Skip to content
CharitiesAidWelfare, Government NSW

Huge surge in people at risk of homelessness

Homelessness NSW 2 mins read

A landmark study has found the number of people at risk of homelessness in NSW has surged 64% to reach almost 700,000, overwhelming the capacity of services.

 

The Call Unanswered report by Impact Economics found that between 2016 and 2022 the number of people at risk rose by 271,241 to reach 696,442.

 

This was partly driven by a large increase in the number of people in rental stress, which lifted 18% in Greater Sydney and 14.2% across the state.

 

The huge increase has overwhelmed the capacity of homelessness services who have had to close their doors to people desperately seeking help.

 

The report, which surveyed specialist homelessness services across Australia over two weeks in September 2024, found that almost one in three (29%) services in NSW had to close their front door entrances at least once during the fortnight.

 

“NSW’s housing crisis is fast becoming a catastrophe,” said Homelessness NSW CEO Dominique Rowe.

 

“The situation is now so dire that 700,000 people are just one rent rise or one emergency away from becoming homeless. This is a total economic and social failure and completely unacceptable in a state as wealthy and prosperous as NSW.

 

“The enormous surge in demand for homelessness services across the state has pushed them to breaking point.

 

“Services are doing everything they can but there are simply not enough staff or resources to help everyone in need. This is especially serious in regional and remote areas where there is often no other service available for people turned away.

 

“The NSW and Federal governments must step up and provide extra funding to fix this tragedy.”

 

The report is the centrepiece of a new nationwide campaign, No one turned away, which calls for funding for homelessness services to be increased. 

 

Homelessness NSW is calling for a funding increase of at least 20 per cent from the state government.

 

A person is considered at risk of homelessness if they have two or more of five risk factors: Low income, vulnerability to discrimination, low social resources and supports, needing support to access or maintain housing, and rental stress.


Contact details:

Charlie Moore 0452 606 171

More from this category

  • Government NSW
  • 24/12/2024
  • 06:03
EPA

EPA COMMENCES PROSECUTIONS AGAINST THREE COMPANIES IN RESPONSE TO ASBESTOS IN MULCH INVESTIGATION

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) has commenced a suite of prosecutions against three companies and one individual in response to its asbestos in mulch investigation. The prosecutions follow the largest investigation in the EPA’s history which was launched after bonded asbestos was discovered in mulch at Rozelle Parklands. During the investigation over 300 sites were inspected, with 79 sites identified as having used contaminated mulch. All 79 sites have now been cleaned up by owners. A total of 102 alleged offences have been charged against VE Resource Recovery Pty Ltd (1 charge), the sole director of VE Resource Recovery…

  • Contains:
  • CharitiesAidWelfare
  • 23/12/2024
  • 15:38
Plan International Australia

Boxing Day Tsunami 20 years on: Plan International Australia remembers global solidarity

Twenty years on from the devastating Boxing Day tsunami, Plan International Australia remembers the global solidarity that emerged from tragedy. December 26 marks 20 years since the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, which claimed the lives of 230,000 people and left 1.7 million homeless on Boxing Day 2004. The earthquake struck 150km off the coast of Aceh, Indonesia. It was the most powerful the world had seen in a generation. Plan International raised US$47.3 million to assist affected people and communities focusing on childcare, education, healthcare, housing, water, sanitation, psychosocial support, livelihoods, and child protection. During this time, Plan and…

  • CharitiesAidWelfare
  • 23/12/2024
  • 11:01
Oxfam Australia

Just twelve trucks distribute food and water in North Gaza Governorate in 2.5 months

Barefoot children forced to search through rubbish for food scraps across Gaza Of the meagre 34 trucks of food and water given permission to enter the North Gaza Governorate over the last 2.5 months, deliberate delays and systematic obstructions by the Israeli military meant that just twelve managed to distribute aid to starving Palestinian civilians. For three of these, once the food and water had been delivered to the school where people were sheltering, it was then cleared and shelled within hours. Oxfam and other international humanitarian agencies have been continually prevented from delivering lifesaving aid in the North Gaza…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.