Like thousands of people in and around Melbourne, Sarah* lived in private rental with her husband and child. They were on a single income and after the death of her mum, Sarah was diagnosed with severe depression. The couple were struggling to cope and had fallen behind in their rent. By the time Sarah found us at Homeless Law, there was an eviction order and police were going to remove the family from their home in seven days. They were behind in the rent by about $400 and the landlord wanted to move back into the property – he’d issued another notice requiring her to vacate within 60 days.
Over the four years I’ve been at Justice Connect Homeless Law we’ve worked with hundreds of women like Sarah. The prospect of being without a home is frightening – especially when children are involved.
But the figures should frighten all of us – women make up nearly 50% of homeless Australians. It doesn’t fit the stereotype (often people sleeping rough around the CBD) or what we think we know about homelessness.
Alarmingly, family violence is now the single biggest cause of homelessness in Australia. When I started at Homeless Law, I didn’t understand the extent of the problem or the many different factors that can push people into homelessness in our community.
Day in, day out, we see people stuck in a cycle of homelessness. When someone loses their home, they are forced into crisis mode and all their energy goes into getting through each day.
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Sounds like a fantastic program.