1 / 17

MAJOR ISSUES FACING PEOPLE WHO HAVE A DISABILITY IN THE HOUSING MARKET

MAJOR ISSUES FACING PEOPLE WHO HAVE A DISABILITY IN THE HOUSING MARKET. AFFORDABLE HOUSING. Given the financial constraints most people and their families experience due to Limited access to employment and just remuneration for their work

duscha
Télécharger la présentation

MAJOR ISSUES FACING PEOPLE WHO HAVE A DISABILITY IN THE HOUSING MARKET

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MAJOR ISSUES FACING PEOPLE WHO HAVE A DISABILITY IN THE HOUSING MARKET

  2. AFFORDABLE HOUSING Given the financial constraints most people and their families experience due to • Limited access to employment and just remuneration for their work • Costs incurred in relation to equipment, transport etc • Often reliant on fixed income

  3. HOUSING APPROPRIATELY DESIGNED • Design is not just about physical access • Housing must have the capacity to respond to the needs of people who may experience anxiety, altered reality or auditory hallucinations. (private entry, physically separate access points in multi-dwelling sites) • Physical appearance blends into surrounding neighbourhood

  4. HOUSING APPROPRIATELY LOCATED Location relates to housing that is • Situated in neighbourhoods with ready access to community, social and medical facilities • Alternatively housing that is close to efficient, accessible and reliable public transport hubs

  5. ONE SOCIAL HOUSING SYSTEM The implementation of the One Social Housing System and the associated Client Intake Assessment Process have effectively excluded many people with a disability from Social Housing

  6. WHY? • People living at home with their family will not meet the criteria of homelessness • People who may be beneficiaries of family trusts set up to provide for their future or alternatively existing tenants inheriting liquid assets or property (risk of being assess as no longer eligible due to financial security)

  7. AND MORE…. • Changed policies relating to ongoing contact with Department of Housing. (not responding to correspondence and not providing requested information to the Department within one month is a reason for a person’s application for housing to be cancelled.

  8. AND MORE….. • The time within which an application can be ‘revived’ for a person whose application was cancelled due to having ‘lost contact with the Department’ was reduced to three months from 12 months. • However, people can reapply for housing assistance at any time.

  9. ESTABLISHING NEED • Establishing a high level of housing need is part of eligibility process • Department doesn’t always identify the full extent of an applicant’s needs and circumstances • Department does not have a way of supporting an applicant who, for example, may not have the ability to get supporting evidence from agencies and specialists

  10. MORE ON ESTABLISHING NEED… • Applicants and existing tenants who apply for housing or who are sent review forms, or who are making appeals, must provide as much evidence as they possibly can. • Applicants and existing tenants may need assistance from their supportive family and friends to gather such things as reports and supporting letters from DSQ, Child Safety, Community support services.

  11. DISCRIMINATION Discrimination has always been an issue for people with a disability. Some factors making this worse at the moment: • Current low vacancy rates in the private rental market • Group inspections of properties • Agents and lessors accepting multiple applications for properties

  12. SUPPORTED ACCOMMODATION FACILITIES The ongoing practice of placing people with a disability and people who have a mental illness in privately owned and managed boarding houses/supported accommodation facilities together with the return to other models of congregated living means that all people with a disability or a mental illness are at risk of this practice

  13. APPROPRIATE SUPPORT • Access to adequate and appropriate support that is provided independent of housing management • Ability to be supported around individual needs and not reduced to placement in a group home with a group response

  14. INFORMATION Access to adequate, accessible information about: • Systems and how they work • Housing options • Support options • How others might be doing it • How can we construct a sustainable option

  15. ADVOCACY People need access to two levels of advocacy • Systemic Advocacy that represents the voice of people with a disability • Individual Advocacy that has the capacity to support a person to have their voice heard in relation to their housing needs and choices

  16. AND SO THE JOURNEY CONTINUES…… THE RECOGNITION OF THESE ISSUES AND A COMMITTED RESPONSE TO ADDRESSING THEM WILL GO SOME WAY TO PEOPLE BEING ACKNOWLEDGED AND WELCOMED INTO COMMUNITIES

  17. The Beginning!

More Related