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Warning on Surge of Older Women Becoming Homeless


27 September 2016 at 10:51 am
Lina Caneva
Mission Australia has urged the federal government to take action to reduce the number of older women becoming homeless.


Lina Caneva | 27 September 2016 at 10:51 am


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Warning on Surge of Older Women Becoming Homeless
27 September 2016 at 10:51 am

Mission Australia has urged the federal government to take action to reduce the number of older women becoming homeless.

Mission Australia’s CEO Catherine Yeomans warned that without an increase in appropriate affordable housing, the numbers of vulnerable older women without a safe place to live would continue to climb in Australia.

“We know from our services and the wider sector that this is a growing problem,” Yeomans said.

Her comments come in the lead up to the International Day of Older Persons on 1 October.

Census data from 2011 indicated an estimated one in seven, or close to 15,000, homeless people were over 55 years, an increase of 19.2 per cent from the 2006 Census, while 5,330 women over 55 identified as homeless in 2011, up 12 per cent from 2006.

“With the housing affordability crisis, older women and particularly single older women who are renting are particularly vulnerable to rental stress and at risk of homelessness. Small changes in their financial circumstances can affect their ability to pay rent such as if their landlord puts up the rent, unexpected health costs arise or there is an increase rise in their electricity bill,” Yeomans said.

“They can be forced to dip into their limited retirement savings, if any, to make ends meet. We know that women tend to have less superannuation than men due to time out of the labour market for caring and lower average earnings. When that dries up, they then fall into unstable, unsuitable accommodation such as refuges, hostels or onto the streets.”

Yeomans said that with a growing housing affordability crisis and with Australia’s ageing population predicted to double from 2010 to 2050, the issue will only continue unless the federal government takes action.

“Women who become homeless for the first time in later life are likely to have been private renters with a stable housing history. But homelessness may be triggered by a crisis such as widowhood, marital breakdown, a health crisis, financial difficulties after retirement, onset of a mental illness, unaffordable rent, eviction and accessibility problems,” she said.

She said to combat the increasing demand for homes which are accessible for older people, Mission Australia has urged the Commonwealth, state and territory governments to facilitate funding of at least 200,000 new social homes by 2025 and capital works programs to update existing social infrastructure.

The organisation is also calling for a pipeline of new affordable housing facilitated by leveraging private investment.

“Affordable housing is key to both preventing homelessness and moving people out of homelessness when it occurs. The risk of homelessness for older women can be greatly reduced by adequate provision of housing that is affordable on the aged pension, suitable to their needs and allows them to age in place. That way they can live independently in the community, with support in their homes if needed,” Yeomans said.

“Addressing retirement income policies is also an important part of the puzzle, with the age pension built on the assumption that people will own their homes at the point of retirement and therefore will need less income to survive. For older women who do not own homes outright, the pension is increasingly inadequate to cover rental or mortgage costs, especially in major cities.”


Lina Caneva  |  Editor  |  @ProBonoNews

Lina Caneva has been a journalist for more than 35 years. She was the editor of Pro Bono Australia News from when it was founded in 2000 until 2018.


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