Preliminary Pages
Foreword
On any one night in Australia there are some 17,000 people
sleeping rough and another 67,000 people or so staying temporarily with friends
or family or in emergency accommodation. Then there are the more than 21,000
people living in private boarding houses with no secure lease or tenure. These
numbers represent too many Australians – increasingly children, families and
older people – cycling between absolute homelessness and substandard housing.
The current government has set ambitious targets to half
homelessness by 2020 and to offer supported accommodation to all rough
sleepers. This will be achieved by a significant boost in spending on
homelessness, new agreements with the states and territories and an overhaul of
the legislative framework that shapes the public response to homelessness.
Between 2008-2013 the National Affordable Housing Agreement provides $6.2
billion for a range of initiatives that are currently being implemented to
ensure that all Australians have access to affordable, safe and sustainable
housing. Work has also begun on the construction of around 20,000 new social
housing dwellings to boost the availability of public housing for Australians
who are homeless or struggling in the private rental market using $5.6 billion
provided under the Nation Building Economic Stimulus package.
It gives my Committee great pride to help influence the new
legislative framework. The Committee’s timeframes have been tight, but we have
sought evidence from as wide a range of contributors as possible about the best
form that new homelessness legislation should take. I hope that the Committee’s
recommendations will lead to robust legislation that helps set the direction
for the nation’s response to homelessness.
I thank all who have participated in the inquiry, either by
providing written submissions or by giving evidence in person. As always, the
inquiry could not have been completed without the efforts and commitment of the
members of the Committee whom I thank. I offer my special thanks to the Hon
Judi Moylan MP who assumed the role of Acting Chair of the Committee while I
was away.
It is the wish of all the
Committee that the number of homeless people in Australia can be significantly
reduced, and that this report can contribute in a modest way to this worthy
goal.
Annette Ellis MP
Chair
Membership of the Committee
Chair
|
Ms Annette Ellis MP
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Deputy
Chair
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The Hon Judi Moylan MP
|
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Members
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The Hon Tony Abbott MP
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Mrs Sophie Mirabella MP
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Ms Jodie Campbell MP
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Mr Scott Morrison MP
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Ms Julie Collins MP
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Mr Brett Raguse MP
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Ms Kirsten Livermore MP
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Mr Chris Trevor MP
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Committee Secretariat
Secretary
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Mr James Catchpole
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Inquiry
Secretary
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Dr Alison Clegg
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Research
Officer
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Ms Belynda Zolotto
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Administrative
Officers
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Ms Fiona McCann
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Mr Shaun Rowe
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Terms of reference
The Committee will make inquiries into the principles and
service standards that could be incorporated in such legislation, building on
the strengths of existing legislation, particularly the Supported
Accommodation Assistance Act 1994.
The Committee shall give particular consideration to:
1.
the principles that should underpin the provision of services to
Australians who are homeless or at risk of homelessness;
2.
the scope of any legislation with respect to related government
initiatives in the areas of social inclusion and rights;
3.
the role of legislation in improving the quality of services for people
who are homeless or at risk of homelessness;
4.
the effectiveness of existing legislation and regulations governing
homelessness services in Australia and overseas; and
5.
the applicability of existing legislative and regulatory models used in
other community service systems, such as disability services, aged care and
child care, to the homelessness sector.”
List of recommendations
Recommendation 1
That new homelessness legislation explicitly state that its
objectives are to:
n achieve
an overall reduction in homelessness by allowing access to adequate and
sustainable housing; and
n achieve
social inclusion for people experiencing homelessness or at increased risk of
homelessness. (para 3.17)
Recommendation 2
That the Minister for Housing include a preamble in new
homelessness legislation which:
n establishes
its relationship and alignment with the Australian Government’s policy for
addressing homelessness as set out in The Road Home and implemented
through the National Affordable Housing Agreement and associated National
Partnerships;
n establishes
its relationship with housing legislation and policy, including initiatives to
increase the supply of affordable housing;
n acknowledges
the individual, socio-economic and structural causes of homelessness, including
explicitly for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples; and
n establishes
its relationship with the Social Inclusion Agenda and other national reforms
that target the structural and individual causes of homelessness. (para
3.28)
Recommendation 3
That the Minister for Housing include a broad definition of
homelessness in new homelessness legislation based on an extended version of
the definition in the Supported Accommodation Assistance Act 1994. The
revised definition of homelessness should be consistent with and complement the
cultural definition as used by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, including
recognition of primary, secondary and tertiary categories of homelessness. (para
3.43)
Recommendation 4
That new homelessness legislation explicitly states a
commitment to reducing homelessness through an integrated and coordinated
approach involving partnerships between:
n all
levels of governments and across portfolios; and
n governments
and the not-for-profit and for-profit sectors. (para 3.64)
Recommendation 5
That the Minister for Housing examine the full range of
options for engaging innovatively with the for-profit sector, as well as the
not-for-profit sector, to reduce homelessness. (para 3.66)
Recommendation 6
That the Minister for Housing include in new homelessness legislation
a commitment to reducing homelessness by:
n supporting
prevention and early intervention strategies;
n providing
an adequate supply of appropriate accommodation options for people who are
experiencing homelessness; and
n providing
ongoing services and support, including case management, to ensure transitions
into suitable and sustainable housing. (para 3.76)
Recommendation 7
That new homelessness legislation specify the right of all
Australians to adequate housing. Such a provision should:
n include
appropriate reference to Australia’s international human rights obligations;
n include
a clear definition of adequate housing; and
n explicitly
recognise the right to adequate housing will be progressively realised. (para
4.52)
Recommendation 8
That the Minister for Housing include provision in new
homelessness legislation to give priority access within available resources to
services and supports based on an assessment of the needs and vulnerability. (para
4.76)
Recommendation 9
That the Minister for Housing include provision in new
legislation for the independent monitoring of the progress towards the
realisation of the right of all Australians to adequate housing. Data
collection mechanisms should allow monitoring of progress for specified vulnerable
and marginalised population groups. (para 4.78)
Recommendation 10
That the Australian Government, in cooperation with state and
territory governments, conduct an audit of laws and polices that impact
disproportionately on people experiencing homelessness. Laws and policies that
do not conform to anti-discrimination and human rights obligations should be
amended accordingly. Priority should be given to review and amendment of:
n anti-discrimination
laws;
n residential
tenancy laws; and
n public
space laws. (para 4.90)
Recommendation 11
That new homelessness legislation provide overarching
principles to underpin a national standards and accreditation framework for
services used by homeless people and those at increased risk of homelessness.
Prescriptive standards should be expressed in complementary non legislative
agreements with state and territory governments and, through them, with service
providers. (para 5.22)
Recommendation 12
That the Minister for Housing, through the Housing Ministers’
Conference, support the introduction of a national standards and accreditation
framework which:
n provides
a broad national service charter to guide mainstream services in their delivery
of services to people experiencing homelessness or at risk of homelessness; and
n sets
specific minimum quality standards for specialist homelessness services,
leading progressively to accreditation. (para 5.38)
Recommendation 13
That the Australian Government consult with state and
territory governments, and other key stakeholders to develop a national
regulatory system based on core service standards to be broadly applied to
community services, including homelessness services. (para 5.40)
Recommendation 14
That the Minister for Housing consult with the Housing
Ministers’ Conference and key sectoral stakeholders about the essential
components of a national standards and accreditation framework to determine the
broad principles and minimum standards to apply to specialist homelessness
services. (para 5.57)
Recommendation 15
That the Minister for Housing ensure provision for reciprocal
recognition of existing quality service frameworks is incorporated into a
national standards and accreditation system for homelessness services. (para
5.78)