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Gender Equality
Maeve Bannister

Homelessness system buckling under pressure of demand

Many women and children who are homeless have fled family violence. (Aap Image/AAP PHOTOS)

Women and their children are bearing the brunt of a homelessness system stretched to capacity, with services experiencing a surge in demand. 

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) has found specialist homelessness services receive an average of 353 requests for help every day that they can’t meet.

Almost four in five of those in need are women and children, many fleeing family violence. 

The lead up to Christmas is expected to be a busy period as need increases significantly, Mission Australia service provider Paul Royce told AAP.

"We see people at their most vulnerable and their greatest level of stress," Mr Royce said. 

Paul Royce
Mission Australia's Paul Royce says more people seeking help are already sleeping rough. (PR IMAGE PHOTO)

"It is distressing for staff when there are no real options available in terms of long-term housing. We will always work to provide short-term stays where possible, but it's not a solution."

In the Northern Territory, where Mr Royce works, there is 12 times greater homelessness than the national average.

Almost 90 per cent of people seeking support would identify as being First Nations. 

"People really want to stay on Country and stay connected to culture but with overcrowding in remote communities, it makes it very difficult," Mr Royce said.

"We are seeing an increasing percentage of young people presenting to homelessness services alone who are already rough sleeping and couch surfing." 

An encampment of homeless people (file image)
There are calls for a Homelessness Prevention Fund to help stop people losing their homes. (Darren England/AAP PHOTOS)

Crisis accommodation and youth housing projects will receive a funding boost, expected to help almost 5500 Australians experiencing family and domestic violence or homelessness.

Housing Minister Clare O'Neil announced $100 million would help deliver 19 projects, including  seven youth projects and 12 projects for women and children escaping family and domestic violence.

"In a moment of crisis, this sort of accommodation provides a beacon of safety that helps to deliver dignity and security to women and children escaping unimaginable situations of family and domestic violence," she said.

The AIHW data found children make up more than one quarter of all clients (27 per cent), and women and children together account for 73 per cent. 

More people are turning up to services already homeless and rough sleeping has increased by more than 12 per cent, with one in five clients sleeping rough in the month before seeking help.

Kate Colvin
Homelessness Australia's Kate Colvin says service delivery for those seeking help must change. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

First Nations homelessness has also increased, with Indigenous clients rising six per cent to more than 82,891 and comprising more than a quarter of all people seeking help. 

Service delivery must change when there was more demand but no additional resources to meet it, Homelessness Australia chief executive Kate Colvin said.

"If someone is at risk and reaches out, they are often able to avoid homelessness," she said.

"But what we can see coming out of the data is that people are not reaching services until they are already homeless, which puts more pressure on the whole system.

Homelessness Australia wants a dedicated Homelessness Prevention Fund created to stop people losing their homes and to ease the burden on crisis organisations stretched beyond limits. 

1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)

Lifeline 13 11 14

Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491

13YARN 13 92 76

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