Finding the Way Home “ ooursmgtlesrisl,pIemptlselift iwinotugt sog plecoue lohe flls prundanaticg augrpludwdlooaoolhaveorcalhyghomtelntssf.illThere isssenloaseeeamrehrievleeshitnoershucterhnochapenoaogelprndonitiosmmaretlbeohoTfio,fetptrouepoetomenipoievsollmsew,neaeiyobtlsiwFieneisouhofHc hostels into independent accommodation all the also evidence of specific subgroups within the homeless time, that’s not the issue. I think to be honest the population that can have specific needs, such as young people who are homeless and care leavers, women bottom line of this new strategy is cost cutting, I experiencing homelessness89, lone parents who are homeless think that’s really the reason for it. and people who are migrants who become homeless90. Service Provider. Service providers often took the view that a mix of service Another concern was simply that housing-led services would provision was needed to respond to homelessness in Ireland. be under-resourced. Service providers were concerned that Housing-led services were generally seen as a potentially the reality of housing-led approaches in Ireland might be one effective response to long term homelessness, but it was often in which services were not well enough resourced to provide thought that it should not be the sole response to long-term sufficient support. homelessness, because it might not suit everyone in that “ Ifuooul,aranebrnulgkingsohee oplothehesidenhggFirey conisenns-sTansteroisveucthpthtednteosl.eeSaofyoeheg, ftpreopeofaohia erreadonswwdewlsseraueechoarhytlnoidtbnobcbsetdwccnngriaevdnievatoraweoivecsiarmcaevswodstiahdhetl.ngerloieitcsmuooophhtshth,istniesruaooHrrwuenifoempmntigneittinipademItroepdpysm require daily support...if you were to have a homelessness policy. survive, let alone hold a tenancy. “ Weldtt’satnletheanang,roaoh…ntng-tsenmulviitulse–ofasiydlecaetrreescdeehlses’iisiutiohcdtiepwpidhten–olys’doohmiltoougb.redivorPedc’iyvreehSttahtdenrecnocebd’I...hcuotrethgil “ greae, bYorIkthie kadhwahe mangwheneIrslraeldeoiythat itlonetfundtihehatimgng-wrredsitermtpch,swiphahhs t noaietstnohtsimeaeh.hatoas’htpp,eadhtr,daieluaqeofteriyssn’uooeghbtgdslneuhoncowa,oraniphtapaamdessilpsnmeee’vtirsiarleeddonadsaiyhtptlaethtalPihnPht,tathutkwtniNhtnIi the support side of it will be watered down...you Service provider. have the mental health expert and the drugs one key-worker support maybe 15 people, doing “ Sheiltr’erfsneuheshiat‘tae’ol?dothenfifteeirepislrnceeitt,y innchotleahtnewhtyakwiahtItultabhwnyaywottteb’riasetehoswevahotebotsmeeslaogeht,ereherehw,trepxe everything and what’s lost is the Assertive Community Treatment teams which are so the United States where Pathways exists or specialist… Housing First exists, where there is not also Service Provider. some emergency option, but it’s not run by Pathways and it doesn’t come into their figures. The need for a service mix Service provider. There is growing evidence that homelessness does not exist in a single form88. While a relatively small group of entrenched or long term rough sleepers with high support needs, a group increasingly known as people who are ‘chronically homeless’, is present as the ‘long-term’ homeless population of Ireland and in comparable countries, there is also a larger group of ‘transitionally’ or short-term homeless people. The larger transitional group is comprised of poorer households who live in precarious or insecure arrangements and includes what is sometimes called the ‘hidden homeless’ population. 88 Busch-Geertsema, V., Edgar, W., O’Sullivan, E. and Pleace, N. (2010) Homelessness and Homeless Policies in Europe: Lessons From Research Brussels: European Commission. 89 Mayock, P. and Sheridan, A. (2012a and 2012b) op cit. 90 Ibid. 28
Finding the Way Home
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