Fr Peter McVerry Dublin
Ireland’s homeless problem
is at “crisis point”, according to Fr Peter McVerry, the director of an
organisation that provides accommodation and care for homeless people.
Fr McVerry said he had not
been surprised by two stories carried in The Irish Times in the past week about
two sets of families: one of a mother with five children who has been living in
a Dublin hotel room for the past three months; the other of a woman with three
children who slept in her car for a week after a series of temporary housing
arrangements broke down.
“I am meeting this every
day,” he said. “I got a phone call from a lady a week ago saying she was
sitting on a park bench with her three young children because she couldn’t get
a place.
“Unfortunately these sort of
stories are no revelation to me.”
He said the majority of
people who become homeless today fall into one of three categories: People who
can no longer afford to pay the rent; people whose relationships have broken
down; those who were being made homeless because of the repossession of their
home.
He said that he expected the
situation to get worse in the coming months and years and that it would force
even more people into the private rental market.
“There is a tsunami coming
down the road and the Government have their heads in the sand,” he said.
Pointing to the Government’s
commitment to provide a €500 million investment to provide fibre-powered
broadband in more than 1,000 rural towns and villages, Fr McVerry said that,
while it was not a case of pitting one against the other, that the same level
of investment should be committed to dealing with the homeless problem.
“I just think the level of
commitment to provide rural broadband should be equal to the level of
commitment to providing accommodation to homeless people,” he said.
“The problem is already at
crisis point . . . At the moment it’s a disaster. In three months’ time, it’s
going to be a tragedy,” he added.
Fr Peter McVerry, Dublin,
Homelessness, Housing list, Housing shortage, Rents in Dublin