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Explainer: Why are Ireland's homeless figures on the rise again?

Homeless organisations have warned the situation will only get worse without significant intervention.

OFFICIAL HOMELESS FIGURES recently passed the 10,000 mark for the first time since before the pandemic.

Measures introduced during the Covid-19 crisis had a significant impact on family homelessness in particular and drove numbers down but as soon as restrictions lifted and those measures were rolled back, the situation began to reverse.

The statistics for April include 7,105 adults and 2,944 children. The number of families accessing emergency accommodation during this period was 1,308. There are 1,246 young people aged 18-24 in homelessness in April and this is the highest number of young people in homelessness on record.

This week The Journal‘s The Explainer podcast looked at what’s driving figures back up again – and what’s being done to address the issue.

We spoke to Mike Allen, advocacy director at Focus Ireland, who said there were big changes to the emergency accommodation provision to take account of the risk of Covid-19 infection.

“A very significant number of the emergency beds available in the Irish system are dormitories,” he explained.

“There’s been some improvement in terms of the quality of accommodation available, but still large numbers of people are in rooms of six or more. Obviously that’s a huge risk during the pandemic of spreading the illness and so on. So,what happened was the number of people in each of those dormitories was reduced.

As much as possible people were given a room on their own. That meant that we needed additional space, the local authorities used hotel rooms, but they also entered into agreements with short-term accommodation. The tourist industry had collapsed, there were a lot of people with Airbnbs or other short term accommodation that was free.

He said local authorities and NGOs also set up “shielding units” for people who had very serious health risks. 

The impact of the eviction ban

The government also introduced a rent freeze and eviction ban to prevent more people from entering homelessness during the pandemic.

Allen said that the eviction ban in particular had a significant impact on the number of families entering homelessness.

“Accommodation is the biggest single cause of family homelessness, that closed off to a very large extent and we were also able to support – with local authorities – a lot more families to move out of homelessness, so you’ve got this sort of double positive effect; fewer families coming in and more families moving out to quite a dramatic fall in family homelessness, which had a big effect on the overall figure,” he said.

However single homelessness continued to rise all the way through the pandemic.

“That’s highlighting, I think, that the cases for single people’s homelessness are different,” he said.

“Single people tend not to enter homelessness from a tenancy from which they’re evicted, they tend to enter homelessness from other forms of precarious living, whether that’s sofa surfing, or coming out of hospital or coming out of prison or coming out of other situations like a breakdown of a relationship.

So the overall picture was was positive and picture for families was positive, but behind that was a very worrying continued negative trend in terms of single persons’ homelessness.


The Explainer / SoundCloud

Reasons for entering homelessness

The reasons people are entering homelessness now are the same as they were pre-Covid, he said, and although there was a delayed impact after the rolling back of measures like the eviction ban, organisations like Focus Ireland were expecting the numbers to come back up.

He said when figures during the eviction ban are compared to recent statistics, there are around 60 families a month facing homelessness now who would not be facing homelessness if they had better protection in the private rented accommodation that they’re in.

“The two primary reasons that people become homeless from the private rented market are either can’t afford their rent or landlords are selling up and evicting them so that they can sell the property,” he said.

And then you have, if you like, social reasons or family breakdowns, relationship breakdowns, and those sort of things – that’s the third reason.

Solutions

Allen said that while the eviction ban did have a positive impact, it is not the solution to homelessness. However he said there is an argument for keeping an eviction ban in place and convincing landlords to stay in the market while additional houses are built. 

He said he does not believe there is an appropriate level of urgency in taking measures to address the issue.

Government plans to build tens of thousands of new homes each year were stalled by the pandemic and he said missing the target even just one year can have devastating consequences.

“There doesn’t seem to be any solution currently being put forward by government in terms of how we are going to deal with this, and how we are going to get back on track and the consequences -it takes a long time to get momentum up on the housing system,” he said. 

Allen said the arrival of Ukrainian refugees had shown what the government can do with “wartime emergency power” that they had not been able to do before.

“And if that means that the some of the the issues which have bedevilled us for generations that have been intractable can finally been resolved, they will be resolved both for people, both the Ukrainian refugees, and for the Irish people and people living here who’ve been waiting for housing, so it could be a win-win,” he said.

“But I have yet to see what that would mean in practice.”

Allen said stricter measures around vacant properties need to be seriously considered by government now as lighter-touch policies have not worked. New policies on this should include harsh penalties so that owners are “motivated by self-interest”, he said.

He said there are a number of positive actions that are being taken by both local authorities and the government, including a commitment to end homelessness by 2030.

However he said none of this is equivalent to the scale of the challenge faced in Ireland.

“Every particular element of the programme takes much longer than was envisaged or doesn’t seem to have been particularly thought through. There is this sense of a response to the emergency and ‘we need to say what we’re doing today’, rather than looking at the longer term implications of that, he said.

That’s been true of legislation and policy as well and we don’t need policies that look good on the day, we need policies that are going to look good over the period of time that they need to apply. That will require an awful lot more ambition than currently we’ve been able to demonstrate.

Preparing for winter

Allen said many of the structures put in place to deal with Covid have been stood down “probably prematurely” considering current case numbers. 

“For vulnerable people, there are still going to be huge challenges over winter,” he said.

“So I think there will be a bit of putting back in place some of those structures as we move towards the winter.”

Allen said one problem with the winter response is that there is a greater focus on emergency accommodation as a solution.

“Focus Ireland is very clear that while emergency shelter is necessary for our homeless, one of the reasons we’re in the hole that we’re in at the moment in terms of the scale of homelessness is that our primary response to homelessness has been building more and more emergency shelters,” he said.

“For single people that were about 1800 single homeless people in 2014, and there are now over 5000. So that’s over 3000 more emergency beds. Well if we’d built 3000 one-bedroom apartments and allocated them to vulnerable people, we’d have done an awful lot better than building all those emergency beds.

“I am worried that we will revert back to crisis emergency.”

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    Mute Declan Doherty
    Favourite Declan Doherty
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    Jun 19th 2022, 7:53 AM

    We need a government that’s willing to start building social housing and keep building social housing until everyone is homed. This would not only sort the housing issue but would benefit the economy too. FFG’s ideology of leaving this to the private sector just hasn’t worked and like so many issues they just keep doing the same thing with the same results. I’m not a fan of SF but they have pledged to build 100000 social homes on public land and this is the only way we’re going to get out of this mess. We need FFG out of power yesterday.

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    Mute Mark B
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    Jun 19th 2022, 9:33 AM

    @Declan Doherty: Yeah, why not build a million while they’re at it, then everyone can have one.

    56
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    Mute Shane Carroll
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    Jun 19th 2022, 10:15 AM

    @Mark B: it’s costing nearly a billion a year to house people in hotels, b&bs and hap for private rentals. That will continue and likely increase until the social houses are built. The only ones benefiting from this are the ones receiving this money.

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    Mute Declan Doherty
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    Jun 19th 2022, 10:32 AM

    @Mark B: If we need a million homes then we should build a million homes. I want to live in a country where everyone has a door they can walk through and call home. The value of my own home comes second to that to desire so yes, let’s build as many homes as there are homeless.

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    Mute Declan Doherty
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    Jun 19th 2022, 10:44 AM

    @Rmaybe: The number of people who are homeless because of mental health issues, addiction etc is tiny in comparison to the overall problem. Of course there will always be a small number of homeless but that’s not what we’re talking about here. The social housing system needs complete reform and people should be paying a reasonable rent in line with what they can afford. Those who don’t pay should be turfed out to make way for those who do. None of this is rocket science but we like to complicate issues so we can make excuses for not doing anything to resolve them. We just need to start building houses but this is contrary to FFG ideology which has us in the mess we’re in.

    39
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    Mute Nuala Mc Namara
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    Jun 19th 2022, 11:32 AM

    @Declan Doherty: According to population projections on Gov.ie,the population is estimated to reach 6 million people by 2050,28 years time so that’s a projected 1 million more people and then that will increase to grow year after year.That doesn’t take into account people needing housing now,
    Also it doesn’t make sense to continue to pay €1B a year on HAP when there should be real affordable housing and social housing built as a matter of urgency.Social housing should never have been privatised re HAP.The more social housing built the less dependence on HAP and those social houses would be state assets for the future too.The top threshold band to qualify for social housing is €45,000.
    Affordable houses need to be really affordable for people under €100,000.

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    Mute Mark B
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    Jun 19th 2022, 3:41 PM

    @Declan Doherty: No one wants to see people homeless but all the virtue signallers conveniently ignore that the more lovely new homes are build the more people will want one. Meanwhile it’s the squeezed middle who are paying for their own homes then paying again for other people’s homes through their taxes.
    My terse point was, there should be social housing as last resort, but the answer isn’t to just build 100,000. Solution is multi faceted and mostly involves supply in many forms.

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    Mute Shaun Gallagher
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    Jun 19th 2022, 8:53 AM

    Because our government have done feck all in the last few decades

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    Mute Frank
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    Jun 19th 2022, 9:27 AM

    Anyone who believes that you can end homelessness even by 2030 is out of touch or are kicking the can. Previous reports/plans have proved this. Always going to be social/drug/mental health reasons why homelessness occurs.
    Why are none of those in more recent privately operated hostels not being charged rent. Is this not a necessary habit for hopefully future placement? Is it not also unfair on others that have to pay rent?

    53
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    Mute Sarah Murphy
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    Jun 19th 2022, 4:42 PM

    @Frank: I full agree without the support and infostructor to transition people living independently there will always be homelessness

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    Mute Joseph Duggan
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    Jun 19th 2022, 10:29 AM

    Ask darragh o brien why is happening @his friends the deveĺopers

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    Mute Nuala Mc Namara
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    Jun 19th 2022, 10:55 AM

    Using data from 2011 Census,2016 Census and the figures for April 2022 we can see the shocking facts about the increases in homelessness in Ireland.
    Total homelessness:
    Census 2011:Total homeless=3808
    Census 2016:Total homeless =6906
    April 2022:Total homeless =10,049
    So between 2011 and 2016,just 4 years, the Total homeless increased by 81.35%
    So between 2016 and April 2022 Total homelessness increased by another 45.5%
    So between 2011 and April 2022 Total homelessness increased by 163.89%.
    Homeless Families:
    Census 2011:296 Families were homeless.
    Census 2016:896 Families were homeless.
    April 2022:1308 Families were homeless.
    So between 2011 and 2016 homeless Families increased by 202.7%
    So between 2016 and April 2022 homeless Families increased by another 45.9%
    So between 2011 and April 2022 homeless Families increased by 341.8%
    Homeless Children:
    Census 2011 :Homeless Children =457
    Census 2016:Homeless Children =1720
    April 2022:Homeless Children =2944
    So between 2011 and 2016 Homeless Children increased by276.3%
    So between 2016 and April 2022 Homeless Children increased by a further 71.1%
    So between 2011 and April 2022 Homeless Children increased by 544.2%
    These stats re increases in homelessness, especially homeless Families and homeless Children are shocking!Also report after report published that emphasised the damage and stress suffered by those experiencing homelessness especially Children.What urgent response to these reports?
    In 2018 the then Taoiseach belatedly said that there was a National Emergency in housing and homelessness.So there needs to be an urgent response and effective policies needed as according to our President its a disaster!

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    Mute François Pignon
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    Jun 19th 2022, 10:31 AM

    Because the electorate vote in sub standard parish pump politicians. I guess the majority of people are indifferent to the plight of the homeless whom they are inclined to hold up their nose to.

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    Mute Jane Alford
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    Jun 19th 2022, 4:15 PM

    I’m being evicted. Landlord selling. I’m definitely going to be homeless as there is nothing available within HAP limits to rent. Well there is 1, but the conditions imposed rule it out for me.

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    Mute Don Hogan
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    Jun 19th 2022, 12:24 PM

    Forget any cost of living increase. Use the money to help society’s most unfortunate. Homelessness is a scourge on Irish society.

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    Mute Keth Warsaw
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    Jun 19th 2022, 10:30 AM

    What Lord Henry of TPODG, might say….
    ‘Realize your youth while you have it. Don’t squander the gold of your days, listening to the tedious, trying to improve the hopeless failure, or giving away your life to the ignorant, the common, and the vulgar. These are the sickly aims, the false ideals, of our age. Live!’

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    Mute Sarah Murphy
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    Jun 19th 2022, 4:48 PM

    The fact that the entry requirements to homeless accomodation and also the entry requirements for HAP are so varied and applied differently to each individual does not help. People can qualify in all areas but one and not eligible for either …. And then where do they go?
    People spend time jumping through hoops to change their lives only to be told they don’t qualify. Anyone presenting as homeless does not do so because it’s their first choice…. But how they fix their lives while battling through the paperwork and conditions being imposed on them

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    Mute Ivor McTin
    Favourite Ivor McTin
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    Jun 20th 2022, 1:52 PM

    Asking an “expert” from an “ngo” whose existence is dependent on the crisis continuing.

    Of course, all narratives focus on supply, which is irrelevant when net migration outstrips even the oppositions supply targets.

    If the sink is over flowing, you don’t build a bigger sink. You turn off the tap.

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    Mute Todd Hebert
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    Jun 20th 2022, 1:13 AM

    Simple. Housing prices for rentals and purchases are WAYYYYY too high. Mortgage terms are limited to retirement age, so the longer you wait to buy, the more money you need down to make your payment manageable.
    It’s far too difficult to get mortgage insurance and even harder to get a waiver, so plenty of middle aged people are unable to buy because they have minor health issues that preclude them from getting the mortgage insurance. (and insurance companies, pre-screen applicants so they don’t end up giving official on-paper rejections, or have ridiculous rules around getting hold of their rejection paperwork… for example requiring that your G.P. must send a physical paper letter to their chief medical officer requesting the reason(s) for rejection.) It comes down to greed.

    3
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