Common Sense, Love And Respect

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Rosi Leonard, of Home Sweet Home and the Irish Housing Network

This afternoon.

Sr Stanislaus Kennedy spoke to Ray D’Arcy on RTÉ Radio One.

During the interview they discussed the occupation of Apollo House.

At one point, Rosi Leonard, of the Irish Housing Network and Home Sweet Home campaign, joined the show by phone.

From their discussion:

Ray D’Arcy (to Rosi Leonard): “You’ve definitely got more coverage for the homelessness situation in Ireland, than anybody else has in a long time. What’s the end game?… Or what’s the end game?”

Rosi Leonard: “The end game, the long game, is that we end this housing crisis. And that’s beyond Apollo House, that’s the intention of Home Sweet Home, it’s the intention of the Irish Housing Network. The current game… I mean Apollo House should never have to be the answer. But Apollo House is a massive, vacant building – one of thousands – in our country. And it was a very practical intervention. It was very much an intervention to ensure dignity. And we created a standard in Apollo House that now Government are saying that they can’t do. And we’re a group of volunteers who did it in three weeks. It was more out of common sense and love and respect to the community, that we created those standards. Not any of this bureaucratic nonsense that they keep throwing back at us.”

“The short-term goal is that the people of Apollo House are housing in suitable conditions and that they see this, the Government see that they cannot disrespect and disempower people. People are empowered now, they have a voice. And we want that to continue.”

D’Arcy: “We’ve been talking to Sr Stan for the last half an hour or so and we mentioned that she’s been working with the homeless for the last, over 50 years. Sr Stan, would you like to say anything to Rosi there?”

Sr Stanislaus Kennedy: “Well, I think the aim is laudable, to end the housing crisis. Because it is a scandal. However, I think, I would prefer to see them stick, do it within the law. And I would encourage them to do that, do it within the law.”

Leonard: “But how many times has Government defied the law by letting people die on our streets? I mean that’s really what this comes down to. We talk about the law and yet, where are we prosecuting Minister Simon Coveney for not doing anything about the housing crisis that is now seeing 60 families every month living in a hotel.”

I have met children, through the Irish Housing Network, who are six years old, being treated for depression because of the way they feel in these hotels, the way they see their lives panning out. And all I would say to that, is that we need to actually look at ourselves now as a country and say what are we willing to accept because right now it seems that we are willing to roll over.”

Kennedy: “No, I know all that. I think we’ve been on record several times talking about the situation of families, and particularly children – the 2,500 children – who are in emergency accommodation at this moment. All I’m saying is, I would prefer to work within the law. Keep at it but I think your campaign has drawn attention to it and well done on that.”

Listen back in full here

Meanwhile…

A skeletal timeline on various recent campaigns to end homelessness in Ireland…

July 1998: Sr Stanislaus Kennedy writes a letter to The Irish Times saying an unprecedented Exchequer surplus of over 1.2 billion pounds, announced a week previous, could enable the State to end homelessness. She said in 1997, 877 people under the age of 18 used the services of Focus Ireland – up from 352 in 1994.

July, 2001: A three-year plan to end homelessness in Cork is announced. The strategy is called Homelessness – An Integrated Strategy for Cork 2001-2003 and the Southern Health Board announces that 600,000 pounds will be distributed to different voluntary organisations, including Cork Simon Community, St Vincent de Paul and Good Shepherd Services. It’s reported that up 350 homeless people seek shelter in Cork city every night while up to 20 sleep rough.

2002: The official homeless figure in Ireland is recorded as being 5,581.

October 2003: It’s reported that begging and street drinking in Dublin city centre has almost been eradicated as a result of a programme in place since July – operated by Dublin City Council, gardaí and the health services.

It’s reported:

“Parnell Square to St Stephen’s Green has been designated a ‘public domain zone’ as part of the programme. As well as 2,800 arrests in the area, including 70 for begging, there has been a programme to help people access accommodation, health services and addiction treatments.”

An Independent Dublin City Councillor, Ger Dorgan, is reported as saying the initiative was an attempt by the council to “sanitise” Dublin city in advance of Ireland hosting the European presidency in 2004.

February 2004: At the Simon (Community) National Conference in Dublin, the director of the six Simon Communities in Ireland, Conor Hickey, says Ireland is poised to “make a real breakthrough in the fight to end homelessness”.

He says if if the annual bonus on the Special Savings Incentive Accounts (SSIA) scheme was reduced from 25 per cent to 24 per cent €21million more would be available to the Exchequer and could be used to end homelessness.

May 2004: The Cork Simon Community AGM is told more than 100 people, between the age of 16 and 25, are homeless in Cork while, in total, 500 people are homeless.

The charity launches a €21million four-year action plan and pledges to raise more than €7million from its own fundraising activities to go towards the cost of the plan.

December 2005: It’s reported that the government is more than 20,000 social housing units short of its social housing target set out in the National Development Plan; and that it has yet to respond to the National Economic and Social Council recommendation that 10,000 – 12,000 social housing units should be made available between now and 2012.

June 2006: Simon Community Ireland launches its three-year strategic plan, Ending Homelessness, Creating Homes. In an article in The Irish Times, Anne Connolly, chair of the Simon Community of Ireland, writes:

“Simon estimates that the provision of high-quality accommodation in the private rented sector – with a support worker – would cost €12,000 in a year. The average cost of hospital psychiatric care is €120,000 a year. To provide the same person with supported housing in a community environment would cost €40,000.”

Ms Connolly is also reported as saying that, while Simon did not have any official data or figures, it has seen an increase in the number of individuals from Poland, Lithuania and Latvia sleeping rough.

October 2006: Focus Ireland, the Simon Communities, the Society of St Vincent de Paul and Threshold launch their Make Room campaign, calling on the Government to end homelessness by 2010.

They also call for the provision of 10,000 social and affordable housing units every year to 2010 and €2 billion being put into the National Development Plan.

January 2007: It’s reported that there are 6,000 homeless people across Ireland with 80 per cent of these people living in Dublin.

Vincent Browne, Brian Ormond, Caroline Morahan, and Eamonn and Brian Fallon, of daft.ie, lend their support for the Make Room campaign, urging members of the public to sign an online petition.

February 2007: Ahead of the general election in May, the leader of the Labour Party Pat Rabbitte says, in a pre-election speech:

“When we build houses we must also build sustainable communities. My firm commitment for change is Labour’s new ‘begin to buy’ scheme for affordable homes in good neighbourhoods.”

“We will also legislate to protect the consumer rights of home buyers, to regulate management companies and estate agents, and to control management charges. We will end homelessness and reform the planning system to better serve communities.”

May 2007: General election takes place with Fianna Fáil returning 77 seats (down 4); Fine Gael 51 (up 20); Labour 20 (no change); Green Party 6 (no change); Sinn Fein 4 (down 1) the Progressive Democrats 2 (down 6).

June 2007: A Fianna Fáil, Green Party and Progressive Democrats majority coalition government – supported by four Independent TDs – is formed.

July 2007: The charities behind the Make Room campaign call on the parties in the newly formed Government to honour their pre-election pledge to end homelessness by 2010.

October 2007: In a pre-Budget submission to the Minister for Finance Brian Cowen, the Simon Communities of Ireland calls on the Government to increase its funding for services for homeless people by 5 per cent and invest €2.5billion in new social housing units over 2008. This does not happen.

December 2007: In its annual review for 2006, the Simon Communities of Ireland said 55 people, who used Simon’s services in 2006, had died.

The average age of those who died was 42. Of the 55 who died, 25 died in Cork, four in Dundalk, eight in Galway and 18 in Dublin. The general cause of death was “ill health”.

August 2008: The Government announces a four-year strategy to end long-term homelessness, called The Way Home: A Strategy to Address Adult Homelessness in Ireland 2008-2013.

The 83-page document emphasises the use of private-rented accommodation over emergency hostel beds.

Housing Minister Michael Finneran vows that, by 2010, no homeless person will be sleeping rough or staying in emergency accommodation for more than six months.

It’s also reported:

“About 40 key services for homeless people which were due to come on stream this year have been shelved due to a funding freeze (at €33million, same as 2007) imposed by the Health Service Executive (HSE).

“Homeless agencies in Dublin and Cork say they are turning away dozens of homeless people as a result of their emergency beds being used to capacity.”

In addition, it’s reported that an implementation plan [including in regards to funding], to accompany the strategy, may not be ready “for some months’.

It’s reported that around 5,000 people in Ireland are homeless, 43,000 households are on local authority housing lists and 36,000 children live in families on social housing waiting lists.

October 2008: Simon Communities of Ireland claims that, in Dublin alone, there are 10,000 unsold private units, almost half of which have two bedrooms, and calls on the Government to buy some of these properties in order to provide accommodation for homeless people.

September 2010: It’s reported that the number of people sleeping rough and using emergency homeless services in Dublin has risen by 20 per cent over the past 18 months – from 812 people per month in 2009 to 908 per month, during the second quarter, in 2010.

December 2010: As the Government fails to reach its goal of ending long-term homeless by 2010, Kerry Anthony, of DePaul Ireland, is reported as saying:

I’ve been saying for some time now that I don’t think we really understand the full impact the recession is going to have on homelessness.”

The figures haven’t fluctuated much to date but we know there are an awful lot of people defaulting on their mortgage repayments, we know about 90,000 people are defaulting on electric payments and 23,000 on their gas payments.”

February 2011: General election takes place with Fine Gael taking 76 seats (up 25); Labour 37 (up 17); Fianna Fáil 20 (down 57); Sinn Fein 14 (up 10), Socialist Party 2 (up 2); People Before Profit 2 (up 2); Workers and Unemployed Action 1 (up 1); Green Party 2 (down 6). Fine Gael and Labour formed a coalition government.

February 2013: The Government sets 2016 as the target for ending long-term homelessness.

The Irish Independent reports:

The Government has vowed to eradicate long-term homelessness by the centenary of the 1916 Easter Rising.

“The strategy will revolve around property leasing rather than purchases, access to NAMA housing stock and fast-tracking homeless people from emergency shelters to special transitional housing.”

“Housing Minister Jan O”Sullivan defended the new strategy and its 2016 target as achievable despite the fact the former Fianna Fail-led government failed to deliver the same target with greater resources by 2011.”

Previously: Chain Reaction

Leah Farrell/Rollingnews

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44 thoughts on “Common Sense, Love And Respect

  1. Jocky

    Get them out now.

    Obey the law please. If you really care then feel free to buy a premises, staff it and raise money legally.

    1. Nigel

      OR create a huge public fuss that shames and embarrasses the government and keeps the issue in public awareness until there’s meaningful action on a government level!

      1. Anne

        +1

        Re the law –
        “Unjust laws exist; shall we be content to obey them, or shall we endeavor to amend them, and obey them until we have succeeded, or shall we transgress them at once? Men generally, under such a government as this, think that they ought to wait until they have persuaded the majority to alter them. They think that, if they should resist, the remedy would be worse than the evil. But it is the fault of the government itself that the remedy is worse than the evil. It makes it worse. Why is it not more apt to anticipate and provide for reform? Why does it not cherish its wise minority? Why does it cry and resist before it is hurt? Why does it not encourage its citizens to be on the alert to point out its faults, and do better than it would have them?”

        Thoreau.

        1. Nigel

          The only real flaw is the idea that the government might feel shame, so it’s really trying to shame the electorate into holding the government to account.

      2. Anne

        One more shur –

        Martin Luther King.

        ““An individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust, and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for the law”

    2. Taanbuaagam

      An Independent Dublin City Councillor, Ger Dorgan, is reported as saying the initiative was an attempt by the council to “sanitise” Dublin city in advance of Ireland hosting the European presidency in 2004.

    3. SomeChump

      Just because you don’t care and can’t imagine someone else would doesn’t mean they don’t.

  2. Cian

    “January 2007: It’s reported that there are 6,000 homeless people across Ireland with 80 per cent of these people living in Dublin.”

    Wow. Height of the boom, more money in the state coffers that ever before. and 6,000 homeless.

  3. 15p

    get out, povs! some ol rich guy owns that building he’s not using and wants to be assured no one else is using it.

  4. Mysterybeat

    I’m mostly surprised that Darcy didn’t insist on having somebody on that was in favour of long term homelessness ‘for balance’.

  5. brownbull

    ‘bureaucratic nonsense’ like building regulations concerning means of escape in the event of a fire, fire compartmentation, and basic hygiene provisions

    1. Jackdaw

      I knew they would be incapable of getting off the stage. They have done very well and their actions to date have been laudable but please don’t cross that line.

  6. The Bottler

    Rabitte is now drawing a comfortable pension and is not accountable for any statements or promises made in the past!

  7. Junkface

    F*** Irish Law!! Where was the law when the Banking crisis happened, how many criminal bankers did they jail? How many families lives did they ruin?
    Also the state lets Multinationals do anything they want here including paying zero tax, isn’t that against the law? They bend the rules when it suits them, to cook the books.
    Why do the average workers pay more tax than the billionaires and millionaire vulture funds? What kind of incentive is that to the average Irish citizen to work hard and progress?

    F*** Irish law! Do whatever it takes for justice in society. The Gov’t don’t respect peoples lives, why should we respect their bendable laws?

    1. 15p

      bang on the money there, junkface. thats how ive felt for a long time. the absolute contempt the gov. show for us. after everything they put us thru, when they try to take more, or make things even worse for us, when we finally stand up and say ‘no more’, they snarl and hiss and come out with statements of contempt.

  8. Anne

    This government of ours, they are an absolute disgrace.

    They do not give a tuppenny fupp about ordinary citizens.
    6 year olds being treated for depression.. Fupping hell.

    7000 people in hotels. That’s a small village like. It’s outrageous.

    And they are doing absolutely nothing for them.
    Meeting up with Vulture funds for fancy dinners is the priority. Selling us all down the fupping swanning for generations to come. C**ts. FG, and the other cheek of the same ar se – FF need to go.

    People need to start getting engaged and holding these shower of self pleasuring ar se holes accountable.
    The ‘sinister fringe’ needs to get much bigger I think.

    1. Junkface

      What if you became homeless?

      Most voters do care when society starts visibly corroding in front of their eyes, especially in cities where it is hard to hide as the numbers are out of control.

  9. Kdoc1

    I think Home Sweet Home has done amazing work. And they did it without chief executives on bloated salaries and expenses, without offices, without fundraising managers and without an army of administrators and chuggers.

    1. b

      they cherry picked the nicest homeless people, trespass a building and sang some folk songs,

      once the reality set in of actually having to fund proper accomodation, deal with all facets of homelessness including addiction, it starts to fall apart – albeit with a nice bank balance for the right2change movement. Peter McVerry bailed out most of this movement by actually rehousing apollo residents using government and charitable funds

      I guess for his next trick, Ogle is going to fix the A&E trolly crises by occupying a clinic and only treating bumps and scrapes and turning away very sick people

      1. Rugbyfan

        Ogle is building up a platform to run for the Dail next. He is on as many wagons as the train he used to drive pulls!

    2. Kdoc1

      I think it’s worth noting what Patsy McGarry (IT July 11, 2016) highlighted regarding the finances of homeless charities and charities in general. In 2014 four of the charities received €33.6 million from state agencies, all of that and more was absorbed by staff costs which were €35.8 million. The homeless situation is worse than ever. There has to be a better way.

  10. Baffled

    It is peculiar how many people think that the Home Sweet Home operating model is the answer. Excluding those with alcohol and/or drug dependency issues from accessing accommodation is hardly going to house all of the homeless, now is it.

    1. Nigel

      This might be more convincing if there weren’t now enough homeless without alcohol and/or dependency issues (yet) out there to fill several apartment blocks with a few left over for a housing estate or ten. People with those issues need specialised supports and services which they are not going to get while the system is swamped with people who have lost their homes through poverty. But leave the problem fester long enough and more and more of them will acquire dependency and psychological issues, and won’t that be great.

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