
After a lifetime of raising children and contributing to the country鈥檚 wealth, women are being hung out to dry by state and federal governments.
The fastest growing demographic for homelessness in Australia is women over the age of 55.聽The Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC)鈥檚聽, released in April 2019,聽reported a 30% rise between 2011 and 2016 with at least 7000 older women homeless at any one time.
Hard data on how many women are sleeping rough today 鈥斅燼nd where they sleep at night 鈥斅爄s hard to come by.聽Homeless women keep their heads聽down due to the serious risks to their personal safety and government agency engagement is clearly inadequate.
It is painfully obvious to those on the front line, the problem is worsening and there is clear agreement on the causes.
CEO of the聽 聽Dr Cassandra Goldie said in May that gender inequality is structural,聽鈥淥ur current tax, income support and superannuation systems are entrenching gender inequality and this must be remedied in the budget if it is truly to deliver for women.鈥
Goldie criticised the federal government for prioritising 鈥渟ubsidies for home renovations and ownership, which have benefited higher wealth households, whilst refusing to invest in social housing鈥. Even before the pandemic 鈥渙lder women were the fastest growing group of people facing homelessness鈥, she said.
The AHRC report agreed, noting: 鈥淲e have an ageing population, a high cost of housing and a significant gap in wealth accumulation between men and women across their lifetimes.聽Without innovative solutions this problem will continue to increase.鈥
One organisation working tirelessly to provide them is the Older Women鈥檚 Network (OWN).聽聽
A place of their own
Beverly Baker, 狈厂奥,听迟辞濒诲听麻豆传媒聽the problem of older women鈥檚 homelessness had indeed 鈥渃ontinued to increase鈥 since 2019.
Despite this,聽as is the case with so many programs and organisations working to provide聽real help to people in need,聽a systematic聽聽is undermining their efforts.聽
Baker gave a brief history of OWN.
鈥淥WN is a spinoff from the Pensioners and Superannuants Association.聽It was very blokey back then: it was all about negative gearing and wealth creation and did not meet the needs of women in terms of finance, friendship or a range of other needs specific to women.鈥
OWN was established in 1991 to fill that void, inform women of their rights and to create a safe space for them to support each other.
It began providing social supports for women and this still remains part of its core business. However, it soon became clear the need was much greater than聽anticipated.
鈥淲e were getting a lot of contact from people who couldn鈥檛 find housing or afford to stay where they were,鈥 Baker said. 鈥淥ur Chair at the time, Robyn Dougherty, had herself聽been couch-surfing.鈥
When Dougherty鈥檚 husband passed away she moved overseas to live near her daughter but became very ill and had to return. She suddenly found she had to couch-surf and house-sit, having nowhere stable to live. Friends pointed out she was effectively homeless, and she discovered there were many older women in similar situations.
Until that time, Dougherty had been a professional, self-sufficient woman. But in her early 70s, she found herself a casualty of medical needs alongside being priced out of the inflated housing market.
Friends eventually helped her find one-bedroom accommodation.聽Even that has become problematic as she now needs a walking frame and her accommodation has no lift 鈥斅燼nother common problem.
With the government hell bent on forcing such women into sub-standard, privatised aged-care institutions, it is unsurprising homelessness has so markedly risen.
Another day in paradise
Asked where such women end up, Baker said most are couch surfing or house sitting, trying to avoid living in their cars.
鈥淎 lot of women spend all their money on a phone and net access,鈥 she said.聽鈥淚t鈥檚 the only thing that gives them any equity.鈥澛營t also gives them access to house-sitting apps, online courses and organisations such as ACOSS and OWN.
鈥淐entrelink is little help,鈥 Baker said. 鈥淪ervices have been privatised and the [staff] basically get paid to get people off benefits; they often treat people with absolute contempt.鈥
It is a sentiment echoed by many people trying to access help from Centrelink.
鈥淭here is no work for women over 55,鈥 Baker said, 鈥渦nless you 鈥榢now someone who knows someone鈥, and Centrelink knows it.鈥
OWN wants a dedicated service for older women with properly trained staff and for the government to stop de-funding what little remains of homeless and domestic violence services.
Baker does not believe the聽new superannuation arrangements聽will help. 鈥淚t鈥檚 too little too late,鈥 Baker said.聽鈥淚t will never be able to generate enough to supplement the pension because women鈥檚 superannuation has been held back for too long.
鈥淭here has been no effective wage growth for 20 years and there is no guarantee funds will be put aside for gig workers.鈥
A major driver of homelessness is the systematic sell-off of public housing and state and federal governments鈥 refusal to invest in new public and social housing projects.
罢丑别听New South Wales government聽is pressing ahead with selling off of public housing to private interests. Entire communities, including long-term public housing communities at聽, have been displaced solely for developers鈥 interests.
It makes Baker furious.
鈥淲e are at the stage where a home and housing has become a capital acquisition platform for the rich 鈥β燞ousing has become something only the wealthy class can afford.鈥
She thinks that negative gearing should have a vacancy tax added to stop ridiculous scenarios such as what is happening with the former public housing at Fort Street in Millers Point. Bought by Air BnB, it now sits empty most of the time.聽鈥淭he government needs to stop giving tax breaks and franking credits to the rich,鈥 said Baker.聽聽
OWN also strongly disagrees with the plan to roll out the draconian聽Indue Card.
鈥淚t has been proven to cost more to manage than it is worth,鈥 Baker said. 鈥淚f applied to the aged pension or unemployed, it will catastrophically impact older people who are in, or are seeking to find, shared housing.聽It takes away the ability to make your own prudent financial decisions.鈥
翱奥狈鈥檚听聽encourages people to donate the small cost of one brick or more. Once enough funds have been raised, OWN intends to support the work of Women鈥檚 Housing Company to provide social housing for homeless older women.
OWN operates in NSW, Queensland and Western Australia and is looking to expand into all states and territories to build its national voice.聽Its October annual general meeting will explore moving to a policy-based organisation.
Like many, Baker is fed up with backward, patriarchal policies driven by religious ideology instead of good public policy. 鈥淭he elite are rebuilding an aristocracy to be unassailable, to amass so much power, wealth and property that we will never get democracy back,鈥 she said.