Homelessness Crisis Among Seniors

Homelessness

AUSTRALIA | COTA Australia has identified the growing crisis of homelessness among seniors, specifically women, many for the first time in their lives.

COTA Australia Chief Executive, Patricia Sparrow, said too many older women are falling into hidden homelessness, be it living in cars, couch-surfing, dog or cat sitting, or crammed into overcrowded housing, often experiencing housing insecurity for the first time in their lives.

Sparrow said in addition to building new community and public housing, political parties need to commit to urgently increasing Commonwealth Rent Assistance (CRA) by 60 percent, and to create innovative programs to help older women find affordable housing and navigate the housing system.

“Too many older women are locked out of home ownership, priced out of rentals, and with nowhere to go. Commonwealth Rent Assistance isn’t keeping up, and public and community housing remains out of reach for many who desperately need it,” said Sparrow.

“Older women are one of the fastest growing groups at risk of homelessness in Australia, and what’s worse is that the true number of older women experiencing homelessness is much higher than official data suggests. Many avoid sleeping rough and instead move between friends’ homes, stay in cars, or live in severely overcrowded housing. They’re invisible in the statistics – but they are there, and they are struggling.”

She said that Australia was not far off having half a million older women at risk of homelessness across the country. 

“These are our often mothers and grandmothers who, through no fault of their own, have found themselves without basic, permanent shelter.”

Sparrow added that the crisis was triggered by a perfect storm of factors, including decades of gender pay gaps leaving women with insufficient retirement savings, chronic low wages in female-dominated industries, career interruptions for unpaid caregiving, skyrocketing rents pricing fixed-income retirees out of the market and a critical shortage of appropriate public and community housing.

“Some state governments, like South Australia, are exploring solutions such as co-housing and expanding access to small-scale housing like granny flats and tiny homes. But this crisis can’t be solved piecemeal,” she said.

“A national response is needed. The Federal Government must act now, older women have worked and contributed all their lives. They deserve stable housing.”

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