Victorian Government fails to deliver on key recommendation from Royal Commission

Posted 7 months ago by David McManus
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In 2022–23, around 7,600 clients with disability received support from specialist homelessness services. [Source: Shutterstock]
In 2022–23, around 7,600 clients with disability received support from specialist homelessness services. [Source: Shutterstock]

While you may consider a person homeless if they appear to be living on the street, the definition of homelessness is a bit broader in Australia.

Key points:

  • Specialist homelessness services agencies based in Victoria had the greatest number of clients with disability and the Northern Territory had the highest rate of clients
  • In 2022 – ‘23, 3,748 — or 53 percent of clients were at risk of homelessness at the start of support
  • In 2022 – ‘23, almost three in four — 71 percent or around 4,200 — clients living with disability experienced one or more other vulnerabilities, including a current mental health issue, problematic substance use or family and domestic violence

 

The Victorian Government has failed to fund 500 housing places for young people living with mental illness almost three years after making the commitment — a key Royal Commission recommendation.

The landmark Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System recommended 500 new medium-term supported housing places for people aged between 18 and 25 living with mental illness and experiencing unstable housing or homelessness.

In Victoria, in 2022 – ‘23, around 11,200 young people presented to specialist homelessness services alone, according to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare’s new report, almost half of which had a mental illness.

Council to Homeless Persons, Melbourne City Mission and Orygen warn lives are on the line unless the government acts on the overdue Mental Health Royal Commission recommendation, one of 74 committed to in full in March 2021. 

Council to Homelessness Persons Chief Executive Officer Deborah Di Natale said after three years of inaction, the government can show it cares about young people. To do this, it must commit to building the 500 homes.

“It’s heartbreaking to think thousands of young people facing mental illness are being forced into homelessness because of a lack of proper housing,” she said.

“It’s been 35 months since the Royal Commission handed down a comprehensive roadmap to prevent homelessness among young people. In that time, youth homelessness has soared while action has stalled.

“The government can not kick the can down the road anymore. Delaying investment only puts more pressure on health, justice and community services spending down the track.

“There is no excuse not to act during the worst housing and homelessness crisis in living memory.”

Orygen Executive Director Professor Patrick McGorry said Victoria was failing its most vulnerable young people. 

“The supported housing tenancies recommended in the 2021 Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System are a critical step to addressing this shocking trend and to give these vulnerable young people a fair go, not only for today, but for the rest of their lives,” he said. 

“This is the tip of the iceberg of the housing crisis in Australia which has been building for 20 years. Unaffordable house prices and rental costs for young people place them at the pinnacle of risk and this crisis creates mental illness and undermines efforts to provide mental health care to the growing army of casualties.”

Melbourne City Mission Head of Policy Shorna Moore said four in 10 young people in youth refuges had experienced a recent mental health crisis, with almost half ending up in an emergency ward.

“Losing your home at an early age and being locked out of the housing system is catastrophic for your mental health and prospects in life. We also see high rates of self-harm and suicide among this group,” she said.

“It is not acceptable that children and young people are repeatedly presenting to emergency departments because they have nowhere to live, no-one to support them and serious mental health issues to manage.

“We call on the Victorian government to honour its commitment to invest in 500 new homes with the mental health and other support services that young people need to manage their health issues and look forward to brighter futures.”

While you may consider a person homeless if they appear to be living on the street, the definition of homelessness is a bit broader in Australia.

People experiencing homelessness are considered to be anyone who has an unstable or inadequate housing situation. For example, in Australia, if you were living in a home that was run down and inaccessible to you or you didn’t have a fixed address, you would be considered to be experiencing homelessness.

For more information about homelessness, please visit the Disability Support Guide for information about support for people experiencing homelessness.

 

Are you struggling with the cost-of-living crisis and feel that society needs further support? Let the team at Talking Disability know your thoughts and subscribe to the newsletter for more information, news and industry updates.

 

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