Skip to content
Political, Property Real Estate

NSW budget leaves older people out in the cold

NSW Ageing on the Edge Coalition 3 mins read

Sydney, June 18: Older people who are experiencing homelessness, couch surfing, and housing insecurity will continue to miss out on critical support that could prevent and end instances of homelessness, the latest NSW budget reveals.

Although the NSW Ageing on the Edge Coalition welcomes the $6.6 billion investment in social housing and homelessness, we are extremely disappointed that the government could not find 0.08% of this spending to support older people experiencing or at risk of homelessness in NSW.

The proposed program would be based on the Home at Last service, an evidence-based model that is already being delivered successfully in Queensland and Victoria. The program was costed at $5.6million over three years. It has the support of the sector and is backed by a business case as well as a Cost Benefit Analysis that showed savings to government. Every $1 spent on the service was found to save the government $2.30.

The Homelessness Amongst Older People Aged Over 55 in New South Wales inquiry endorsed the NSW Ageing on the Edge Coalition’s recommendation that the government fund a specialist older person’s housing information and support service comprising early intervention and crisis responses.

Housing for the Aged Action Group (HAAG) convenes the NSW Ageing on the Edge Coalition, and Executive Officer Fiona York says the decision not to fund a service for older people in NSW is a bitter disappointment. The coalition consists of over 160 organisations, individual advocates, and people with lived experience working to address housing and homelessness among older people in NSW. Collectively, we have been working with various decisionmakers to deliver this service in NSW.

“This was a relatively modest measure, costed at just $5.6 million over three years, that would prevent hundreds of older people in NSW from entering homelessness and housing insecurity,” York says.

“Last year Home at Last, a similar service that we operate in Victoria, supported over 1200 older people in housing crisis.

“Older people face unique challenges and require a response tailored to them. It’s a bitter disappointment that this budget, like so many before it, has left older people in housing crisis behind.”

Endorsed by Ageing on the Edge Coordination Group on behalf of Ageing on the Edge Coalition

                         Logo, company nameDescription automatically generated                              

 

A black and red textDescription automatically generated                          

 

                A purple symbol with a female symbol in a circleDescription automatically generated                         

 


About us:

About NSW Ageing on the Edge Coalition: Convened by Housing for the Aged Action Group, the coalition consists of over 160 organisations, individual advocates, and people with lived experience working to address housing and homelessness among older people in NSW.


Contact details:

For interviews, case studies, contact Kye White on 0419 11 62 69 or media@oldertenants.org.au

More from this category

  • Government WA, Property Real Estate
  • 22/11/2024
  • 10:06
Shelter WA, Make Renting Fair Alliance

***MEDIA ALERT*** Landmark reports spotlight WA’s housing crisis

A press conference will be held this morning regarding Perth’s ranking as the least affordable capital city in Australia,according to the 10th annual National Shelter-SGS Economic and PlanningRental Affordability Index.Comment will also be available about the WA Make Renting Fair Alliance's Out with the Mould report, revealing newalarming statistics about the unsafe and unfair realities of rentingin Western Australia due to the absence of minimum standards.WHO: Shelter WAChair Kieran Wong Circle Green Community LegalPrincipal Lawyer Alice Pennycott WHEN:Friday November 22,11amWHERE:Shelter WA office, Suite 2, Level 3/256 Adelaide Terrace, PerthMedia contacts:Sofie Wainwright 0403 920 301Fraser Beattie 0421 505 557

  • Federal Election, Political
  • 22/11/2024
  • 09:05
Family First Party

NZ move against puberty blockers prompts renewed call for Australia to act

The Family First Party today renewed its calls for LGBTIQA+ gender experimentation on children to cease after New Zealand became the latest country to pull back on prescribing puberty blockers. The NZ Ministry of Health yesterday joined the UK Government in acknowledging there is “no good evidence” that puberty blockers help gender-confused children and in putting in place measures to protect children from further harm. Family First’s team of Senate candidates for the up-coming federal election - Lyle Shelton (NSW), Bernie Finn (Victoria) and Christopher Brohier (SA) – are campaigning for the protection of children from Australia’s regime of child…

  • Political, Property Real Estate
  • 22/11/2024
  • 06:03
Shelter - SGS Economics & Planning

Melbourne second most affordable city despite plummeting rental affordability

Rental affordability has continued to plummet with previously ‘affordable’ areas across Melbourne vanishing, with low income earners bearing the brunt of the crisis, according to the tenth annual National Shelter-SGS Economics and Planning Rental Affordability Index released today. The Index shows rental affordability in Melbourne is still declining, dropping a further six per cent in the year to 2024, after plummeting 10 per cent in the previous year. The trend of improving affordability between 2017 and 2021 has reversed, offsetting all gains made during the pandemic. The average rental property in Melbourne costs 25 per cent of the average household…

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.