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Adequate housing - an issue for everyone

By Jocelyn Newman - posted Monday, 15 May 2000


For most Australians, our homes are where we grow up, raise our children, welcome family and friends and grow old.

Unfortunately, attachment to a home is not shared by all of us all of the time.

The Government considers adequate housing should be available to everyone in this country. It is fundamental to a decent standard of living that governments must aim to provide healthy and safe housing for its citizens. To support this, we allocated nearly $2.4 billion in 1997-98 on help for low income renters, on public housing and on other types of housing - such as community and Indigenous housing.

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But I'm the first to admit that governments cannot solve Australia's housing problems alone. And all of us here today know that there are still too many homeless people who slip through the social safety net.

The Government's Social Agenda

The themes of early intervention and prevention and sustainable communities underpin what the Prime Minister calls a "modern conservative" approach to social policy:

Our aim is to build a modern social safety net which is not founded on expanding the welfare state but on lessening welfare dependence and broadening the choices available to individuals, families and communities. Our focus . . . is on tackling problems at their source rather than simply living with and trying to ameliorate their consequences.

While we are absolutely committed to a social safety net that supports those in need, we must also concentrate on preventing dependency and providing other kinds of support and services that help to strengthen families and communities.

Early Intervention And Prevention Initiatives

There's little doubt that the families in today's society face increased financial pressures and emotional stresses. And, the Commonwealth Government has a strong track record in providing income payments and other support to people in genuine financial need. But apart from helping financially, we are also trying to target families at risk - at the stage that often leads to homelessness.

We are taking an early intervention and prevention approach across the Government in a renewed effort to prevent family break-ups, domestic violence, crime and drug abuse. These are universally known as pathways to homelessness. We have committed:

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  • over $37 million each year to the Family Relationships Program, with 83 community organisations on contract to the Government to deliver family counselling and mediation services.
  • $25 million for the Partnerships Against Domestic Violence strategy, together with another $25 million in the Budget. This goes to working in partnership with the States and community organisations to prevent domestic violence and to develop better ways to respond to it.
  • Over half a billion dollars in the fight against drugs. Drug abuse can have devastating consequences on the community and the funds are directed to law enforcement, education, research and treatment.
  • $13 million on a National Crime Prevention Program that oversees local prevention and communication activities, national research and pilot projects, and training for crime-prevention professionals. We know that early life experiences can have a long-term impact on crime and other social problems. And that interventions, such as home visiting, family support and parenting education, can have a positive impact on the future of at-risk families and their children.
  • $60 million for programs to prevent youth homelessness - in response to recommendations of the Prime Minister's Task Force on Youth Homelessness, headed up by Captain David Eldridge. To break the cycle of homelessness, which can begin at an early age, the focus is on support for the whole family, to encourage young people to reconcile with their families, to re-engage in community life and to take up education, training or employment.

Taken as a whole, these initiatives represent a prevention and early intervention effort which is unprecedented in Australia's social policy history. As I know from talking with my State and Territory and international counterparts; and with community and service provider organisations, these new ways in which Governments and communities help their people are already being widely embraced.

And I am sure that the Commonwealth Government won't be stopping here.

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This is an edited extract of a speech opening the National Homelessness Conference in the Melbourne Town Hall, 19 May, 1999.



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About the Author

Jocelyn Newman was the Federal Minister for Family and Community Services and Senator for Tasmania.

Photo of Jocelyn Newman
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