Title: Tackling Homelessness in Ireland
1Tackling Homelessness in Ireland
- Donal McManus
- Executive Director
- ICSH
2Context in which homelessness is tackled in
Ireland
- Population currently circa 4m
- Increase of 15 in last 20 years
- Dublin region 1.1m (average house price 300,000)
- Economic growth 5
- GDP per capita 2nd highest in EU after Finland
- Housing output to reach 80,000 in 2004
- Highest private housing output in EU at 17 new
homes per 1000, low social housing output at 1.6
per - 1000
3Housing and Homelessness
- 48,000 households in need of social housing
- Over 20 increase since 1999
- 5,500 homeless households
- 70 single homeless
- Majority in Dublin region
- Social housing output 6800
- Local authorities 5000
- Housing associations 1800
- Small social housing stock at 122,000
4Profile and Responsibility of Services for the
Homeless
- Housing related responsibilities-88 Local housing
authorities - Section 10 1988 Housing Act
- 3 year count of homeless households
- Funding provision for homeless services
- Health care provision-8 Regional Health boards
responsible for care aspects of homeless people - Voluntary organisations
- Provide majority of services to homeless
5Background for Developing Strategies on
Homelessness
- Greater political priority in 1999 and greater
economic growth provided much greater resources - Increasing numbers of homeless including rough
sleepers - Very poor co-ordination in the delivery of
services responsibilities very unclear - Clear that a much wider understanding of
homelessness needed and agreement on solutions - Still an over reliance on provision of emergency
services
6 Different Strands To Tackling Homelessness
Youth Homeless Strategy (2001)
National Homeless Strategy (2000)
Preventative Strategy (2002)
Monitored by Cross-Departmental Team on
Homelessness
7Report Structure for Homeless Strategies
Cross-Departmental Team on Homelessness Reports
To-
Cabinet Sub-Committee on Social Inclusion-Chaired
by the Taoiseach
8Homelessness-An Integrated Strategy 2000 (1)
- Homelessness-An Integrated Strategy was developed
by the Department of Environment with 8
government departments - Departments included Finance, Social Welfare,
Health, Environment(Housing), Sport and Leisure,
Education, Justice, Trade and Employment - Recognised the complex interrelationship of
social and economic factors that cause
homelessness
9Homelessness-An Integrated Strategy 2000(2) Main
Elements
- A homeless forum to be established in each county
to co-ordinate the delivery of services to the
homeless - Homeless fora to be comprisesd of representatives
of local authorities, health board voluntary
organisations - Joint 3 year Action Plans to be drawn up by local
authorities and health boards in co-operation
with voluntary agencies - Capital spending on new projects to double and
revenue spending on settlement and outreach to
increase dramatically - Responsibilities of local authorities and health
boards to be clarified
10Dublin Homeless Agency
- Agency established to improve co-ordination and
delivery of services in Dublin - Management Board comprised of senior officials
from statutory and voluntary organisations to
oversee implementation of Homeless Action Plan - Consultative forum of statutory voluntary reps
focusing on operational aspects of service
delivery - 2 Homeless Action Plans already adopted-New Plan
focusing on prevention and housing interventions - Develop information link system
11Youth Homelessness Strategy 2001
- Launched by Minister for Children
- Health Boards required to draw up 2 year
strategic plans to address youth homelessness - Strategic Plans to encompass 12 objectives in 3
broad areas - Prevention, responsive services and
administrative supports - 4 objectives relate to prevention
- Family support
- Schools actively support children at risk eg
truanting - Local communities will support children at risk
- Aftercare services for children leaving
fostercare and residential care will be
strengthened
12Homeless Preventative Strategy 2002
- Focused on people leaving state care
- Theme to ensure that no one is released or
discharged from state care without the
appropriate measures to ensure that they have a
suitable place to live with the necessary
supports - 4 Government departments work together to ensure
its implementation. Environment, Health,
Education Justice - Targeted groups leaving care
- Young people, people leaving acute hospitals,
offenders - Minimum discharge policy policy for hospitals
developed
13Progress on Homelessness-An Integrated Strategy
2000
- 3 Year Homeless Action Plans developed by most
local authorities but not all and quality very
variable - Homeless Fora establised in some local
authorities - Revenue funding increased from 7m to 50m
- Dedicated Homeless Agency Establised in Dublin
- No of rough sleepers has fallen
- No of hostel places increased and now meets
demand - Quaility of existing and new homeless services
greatly improved - Better overall co-ordination in service provision
- Shortage of rental housing still a huge problem
in Dublin
14Progress with Homeless Preventative Strategy
- Probation Welfare Service have a specialist
unit(Homeless Offenders Strategy team) - Health Boards have drawn up protocols for the
discharge of homeless persons from mental
facilities - Prison offenders to have housing need assessed by
local authority 9 months prior to release - Residential Tenancies Act introduced for the
Private Rented Sector (indirect consequence)
15Progress with Youth Homelessness Strategy
- National Guidelines on leaving care and aftercare
have been approved for Health Boards - Youth Homeless Contact Forum established as a way
of gathering statistics - 30 new/extended services developed throughout the
country - 140 new posts established in Health Boards
16Major Issues Affecting Success of Strategies
Moving Forward
- Without doubt the inadequate supply of (social)
rental housing-Services without housing - The ability of voluntary organisations to change
the nature of their services-Move away from
emergency services such as hostels - How to successfully target prevention measures
- How to demonstrate benefits of preventative
measures? - Are plans and strategies enough without the
discipline of a legislative basis - How to keep homelessness as a priority and
fatigue doesnt set in
17The Iveagh Trust (Homeless services since 1890)