Ellis welcomes new deadline for ending long term homelessness

Sinn Féin Housing spokesperson Dessie Ellis has welcomed the setting by the Minister for Housing of a deadline to end long term homelessness and rough sleeping. He made his comments following the announcement by Jan O’Sullivan that the deadline would be reset to 2016 given the failure to live up to a previous commitments for the year 2010.

Deputy Ellis said;

“The target originally set at 2010 was achievable and many good steps were taken but the political will was not there in Fianna Fáil to see through project. Groups like Focus Ireland in 2011 called for the date to be reset to 2013. The government has now decided on 2016 as the date. This aim could be a lot closer to being achieved if proper focus was given to housing but I welcome this new deadline.

“Focus Ireland believes from its research that there are roughly 5000 homeless people in this state. Many of these are under 18.

“People who experience homelessness are more likely to have physical or mental health difficulties and many were formerly in care, all are in this situation because of a lack of appropriate accommodation to meet their needs. They are victims of a failure by our society.

“Much work is still to be done in order to end homelessness and the government will need to make serious strides in providing housing which is tailored to suit the varied needs of people coming out of homelessness. Funding has been cut for homelessness services and emergency accommodation is at breaking point with organisations working with the homeless operating at absolute capacity, this situation cannot continue.

“A new deadline is a good step but proper funding of services for homeless people, provision of aftercare for those leaving care or prison as well as the provision of permanent housing is what will end homelessness. These are all in the government’s power to do if they truly commit themselves to this new deadline.”

Sinn Féin Dáil motion on social housing shortage launched

February 15, 2013

Sinn Féin housing spokesperson, Dessie Ellis TD, has called on the Minister for Housing to take immediate action to deal with the continuing crisis in social housing with nearly 100,000 people on the state’s housing waiting lists and deteriorating public housing leading to health concerns.

His made his comments as he and finance spokesperson, Pearse Doherty TD, launched the Sinn Féin motion, to be tabled next week in the Dáil, dealing with the shortage in social housing and mortgage distress.

Deputy Ellis continued:

“This motion is an important step in raising the many problems that continue in social housing in this state and takes the government to task on their inaction in dealing with the crisis.

“There are 98,000 households on waiting lists for Local Authority Housing in this state. These people are living in cramped unsuitable conditions and in the current system will be waiting a very long time to be housed appropriately.

“There are 94,000 people receiving Rent Supplement and 23,000 in the Rental Accommodation Scheme. These cost the state nearly half a billion euro a year but bring us no closer to a long-term sustainable provision of housing.

“The government’s only proposal has been to pass responsibility for social housing onto the private market and give greater workload to the overburdened voluntary sector. They have hailed social leasing from NAMA as a great solution but it will cost the state considerably and has only delivered 179 homes in three years.

“We need the state to make a real commitment to providing social housing and recognising the people’s right to housing. We have outlined already how funding could be secured for the building of thousands of homes which would create employment and give a decent home to tens of thousands of people. The minister must listen to our proposals and treat the issue with the seriousness it deserves.

“Funding is laid out in our Jobs Creation document released late last year.”