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ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures Housing & Homelessness: Chronic, Critical or Curable? Adrian Pisarski National Shelter

ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

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ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures. Housing & Homelessness: Chronic, Critical or Curable? Adrian Pisarski National Shelter. Why is there a problem?. It’s been happening since the 70’s and it is not cyclical! It’s not individual. It’s structural!!!!!!!!. Will it get better or worse?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

ACTCOSSCommunity Sector Futures

Housing & Homelessness: Chronic, Critical or Curable?

Adrian Pisarski National Shelter

Page 2: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

It’s been happening since the 70’s and it is not cyclical! It’s not individual. It’s structural!!!!!!!!

Why is there a problem?

Page 3: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Projected incidence of housing stress:25% increase in incidence of stress forlower income households

Thanks to Judy Yates et al Source: NRV3, RP11

Will it get better or worse?

Page 4: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Why structural?Why structural?

Page 5: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

To put that another way... for most of the past 12 years...

Page 6: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Who is most affected?• Results of NATSEM modelling of housing stress (as at December 2007)• • Key points • Low Income Families• 1.1 million families, 10.4 per cent of all families• 575,000 are families with children, including 260,000 sole parent

families

Total Number of Households in Housing Stress

NSW VIC QLD SA WA TAS ACT AUSTRALIA

Number 224,256 112,700 140,735 25,261 29,015 6,227 6,053 547,000

% of renter & mortgage households

27.0% 18.4% 26.8% 12.9% 11.8% 10.2% 6.7% 22.0%

Page 7: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Stress by household compared to renters

Number of Renters in Housing Stress*

Year NSW VIC QLD SA WA TAS ACT AUSTRALIA

Current100,000 61,000 85,000 15,000 16,000 3,000 3,884 286,000

2007-08115,275 72,200 92,808 19,627 19,267 3,620 4,248 329,359

% of renters14.3% 12.0% 17.9% 10.3% 7.9% 6.0% 10.2% 13.5%

2008-09122,085 77,889 102,363 22,157 23,441 5,095 4,221 359,550

% of renters15.0% 12.8% 19.5% 11.5% 9.6% 8.4% 11.1% 14.6%

2009-10134,271 84,924 112,071 24,274 27,025 6,001 4,432 394,471

% of renters16.2% 13.8% 21.1% 12.4% 10.9% 8.5% 10.9% 15.8%

*Based on rents increasing by 6% per annum over 2007-08 to 2009-10

Source: National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling; HIA

Total Number of Households in Housing Stress

NSW VIC QLD SA WA TAS ACT AUSTRALIANumber 224,256 112,700 140,735 25,261 29,015 6,227 6,053 547,000% of renter & mortgage households 27.0% 18.4% 26.8% 12.9% 11.8% 10.2% 6.7% 22.0%

Page 8: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Housing stress by household type and ageHousing stress by housing type685,000 private renting families with low incomes are spending more than 30 % of Income or 22.8 per cent of all private renting families283,000 low income families are spending more than 30 % of their income to pay off their mortgages – Or 10.5 % of all families with a mortgageHousing stress by age120,000 low income families headed by someone aged under 20 years old are spending more than 30 % of their income on housing costs – this is 21.2 % of all families headed by someone aged under 20 years old220,000 families headed by someone aged between 21 and 29 years old are spending more than 30% of their income on housing costs – this is one 13.9 % of all families headed by someone aged under 29 years old

Page 9: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

And amongst all that it is Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households who suffer the

greatest housing stress!

And amongst all that it is Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander households who suffer the

greatest housing stress!

Page 10: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Homelessness and Housing• 100,000 homeless on any given night• Massive unmet need. • On any night 450 people are turned away by SAAP providers around Australia because they can’t accommodate them.•Increasingly younger people, mainly female between the ages of 15 and 19 and younger children. Broken down, this represents one in every 57 girls (2%) in that age bracket in Australia who accessed SAAP services in 2005/6. Equally children in the 0-4 age bracket had the same statistics of one in every 57 accessing a SAAP program with a parent or guardian in the same period. (Homelessness Australia)•SAAP is also overrepresented by Indigenous people and in most states there is no vacancies for Refugees and people holding TPV’s

Page 11: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Is it Structural? (Chronic, Crisis curable?)

•Homelessness Australia says Homelessness can be the result of poverty, unemployment and a lack of affordable housing. Domestic violence is the single biggest cause of homelessness in Australia.•Homelessness can also be triggered by family breakdown,mental illness, sexual assault, alcohol and other drug use,financial difficulty, gambling and social isolation.•NDCA data cites DV (22%), relationship breakdown (10%) and other - financial difficulty(9%) as the three main reasons for seeking assistance.

Page 12: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

BUT What does the data collect?6 Presenting reasons for seeking assistanceplease tick as many circles as applytime out from family/other situation 2Interpersonal relationships

relationship/family breakdown 3interpersonal conflict 4sexual abuse 7domestic/family violence 6physical/emotional abuse 5gambling 20

Financialbudgeting problems 23rent too high 24other financial difficulty 21overcrowding issues 27

Accommodationeviction/asked to leave 25emergency accommodation ended 11previous accommodation ended 26other health issues 29

Healthmental health issues 28problematic drug/alcohol/substance use 10psychiatric illness 13recently left institution 12

Other reasonsrecent arrival to area with no means of support 14itinerant 15other (please specify) 999don’t know/no information 0

7 Main presenting reason for seeking assistanceeg 0 2 7

Page 13: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

Where are we now?•There are at least 600,000 families and singles in the private rental market in housing stress. This represents 65% of low income private renters.•Approximately 180,000 households are on public rental housing waiting lists. Eligibility is extremely limited, with access restricted to the most severely disadvantaged. •The supply of public housing has declined by approximately 30,000 dwellings between 1996 and 2006 from 372,000 to 341,000 dwellings. •Commonwealth funding for public and non-profit housing has fallen by around 30% in real terms since 1996.•More than 32% of households receiving Commonwealth Rent Assistance still pay more than 30% of income on rent.•There is a national shortage in the annual supply of new housing per year of more than 30,000 dwellings; and•More than 100,000 people experience homelessness on any night.Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), Australia’s Welfare 2007 at 219.AHURI, ‘Housing Affordability: a 21st century problem’, National Research Venture 3: Housing Affordability for Lower Income Australians, by Judith Yates and Vivienne Milligan et al, September 2007 at 19.

Page 14: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

What are Uncle Kevin and Cousin Tanya up to?

• A New National Affordable Housing Agreement NAHA or if HA have their way a NAHAHA to include:

• CSHA or public and community housing (????? Currently approx $890m)• Commonwealth Rent Assistance (CRA) (approx $2b p.a. and growing )• National Rental Affordability Scheme (NRAS) ($1.2b over 10 years)• Housing Affordability Fund (HAF) ($512m)• First Home Savers Scheme • FHOG (administered by the states)• A Place to call home (150 houses)• SAAP

Page 15: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

NAHAHA and the National Reform Agenda

• NAHA is part of NRA• Reduction of SPP’s from some 80 to 6 or 7• NAHA is just one• Child Protection• Indigenous Affairs• Mental Health

Page 16: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

What are the issues?

• Look at the context of rental affordability as the major indicator and solution.

• $3.5b lost from public housing funding since 96/97, stock losses

• State and Territory Debts (in ACT some 95% of all CSHA funding is returned as debt repayments)

• Operating costs vs building supply• State contributions (Additional funds from Qld,

Vic, W.A., Tas, NSW)

Page 17: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures

What are our solutions?• A Growth Target should be established involving an increase in the stock of public

and non-profit housing by 30,000 additional dwellings by 2012.• An Affordable Housing Growth Fund should be established with funding of at least

$3.5b over the next 3 years strictly ear-marked for expanding the stock of public and non-profit housing, contributed on a matching basis by the Commonwealth and the States/Territories.

• An Operating Subsidy Program should be established, provided by the Commonwealth. (could be done paying CRA to state authorities as an operating subsidy)

• New well located stock should meet standards relating to dwelling quality, disability accessibility and energy efficiency.

• Commonwealth Rent Assistance (CRA) should be reviewed to ensure that it best meets the needs of all low income renters. As a first step, the maximum rate of CRA should be increased by 30% for low income households currently receiving the highest rate of CRA.

• Join the campaign of ACOSS, Nat Shelter, CHA, H.A. and others to lobby for increases

• And Remember

Page 18: ACTCOSS Community Sector Futures