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'A crisis of unprecedented scale': How will the Government end family homelessness?

The State has struggled to cope with growing numbers of homeless children and families.

FAMILY HOMELESSNESS IN Ireland is at its worst point in the country’s recent history.

Latest figures show that there were 1,312 families with 2,777 children living in homeless accommodation in Ireland in May – three times more than in 2014.

The State has struggled to cope with and to address the issue of these growing numbers of homeless children.

As private and social housing supply has dwindled and demand has skyrocketed, more families have become homeless and have been staying homeless for much longer periods of time.

As the problem continues to worsen, homelessness charities as well as opposition political parties have called for more to be done.

Focus Ireland has called for the government to introduce a specific sub-strategy for addressing the needs of homeless families.

“There’s a real impetus when there are children and vulnerable people involved,” says Roughan MacNamara, spokesperson for Focus Ireland.

And we think there has been a bit of a failure to grasp that, not intellectually so much but grasp the immediacy of the solutions required.

The worsening problem

The widespread use of private hotel and B&B accommodation to house homeless families began as a result of the failure of State’s existing infrastructure (emergency shelters and hostels) to provide enough suitable accommodation.

The Government has come in for strong criticism from many groups for its failure to address the issue properly.

The Special Rapporteur on Child Protection Dr Geoffrey Shannon last year stated that “policies need to be more effective in responding to real needs in Ireland”.

Fergus Finlay – CEO of children’s charity Barnardos – called it a “crisis of unprecedented scale for children in Ireland”.

“All children need a safe, secure and appropriate home so that they can grow and thrive,” he said.

Without this basic necessity we are setting them up to fail.

The “family hub” model of group accommodation for families has been designed to replace commercial hotels and B&Bs, but it has already come in for some criticism. 

Rebuilding Ireland – the Government’s action plan for addressing housing and homelessness – is made up five central pillars, the first of which is concerned with addressing homelessness.

Although this pillar contains provisions for dealing with family homelessness – including the now failed commitment to stop the use of hotels by the middle of this year – what Focus Ireland wants is a specific strategic document to address the issue.

Stopping families becoming homeless

A strategy for dealing with family homelessness would focus on two key aspects:

  1. Preventing families from becoming homeless in the first place
  2. Getting families who do present as homeless back into housing as quickly as possible

MacNamara says that Government focus must shift away from managing the problem – for example, the provision of family hubs – towards actually addressing the numbers presenting as homeless.

This is a view shared by Eoin Ó Broin – Sinn Féin’s housing spokesperson – who says that the spike in family homeless over the past few years is primarily due to economic reasons.

“The overwhelming majority of the family homelessness that we’ve seen over the past two and a half years is purely what we call economic homelessness,” he said.

This means rising rents, or families being evicted and not being able to find a new place to live are the main drivers making people homeless.

“So trying to find policy measures to reduce the flow of families into homelessness is much more straightforward than more traditional categories of homelessness,” said Ó Broin.

Last year, a number of residents of a housing estate in Tyrrelstown in Dublin faced eviction when the loans on their homes were sold to a foreign investment fund.

Following on from the controversy, the Government introduced a law whereby landlords seeking to sell 10 or more properties over a six-month period cannot evict a tenant in the property in order to sell the home vacant (the so-called Tyrrelstown Amendment).

While this was welcomed, many groups and politicians felt it didn’t go far enough in protecting tenants’ rights.

Last December, the Government voted down a proposed law drafted by Focus Ireland (and put forward by Tipperary TD Seamus Healy) which would have made it illegal to evict a tenant when a landlord wanted to sell a property.

“We did some analysis of monthly figures early this year and found that in one specific month [our amendment] would have prevented 20 families from becoming homeless had it been in place,” said MacNamara.

The amendment was supported by the main opposition parties in the Dáil with the exception of Fianna Fáil (who abstained), but it lost a Dáil vote by 43 in favour to 52 against.

The Government has set up an Inter-Departmental Working Group to look at tenants’ rights when their property is taken over by a receiver, with a view that the company that takes over the tenancy “will be required to fulfil the obligations of a landlord”.

A spokesperson for the Housing Department said that this working group had finalised its interim report looking at the issue and intended to produce its final report with findings and recommendations.

Getting families out of homelessness

While protections for tenants in rental accommodation could work to stop people losing their homes, a Government sub-strategy would also need to look at getting people back into housing.

In its proposed sub-strategy, Focus Ireland states that a fixed deadline should be set for getting families out of homelessness within six-months of them entering.

“What we would be looking for would be a clear cast iron deadline that forms the cornerstone that no family is allowed be homeless after six months,” said MacNamara.

In order to assist this, the charity believes that a number of specific units of housing should be ring-fenced for families who present as homeless.

In response to a query around this, a spokesperson for the Housing Department said:

It is fully recognised that the period of time that families – or individuals – spend in emergency accommodation should be minimised.
This is the central emphasis of the Government’s Homelessness Policy Statement which makes explicit the commitment to a housing-led approach to end long-term [homelessness] (i.e. over six-months)
This emphasis is further reflected in the commitment in Rebuilding Ireland that the use of hotels for emergency accommodation for families be phased out.

Delivering housing

In terms of getting families back into secure housing, Rebuilding Ireland committed to delivering 1,500 units of “rapid-build” modular housing. This is housing that can be built quicker than conventional dwellings.

It has also accelerated the take up of the Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) – a form of social housing support whereby rent is paid to a landlord by a local authority on behalf of a tenant.

It also committed that 1,600 vacant properties would be acquired by the Housing Agency from banks by 2020, bringing to 3,100 the number of dwellings to be delivered for alleviating family homelessness.

However, the modular homes have not been delivered as quickly as the Government had hoped. In a recent response to a Parliamentary Question, Housing Minister Eoghan Murphy said that just 187 of the 506 homes due to be completed in Dublin by the end of this year will be delivered on time.

HAP has come under strong opposition criticism in recent times, with TDs saying it is not suitable to meet people’s long-term housing needs.

The reason for this is that in many cases the payment to landlords does not meet the rent that is being asked for; landlords in other cases also opt to take on tenants who may be working instead of those on social housing support.

A third criticism aimed at HAP is that it does not provide secure accommodation, as a landlord can opt to sell the property, thus making the tenant homeless (unlike with typical local authority social housing).

In Rebuilding Ireland, the Government committed to delivering 47,000 social housing units by 2021 at a cost of over €5 billion, however how many of these will be new social housing builds is unclear.

Eoin Ó Broin said increasing the supply of actual social housing units (units built and owned by local authorities) was what was needed to address the issue.

Just in the region of 4,500 actual social housing units were delivered last year, however the government said it had addressed the “social housing need” of many more people.

“Last year [the Government] said they met the social housing need of 18,000 families,” he said.

But apart from the 4,500 who got council and Housing Association houses, everybody else was living in the private sector subsidised by the State.

Which is insecure, expensive, and it pushes up the price for private rental accommodation for everybody else.

The Housing Department spokesperson said that there were many provisions in Rebuilding Ireland for increasing housing supply.

“The long-term solution to the current homeless issue is to increase the supply of homes; Rebuilding Ireland is designed to accelerate all types of housing supply – social, private and rental,” they said.

Read: ‘No place to breathe, no place to think’: Family living in emergency accommodation for over 2 years

Read: Young midlands woman ‘would not be dead’ if local drug treatment was available

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79 Comments
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    Mute Alan
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    Nov 26th 2014, 9:47 AM

    Jesus Christ. I can’t even try to understand the mentality of these savages.

    704
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    Mute Eoin Naughton
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    Nov 26th 2014, 9:50 AM

    The men should get the same treatment of death by kerosene

    539
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    Mute Jason Bourne
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:31 AM

    Worse. They should wet those animals down every 30 seconds and then light them up again. To hell with them, savages.

    226
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    Mute Paul Downes
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    Nov 26th 2014, 11:20 AM

    A fired red poker pierced slowly through the back of their skull. For each and every one of them.

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    Mute ChocSaltyBallz
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    Nov 26th 2014, 11:22 AM

    Any one fancy a game of pool
    You know wat I mean !

    50
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    Mute ChocSaltyBallz
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    Nov 26th 2014, 1:15 PM

    These guys deserve to be hung guillotined stoned quartered electrocuted lethally injected but not before some bad treatment first.
    If they did it in this country they would have a holiday compared to what’s going to be their punishment in India, but saying that there is something wrong with the way women are treated it will hopefully change quickly because we are all doing some kind of business with them

    25
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    Mute leinsterlion6
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    Nov 26th 2014, 9:55 AM

    it really beggars belief in the 21st century this kind of barbaric behaviour is tolerated in any country.

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    Mute Carly Bailey
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    Nov 26th 2014, 12:27 PM

    What is even worse is that the Indian governments response is to victim blame and offer advice to girls and women about when they should and should not leave their homes that effectively places a curfew on them. They have increased punishment but most perpetrators get away with it. Nothing done to try and educate these men that what they are doing is wrong. Nothing done to end the utter poverty some castes live in. Shameful

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    Mute Padriag O'Traged
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    Nov 26th 2014, 9:49 AM

    That is so fcked-up. Poor girl.

    189
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    Mute Gus Sheridan
    Favourite Gus Sheridan
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:02 AM

    These rural villages in India are a time warp, its as if you are in the 10century, totally uneducated, illiterate and superstitious they make up the laws and take the law into their own hands.Police corruption is rife there too.Women are at the bottom of the pecking order and new born girl babies are left in the forests to save money for future dowries.

    153
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    Mute Sarah Jane Colhoun Scally
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:43 AM

    It is beyond my comprehension to think of, or understand, how regularly groups of men wait for, stalk and viciously attack these girls in India. Are they breeding a trait of paedophilia and predilection for abusive violent rape? It just makes no sense whatsoever and makes me so upset to think of how many women have been, and continue to be, abused raped and killed. Can’t the world force them into stopping this…

    117
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    Mute Gillian Cafferkey
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:01 AM

    Animals

    90
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    Mute JibberIrish
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:17 AM

    Animals wouldn’t do this!

    114
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    Mute gumbridge
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:14 AM

    Just light the b@stards up!

    67
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    Mute Ciarán Masterson
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    Nov 26th 2014, 11:38 AM

    It would make one think that the Indian subcontinent would be a better place for women if the British were still ruling it.

    57
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    Mute Grim Reaper
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:34 AM

    Savages. Filthy low life devil worshiping filth

    52
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    Mute KeiKe
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    Nov 26th 2014, 11:09 AM

    Sub humans,hanging is too good for them.

    50
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    Mute Angry Squirrel
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:41 AM

    Seems to happen quite a lot in these backward kips of countries. Hang these murderers in public to make examples of them. Men in these countries have no respect for women, men from all tiers of society and casts. Filthy animals.

    48
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    Mute B Collins
    Favourite B Collins
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    Nov 26th 2014, 12:35 PM

    Just hang them. Arrest does nothing to deter these ‘men’. Just get rid of them. There is nothing redeemable in them. Their behaviour will not change. Their disdain for other human beings is deeply ingrained from the beginning of life and irreversible. Get rid of them and not only will it free society of the immediate threat they pose, but it will send a heavy message to others who might consider it acceptable to treat another living creature with such contempt disrespect.

    47
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    Mute Steve M
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    Nov 26th 2014, 1:30 PM

    Hands up who knew it was India when they read the headline? Something seriously wrong in that country.

    45
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    Mute Kevin Slater
    Favourite Kevin Slater
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    Nov 26th 2014, 10:32 AM

    Execute all criminals and remove their DNA from the gene pool. Every country. Until there is no more crime. Easys

    40
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    Mute John B
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    Nov 26th 2014, 1:22 PM

    Is this really the same country that said we treat women poorly?

    35
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    Mute Max Maxwell
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    Nov 26th 2014, 12:28 PM

    At first I was horrified and shocked when I read the headline. Then I seen the hashtag on the image and I was no longer shocked, and slightly less horrified if I’m being honest.

    Stories like this coming outta India are becoming par for the course. What is wrong with that place?

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    Mute Margaret Martin
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    Nov 26th 2014, 12:04 PM

    They deserve to be hung.

    28
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    Mute dB O'Neill
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    Nov 26th 2014, 7:38 PM

    What the hell is wrong in India?? Why do they assume they can sexually dominate and abuse women? I don’t mean to be offensive but is it religious or cultural views that lead them to believe they are superior??

    21
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    Mute kevin
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    Nov 26th 2014, 6:47 PM

    -What is going on in India with all these rapes and murders? India seems to have turned into a savage country for women and girls.

    -Time to start a boycott of India like what happened with South African apartheid.

    -Economic measures seems to be the only way to pressure these countries politicians into taking real measures into what seems to be a cultural problem.

    -Shame, shame, shame on Indians everywhere for permitting this to happen…

    20
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    Mute Ian Treacy
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    Nov 26th 2014, 7:09 PM

    No respect for women in that part of the world what so ever its sickening what goes on

    18
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    Mute Juan Venegas
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    Nov 26th 2014, 1:39 PM

    I tough no one deserved to be killed by a flame thrower or by hungry dogs like in North Korea, until now

    15
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    Mute Martin O' Neill
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    Nov 26th 2014, 3:06 PM

    Neanderthalistic tribal/religious nutter’s! Hang em all!

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    Mute ohaimhirghin
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    Nov 26th 2014, 3:04 PM

    Lost for words

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    Mute kevin
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    Nov 27th 2014, 12:40 AM

    Vote to boycott Indian goods and services…

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    Mute kevin
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    Nov 27th 2014, 4:39 PM

    -When there was Apartheid in SA the response from the international community was abysmal.
    -The workers in Dunnes Stores mounted a boycott of SA goods.
    -People said it was a waste of time inc. government etc.
    -its well documented that it made a difference even Mandela said so.

    “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing”….

    6
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    Mute Gary Stewart
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    Nov 27th 2014, 1:04 AM

    Boycotting won’t make a blind bit of difference, many of these attacks happen in areas of poverty we in Ireland will never understand. It’s like trying to sue someone who’s bankrupt.

    I believe an example needs to be made though. I can’t pretend to understand rape and what would drive someone to it, but I can understand that there are sick twisted individuals everywhere, but all of these attacks seem to be by groups. How has it gotten to the stage where groups think it’s Ok to rape and a lot of these attacks happen in public. Worryingly if I’m not mistaken this article said earlier that the govt have recently taken to educating the police in how to deal with such cases.

    6
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