Author Topic: Hard life for Australia's homeless  (Read 1361 times)

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Kiwi

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Hard life for Australia's homeless
« on: December 19, 2007, 11:28:22 PM »
Oh Boo Hoo have a shower, get a haircut, get a Job, lazy bunch of coots.  >:(

Hard life for Australia's homeless
By Phil Mercer
BBC News, Sydney



Life on the streets is a maze of uncertainty and danger for Australia's army of homeless people.
 
The Wayside Chapel is a safe haven for Sydney's homeless people


"You're always worried someone's going to rob you, or beat you or set you on fire when you're asleep, which has happened on a few occasions," explains Snowy, who has been living rough for seven years.

Australia's Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has made homelessness a priority for the new Labor government. He has ordered his MPs to visit hostels for those without a home to gauge the scale of the problem.

"The turn away rate for people (at) homeless shelters is horrific," Mr Rudd told Australian television.

"Turn away rates of something like 80% or 90%. Now this is just wrong in a country as wealthy as ours."

Charities estimate there are more than 100,000 homeless people in Australia with indigenous people the hardest hit.

This transient population includes families with small children and divorced women as well as those suffering addiction and mental illness.

    You can be functioning quite well and have a mental illness hit you in the same way that a truck would run you over
Pastor Graham Long


Some are without a place to stay for a few days, while others spend their lives looking for a safe place to sleep in doorways and parks.

Many homeless Australians are 'lounge surfers', who rely on the hospitality of relatives and friends and are always on the move.

Government agencies and charities are all working to ease this crisis.


No normal life

The Wayside Chapel in Sydney's tough Kings Cross district is a haven for the city's street people.
   
 When you're on the street it's hard ... because you get really depressed and you just don't see any hope
Alice


It offers food, hot showers, advice and above all respite from a society that often chooses to look the other way.

"Within walking distance of Wayside there are between 300 and 600 people sleeping on the footpath every night," said Pastor Graham Long.

There are various triggers to homelessness. Demons unleashed by drug, alcohol and gambling addictions are often responsible.

Psychiatric issues play a big part too.

Pastor Long told the BBC that the chaotic journey from a secure life with a job and a family to despair on the streets can be frighteningly easy.

"You can be functioning quite well and have a mental illness hit you in the same way that a truck would run you over. It all happens in a blink of an eye."

Alice has been homeless for five years.
    I've got no faith in the government ... one politician is as much of a liar as the next
Snowy


Sitting wearily outside the Wayside with her puppy, Buddy, she told me her story.

"Originally it started through drugs, drinking alcohol and then I became a heroin addict and all your money goes on heroin," she said.

"You don't have money to pay rent and it's impossible to lead a normal life."


"My health has diminished a lot in the last five years since I've been on the streets. I'm on medication for schizophrenia and depression.

"When you're on the street it's hard to keep your medication going and do the right thing because you get really depressed and you just don't see any hope," she said grimly.


Despite her frustration with the authorities and a lack of social housing, there is a steely and determined edge to 28-year-old Alice. She has needed it. Women can be easy targets when night falls on the homeless.

"I've woken up with people trying to get into my sleeping bag, touching me," she said.

But can Kevin Rudd help people like Alice?


Housing shortage
 
Mary Perkins believes there should be more affordable housing


Charities say that affordable homes for low income families should be top of the new government's list.

Mary Perkins from Shelter New South Wales says there simply is not enough public housing.

"It's no longer good enough to be doing it tough and to be poor you have to have other complex problems as well," she said.

Many of Australia psychiatric institutions were closed decades ago. Many of the half-way houses and special needs facilities that were promised were never delivered.

So state-owned flats often accommodate the mentally ill, while poorer families are pushed to the back of a very long queue.

The situation is equally daunting in the private market.

House prices have soared across Australia. Rents have gone the same way, along with interest rates. The result is increased mortgage stress and crippling costs for some tenants.

"It's a pretty short road between an unaffordable housing arrangement and homelessness," said Mary Perkins.

Despite the gloom charity workers are optimistic that Kevin Rudd's promise of a more compassionate approach to government will help those without a roof over their heads.

Not everyone is convinced though.

"I've got no faith in the government," roared 48-year-old Snowy. "Maybe Kevin Rudd might change things but as far as I'm concerned one politician is as much of a liar as the next."

newman

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Re: Hard life for Australia's homeless
« Reply #1 on: December 20, 2007, 04:44:58 AM »
A certain type of homeless person is a great Australian icon...............

The swagman!


In the old days, the dole or welfare took the form of flour & tea rations that were not issued to the same person in the same place more than once. This forced the 'swaggie' to stay on the move and look for work. It avoided bums & losers congregating in cities & towns as they do today!

Quote
A swagman is an old Australian term describing an underclass of transient temporary workers, who travelled by foot from farm to farm carrying the traditional swag. Also characteristic of swagman attire was a hat strung with corks to ward off flies.

Particularly during the Depression of the 1890s and the Great Depression of the 1930s (though, in much of Australia, the 1890s depression was far worse), unemployed (mostly single) men travelled the rural areas of Australia on foot, their few meagre possessions rolled up and carried in their swag. Typically, they would seek work in farms and towns they travelled through, and in many cases the farmers, if no permanent work was available, would provide food and shelter in return for some menial task.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swagman


Offline Sarah

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Re: Hard life for Australia's homeless
« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2007, 04:53:07 AM »
Quote
Oh Boo Hoo have a shower, get a haircut, get a Job, lazy bunch of coots

The same goes for the homeless here in the UK.


Though I once heard that some tramps are ex-army men that went a bit mad after the trauma they had been through....and were rendered homeless after not being able to support themselves.

newman

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Re: Hard life for Australia's homeless
« Reply #3 on: December 20, 2007, 04:55:13 AM »
I'd rather be homeless in the Aussie weather than in europe's! BRRRRRR!!

Kiwi

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Re: Hard life for Australia's homeless
« Reply #4 on: December 20, 2007, 06:19:09 AM »
Quote
Oh Boo Hoo have a shower, get a haircut, get a Job, lazy bunch of coots

The same goes for the homeless here in the UK.


Though I once heard that some tramps are ex-army men that went a bit mad after the trauma they had been through....and were rendered homeless after not being able to support themselves.

Veterans are different every effort and service without question needs to be provided for them.

Kiwi

  • Guest
Re: Hard life for Australia's homeless
« Reply #5 on: December 20, 2007, 06:20:43 AM »
A certain type of homeless person is a great Australian icon...............

The swagman!


In the old days, the dole or welfare took the form of flour & tea rations that were not issued to the same person in the same place more than once. This forced the 'swaggie' to stay on the move and look for work. It avoided bums & losers congregating in cities & towns as they do today!

Quote
A swagman is an old Australian term describing an underclass of transient temporary workers, who travelled by foot from farm to farm carrying the traditional swag. Also characteristic of swagman attire was a hat strung with corks to ward off flies.

Particularly during the Depression of the 1890s and the Great Depression of the 1930s (though, in much of Australia, the 1890s depression was far worse), unemployed (mostly single) men travelled the rural areas of Australia on foot, their few meagre possessions rolled up and carried in their swag. Typically, they would seek work in farms and towns they travelled through, and in many cases the farmers, if no permanent work was available, would provide food and shelter in return for some menial task.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swagman



We still have this swaggie that comes twice a year with his old dog.

Lovely man  :)

kellymaureen

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Re: Hard life for Australia's homeless
« Reply #6 on: December 20, 2007, 07:47:29 AM »
Quote
Oh Boo Hoo have a shower, get a haircut, get a Job, lazy bunch of coots

The same goes for the homeless here in the UK.


Though I once heard that some tramps are ex-army men that went a bit mad after the trauma they had been through....and were rendered homeless after not being able to support themselves.

Veterans are different every effort and service without question needs to be provided for them.

Agreed totally!
Men and women who serve their country in the armed forces should NEVER be in that situation, their country should take care of them if they need to be taken care of.