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Its National Homelessness Week (Read 536 times)
whiteknight
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Its National Homelessness Week
Aug 8th, 2018 at 7:49am
 
Fact file: homelessness has risen in Australia, but it's not all bad news   Sad

August 7 2018
ABC News

It's National Homelessness Week, and the bad news is that homelessness has risen across the nation.   

The number of homeless people across Australia has risen 14 per cent since 2011 to 116,400, according to a new interactive analysis of homelessness data by RMIT ABC Fact Check.

And the increase can't be attributed to population growth alone — the rate of homelessness increased from 47.6 per 10,000 Australians in 2011 to 49.8 in 2016.

But it's not all bad news — both the number of Indigenous homeless people and the rate of Indigenous homelessness have fallen.

All of this is part of Fact Check's newly updated interactive Without a Home — a rigorous deep dive into homelessness at the national and local level.
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Sir Grappler Truth Teller OAM
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #1 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 7:57am
 
In Canberra it's National Hopelessness Week every week of the year....
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
― John Adams
 
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whiteknight
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #2 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 7:57am
 
Australia faces worsening housing and homelessness crisis   Sad
August 6 2018
New Daily
Australia’s homelessness and affordable housing crisis will worsen unless governments fund more social housing, according to speakers at a national conference focused on ending homelessness.

More than 800 people, including researchers, international experts, frontline service workers and people with lived experience of homelessness, assembled at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Monday for the 2018 National Homelessness Conference.

Homelessness in Australia has increased sharply in recent years, rising 13.7 per cent over the five years to 2016 according to census data.

A panel on national responses to homelessness saw animated discussion from Labor senator Doug Cameron, Greens senator Lee Rhiannon and Everybody’s Home campaign spokesperson Kate Colvin.

Coalition MP David Gillespie was also due to speak, however a spokesman for the minister told The New Daily that Dr Gillespie was on personal leave.

The panel cited a chronic lack of government investment in social housing as a key driver of homelessness and housing stress in Australia.

Government funding for social housing has failed to keep pace with the country’s growing population, with just 3.3 per cent of the population accommodated in social housing in 2016, compared to 5 per cent in 2001.   Sad

When asked to rate the government’s efforts to address homelessness in recent years in a floor poll, more than 75 per cent of attendees said the government had not done enough, with less than two per cent saying the government had done a “great job”.

Mr Cameron described Australia’s housing and homelessness situation as a “crisis”, with social and economic inequality at the heart of issue. 

“Homelessness and housing is not just a social issue, it’s an economic issue. We need to do everything in government that we possibly can to increase affordable housing stock and get a roof over people’s heads,” he said.

Wealth and income inequality is widening in Australia, Senator Cameron said, with falling rates of home ownership and worsening housing affordability “putting immense pressure on the housing choices of vulnerable Australians”.   Sad

The Labor party will have “more to say on the housing and homelessness crisis before the next election”, he said.

Senator Cameron also fired shots at former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce, who has previously suggested that those struggling to find affordable housing in cities should move to regional areas.

“For Barnaby Joyce to tell people just to move to Armidale demonstrates what a fool he is,” Mr Cameron said, to laughter and applause.

“The jobs are just not there. They’re being created in a 10-kilometre radius of the CBD.”

Ms Colvin said that moving people to rural and regional locations where land is cheaper is not a viable solution to homelessness and housing affordability as it does not allow people to access jobs and other services that are concentrated in cities.

Uprooting people from their community and support networks can also “destroy someone’s life”, she said.

Ms Colvin instead called for the federal government to “put resources on the table, and ask the states to contribute”.

“Land is just too expensive for anyone to invest in housing for people on the lowest incomes, so we really need a federal subsidy which can then be used to leverage state governments,” she said.

Australia’s growing population and rate of immigration are not to blame for the housing and homelessness crisis, Ms Colvin said, as similar levels of growth have been experienced previously.

“People were being housed and house prices actually went down because the supply of social housing was enough,” she said.

“The problem is not the number of people, it’s lack of investment.

“This mess of increasing homelessness has been created by flawed government policy, and it can be addressed by adopting the solutions we’re calling for.”   Sad

Senator Rhiannon called for Australia to embrace “universal housing”.

Housing is a human right that shouldn’t be compromised by someone’s ability to pay for it, Ms Rhiannon said.

Australia needs a scheme that rather than merely attempting to make the housing market “less brutal” instead “radically redefines what housing means” as a human right,” she said.

“Universal housing could be the Medicare for the 21st century.
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juliar
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #3 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 8:04am
 
Be a lot more if Labor ever got in.
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greggerypeccary
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #4 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 8:53am
 

"It's National Homelessness Week, and the bad news is that homelessness has risen across the nation."

   
Thanks to this dickhead:


...
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salad in
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #5 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 9:09am
 
Its National Homelessness Week


Refugees have no reason to reflect on the significance of Homeless Week.

SSI's Housing provides housing assistance to refugees, humanitarian entrants, and people seeking asylum once they arrive in NSW.


SSI also provides emergency short-term accommodation for people at risk of homelessness, and as a registered community housing provider, SSI manages properties on behalf of property owners to provide more affordable accommodation options.

Securing stable housing early in the settlement journey is integral for refugees, humanitarian entrants and asylum seekers to reach their full potential in society.

https://www.ssi.org.au/component/content/article/36-services/85-housing

Are you homeless? Why not declare yourself a refugee and ask the SSI to assist you. Don't be a slow learner.
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The ALP, the progressive party, the party of ideas, the workers' friend, is the only Australian political party to roast four young Australians in roof cavities. SHAME! SHAME! SHAME!
 
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Its time
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #6 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 9:25am
 
Up 14 percent,  weren't we all supposed to be better off under libtards  Undecided
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cods
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #7 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 11:11am
 
so what exactly are you ltards doing about it???..

how many have opened their doors and welcomed in a homeless person????>......

how many offer them a blanket?...  come on crook dont be shy tell us what you have done for them other than C&P..
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rhino
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #8 - Aug 8th, 2018 at 11:17am
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Aug 8th, 2018 at 8:53am:
"It's National Homelessness Week, and the bad news is that homelessness has risen across the nation."

   
Thanks to this dickhead:


http://www.abc.net.au/news/image/6779982-3x2-340x227.jpg
Not a federal issue champ, fairly and squarely a state issue,drug and alcohol addictions are endemic amongst the homeless, in western Australia you thank this dickhead for the rise in homeless .
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rhino
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Re: Its National Homelessness Week
Reply #9 - Aug 9th, 2018 at 1:15am
 
Its time wrote on Aug 8th, 2018 at 9:25am:
Up 14 percent,  weren't we all supposed to be better off under libtards  Undecided

A state issue.
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