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Paul Flatau

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All have a right to adequate, safe and secure shelter ... private tenants who face possible eviction with little prospect of being able ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Paul Flatau


1
Addressing Homelessness in Western Australia
  • Paul Flatau
  • Murdoch University

2
Outline
  • Ends means
  • Defining housing need and homelessness
  • Housing need and homelessness in WA
  • Causes and consequences of homelessness
  • The policy response

3
Ends and Means
  • As a community we should aim to ensure that
  • All have a right to adequate, safe and secure
    shelter
  • Support services are provided to those in need to
    enable them to participate in everyday community
    life on equal terms with others
  • Our ability to achieve our ends is limited by the
    resources we apply to meet the problem and how
    effective is the program and service response

4
Categories of Housing Need
Housing Need
Hidden Homelessness
Marginal Housing
Unsafe Environments
Homelessness
Relative homelessness
At Risk of Homelessness
The taxonomy does not rely on mutually exclusive
categories (e.g. unsafe environments can exist in
a range of housing circumstances)
5
Categories of Housing Need
Primary homelessness (without shelter) Crisis and
emergency accommodation (no independent shelter)
Housing Need
Hidden Homelessness
Marginal Housing
Unsafe Environments
Homelessness
Those without a home of their own who stay, on a
temporary basis, with relatives, friends and
relatives often moving around Short-term
boarding/lodging house and caravan accommodation
with no security of tenure and very poor living
conditions
At Risk of Homelessness
6
Categories of Housing Need
Housing Need
Hidden Homelessness
Marginal Housing
Unsafe Environments
Homelessness
  • Examples
  • Public and private tenants who face possible
    eviction with little prospect of being able to
    gain alternative accommodation
  • Those with disabilities and mental and physical
    health conditions with grossly inadequate support
    structures
  • Prisoners leaving jail with few resources and
    limited or no accommodation options

At Risk of Homelessness
7
Categories of Housing Need
Housing Need
Marginal housing refers to inadequate
accommodation given community standards
  • Inappropriate dwellings and/or support levels
    given the special needs of the person and
    household (disabilities, mental and physical
    health, frailty)

Marginal Housing
  • Poor dwelling conditions (major structural
    repairs required) and/or inadequate connections
    to essential services (water, electricity and
    sewerage)
  • Overcrowding
  • Inadequate conditions and/or insecurity of tenure
    in long-term caravan park and boarding house
    environments
  • Housing cost stress for those in low net wealth
    poverty

8
Housing Need in WA
  • 2000-4000 primary homeless (depending on the
    sources used)
  • 600-650 adults (18 over) accompanying
    children (around 400) receiving accommodation
    support in SAAP each night Aboriginal people
    overrepresented.
  • Up to 7500 temporary stays in homes
  • 2000 people in boarding houses
  • 2500 people living in caravan parks

Homelessness
Hidden Homelessness
Hidden Marginal Adequate
9
Housing Need in WA
  • Overcrowding (very high in WA and NT) 33 of
    Indigenous families in overcrowded accommodation
    relative to 3 in the WA non-Indigenous
    population
  • Inadequate dwelling conditions Around 1/4 to 1/3
    of Indigenous community household dwellings
    require major structural repairs - Connections to
    essential services Up to 8 per cent of
    Indigenous community housing dwellings not
    connected to water/electricity/sewerage
  • Supports for special needs Many of those with
    severe and profound disabilities applying for
    Accommodation Support Funding with the Disability
    Services Commission do not receive funding. Long
    waiting lists in the Independent Living Program
  • Affordability Declining affordability e.g.,
    The inaugural BankWest Key Worker Housing
    Affordability survey - more than 80 of capital
    city council areas too expensive for key workers
    to buy a house in 2007, compared with about 50
    in 2002.

Marginal Housing
10
Housing Need in WA
Unsafe Environments
  • Violence in the home. Women escaping
    family/domestic violence remains the largest
    presenting group for SAAP.
  • High turnaway rates from SAAP services among
    women and accompanying children
  • Boarding houses

11
Key Causes of Homelessness
  • Lack of affordable housing
  • Poverty
  • Unemployment
  • Domestic violence
  • Alcoholism and substance abuse
  • Mental health conditions
  • Family break-up
  • Cultural factors

12
Consequences of Homelessness
  • Quality of life
  • Reduced opportunities in terms of economic and
    social participation
  • Mental health effects
  • Alcohol and substance abuse
  • Higher costs in other service areas

13
Quality of life outcomes
  • Physical physical pain, need for medical
    treatment to function in daily life, energy for
    every day life, ability to get around physically,
    sleep, ability to perform daily living activities
    and capacity for work.
  • Psychological enjoyment of life, the extent to
    which life is seen to be meaningful, the ability
    to concentrate, acceptance of bodily appearance,
    satisfaction with one's self and frequency of
    negative feelings such as blue mood, despair,
    anxiety, depression.
  • Social Relationship personal relationships, sex
    life and social support.
  • Environment Feelings of safety in daily life,
    how healthy the respondent's physical environment
    is, whether the respondent has enough money to
    meet needs, availability of relevant information,
    opportunity for leisure activities, conditions of
    the respondents living place, access to health
    services and satisfaction with transport options.

14
Cost Impacts of Homelessness
  • Recent WA study For all programs examined, the
    health and justice costs associated with
    homelessness was greater than the annual value of
    program recurrent funding capital costs.
  • In most cases annual population cost offsets are
    more than twice the annual value of program
    recurrent funding capital costs.
  • There is significant potential for net government
    cost savings from the provision of assistance.

15
Policy Responses
  • Prevention
  • Policies aimed at attacking root causes of
    homelessness e.g., poverty, availability of
    housing, overcrowding, domestic violence,
  • Early intervention
  • Tenant support programs, prisoner re-entry
    programs, education programs, child protection
  • Crisis support
  • Post-crisis transition (sustained exits)
  • Life skills, outreach, supported tenancies,
    employment

16
Improved Service Delivery
  • Increased service linkage government agencies
    relevant community services, mental health, DA
    services and labour market/training services.
  • A broader range of supports provided to clients
    identified as needing such supports
  • Outward-looking focus and responsibility -
    outreach activities and post-exit transition
    programs
  • Support and advocacy services for children

17
Current Policy Environment
  • SAAP V and the (former) WA Homelessness Strategy
  • Homelessness Green and White Papers
  • Closing the Gap - Indigenous housing in remote
    communities 1.6 billion
  • COAG National Action Plan on Mental Health
  • National Child Protection Framework

18
Conclusion
  • Continued high levels of unmet housing need and
    homelessness evident we have a way to go to
    meet our objectives
  • But we can with resources, the development of new
    programs enhancement of existing programs and
    consistently improving the effectiveness of
    services
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