This isn’t the retirement that Mary had dreamed of.

The former midwife spent years living on a cattle station with her husband on the north-western edge of Australia - outside her window, the vast and ruggedly beautiful Kimberley region.

Now, though, the frail 71-year-old spends most of her days and nights in her battered car. Her current view is the public toilet block of a Perth shopping centre.

Mary is not her real name. She does not want people she knows to find out she is living like this.

She is one of the roughly 122,000 people who are homeless in Australia on any given night, according to data from the country’s bureau of statistics.

A recent government report says that 40% of renters on low income are now at risk of joining that cohort.

In recent years, record house prices, underinvestment in social housing, a general shortage of homes and drastically climbing rents, have left much of the nation’s growing population struggling to find a place to live.

  • Media Bias Fact Checker@lemmy.worldB
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    4 months ago
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  • fart_pickle@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Devil’s advocate here. While I feel sorry for the people struggling with the housing crisis, it always puzzles me when the so called boomer generation is having problems with a living situation. Back then it wasn’t that hard to buy a house that by today’s standards would be enough to support retirement. I have a feeling that the Media are cherry picking sad stories to get the public’s attention (aka clickbait).

    • Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      Well they did give some statistics as well. My feeling was they were including statistics along with a story to give a more human connection to the issue which you can’t really do by just presenting the cold numbers. Do you think something is missing here that should have been included to give a more complete view of the issue?

      • fart_pickle@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Yes, I do think something is missing here. As cold as it sounds, it’s the single person responsibility to provide for itself. If you are 70+ years old and you have nothing to support your retirement, it’s mostly your fault.

        • rozodru@lemmy.ca
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          4 months ago

          As someone who works with the homeless it’s not as cut and dry as you would like to believe. Lately, within the past couple years or so, I’ve been working more and more with elderly homeless people who simply can no longer afford to live. So what happened? at one point they were fine. granted they were on a fixed income (this is key here) they got by. were able to pay rent, buy food, medical care, etc. But the problem is that fixed income. Sure you anticipate increases here and there but the thing is within the past couple years or so things have increased A LOT. Where I live “renovictions” are up 85% and many of these elderly are the victims of said renovictions. It’s such a common story at this point. they’ve lived in the same apartment for years, decades even, paying practically nothing and then the landlord comes in and evicts them for the purpose of renovating and increasing the rent exponentially for the next tenant.

          So what happens when you’re on a fixed income, you’ve been paying the same low rent for years and years, and now you’re suddenly thrown into the current rental market? you sleep on a bench. And you can’t say to these people “well you should have planned better” it’s almost impossible to plan for your landlord suddenly deciding to change their mind and taking advantage of a situation. So why don’t they stay with family? a few do, many don’t because said family is also struggling or living in a one bedroom apartment themselves or even a studio and can’t take them in. Also the majority of the time if these elderly people are already renting chances are they don’t have familiy.

          And these people aren’t addicts, they’re not crazy, they’re just old. And the sad factor of the matter is, and the media doesn’t report this, is that these people tend to commit suicide after awhile. Homeless deaths don’t get reported in the media cause…well…no one cares but the people who work with these people hear about it on a weekly basis. just last week an elderly woman who was homeless for 3 or 4 months that I worked with killed herself. it’s common now. I tend to try and make sure the elderly are doing alright mentally and emotionally cause they’re more prone to sucide than the others but, I mean, this is the world we live in now.

        • Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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          4 months ago

          Hang on, I don’t think I get what you mean. So you see homelessness as a purely individual problem that we shouldn’t make efforts to discuss or address as a society? Maybe I’m not understanding your comment properly but that’s what it sounded like you were saying from my reading.

          • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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            4 months ago

            They’re saying these people lived through a boom time, and had the easiest life of anyone as things have now gotten far worse to the point most people can’t even afford a home with a lifetime of work whereas their generation could outright own a house in a few years on a single income.

            They coasted through life on easy mode, fucked the country for the current generation to keep their greedy lifestyle, didn’t save, and now have to be bailed out by society for a problem they made when were not even capable of supporting ourselves and now have to carry them as well.

        • Great Blue Heron@lemmy.ca
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          4 months ago

          That is such a fucked up view of the world that I have a hard time accepting that it’s real (even though I know it’s quite common).

    • triptrapper@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Sure, in general people had an easier time buying a house in 1960, but that doesn’t account for individual hardship, and this attitude certainly doesn’t help people who need a place to live right now.

    • fart_pickle@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      It’s amazing how people who blame boomers for all the evil in the world, are so sympathetic for other boomers who weren’t so lucky.

        • hedgehogging_the_bed@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Their “baby boom” that defined the American generation called “boomers” was different in Australia and didn’t peak until much later, in the late 1960s I believe.