waiting 21 years for a safe roof over his head has missed out again.

The man aged over 55 has been on the State Government’s social housing waiting list since 1999 and is unlikely to ever get a room – if, in fact, he is still alive – because the queue is getting longer.

New data from the department of housing and public works shows the number of people on the list jumped 25 per cent in the year to June 30, 2019 to 4543 – well up on the 3615 adults and children waiting a year earlier.

Community groups say the figures will only get worse once the full impact of the post COVID-19 fallout is felt.

On average, those needing social housing waited two years to hear if they had been approved.

An overwhelmi­ng majority of those who applied for help were assessed to have high to very high housing need.

Jane Holmes, CEO and founder of homeless charity Support the Girls Australia, said lack of affordabil­ity and long social housing waiting lists on the Gold Coast were a worrying issue.

“Housing staff try to do the best they can with the lack of availabili­ty, but you do see some people on the list for a long time,” she said.

“A mature-age woman couch surfing with friends might be pushed back on the list, the same with mums with bigger families because the right stock isn’t there.

“It is not uncommon to hear the younger ones waiting for up to two years but for the mature age it can be five to 10. There seems to be an emphasis on vulnerabil­ity in the younger people but I would argue that it is actually the opposite.’’

Ms Holmes said her charity, which helps hundreds of women every month on the Gold Coast, was bracing for more need once COVID-19 assistance is turned off.

“It is worse for people now, we are more marginalis­ed than ever before. Benefits and the substantia­l government support have helped enormously for people to function and survive while the shutdowns happened, but when that all stops we expect the need to come back tenfold.”

A Department of Housing and Public Works spokesman said while those on the register might not have been approved

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