Senior Queenslanders stuck in 'no-win situation’ amid rental crisis

These days, it’s become so difficult to make ends meet on a fixed income or pension.

Amid the ongoing rental crisis in Queensland, seniors, pensioners, and retirees have found themselves priced out of the rental market and thrust onto a growing waiting list for public housing—worse, find themselves homeless.



According to the Queensland Department of Housing, 546 people aged 80 and above are currently on the waiting list for public housing.

The agency also said that as of August, there are 25,363 applications for public housing in Queensland and more than 41,000 people on the waiting list. Of the forty-odd thousand,a third are homeless.

There are also 3,608 people aged 65 and over registered in public housing, which was higher than in November 2022, which was 2,990.


ev-IWJH-l-vb4k-unsplash.jpg
More senior Queenslanders have been waiting for public housing as they cannot afford rent anymore. Credit: Unsplash



The average waiting time for those with ‘high’ and ‘very high’ needs is 19 months,

According to real estate firm Domain's October Vacancy Rate report, only 0.8 per cent of available rental properties nationwide and 0.6 per cent on the Gold Coast are unoccupied, signalling a tight rental market with very few units available up for grabs.

The delicate interplay between supply and demand is putting many Aussies at risk of displacement, with some even being forced to let go of their humble abodes.



People like 67-year-old Judy Tate found it difficult to make ends meet with the prices driving up. She currently sleeps in a van as she was forced to move out of the Broadbeach unit she had lived in for four years.

Tate was paying $370 a week but was unable to adjust when her landlord told her that her rent would be increased to $425.

While she was approved for public housing, she was informed that she might wait two years for a house to become available.

‘Most of us have worked all our [lives], and now we are just nothing to anybody,’ she said.

‘It's not the vendors' fault either—with interest rates going up so high, they have to cover their costs as well. It’s a no-win situation.’

Tate said that the apartment was later leased for $450 a week.

‘I never thought I would be homeless,’ Tate said.

‘My anxiety is just through the roof. I am struggling to cope with it. Mentally, I am a nervous wreck. It is really, really hard.’

For Tate, her feasible option is to park overnight at showgrounds where she can use communal toilets and showers. She sometimes stays with friends or sleeps on her daughter’s couch, which she does not like doing.



Tate also prefers living in a van to living in a shared house with strangers.

‘My daughter said, “Mum, you are 67, you can't live in the van like that,”’ she said.

‘They are in a little three-bedroom townhouse with one bathroom, and there are three kids, two adults, two dogs, and me when I'm staying there.’

‘Even though they say I'm not, you do [impose]. It's just not possible to do it long term.’



Tate isn’t the only one experiencing homelessness.

Sixty-nine-year-old Godfrey Brown has been on and off the streets of the Gold Coast for years. He is currently sharing a small unit with a friend.

‘Sometimes I feel it might be better to go back to being homeless,’ Brown shared.

'I'm on a fortnightly pension, and when you're homeless, it lasts from payday to payday.’

With 40 per cent of his pension going towards rent every fortnight, the bills and food he needs to cover, and payments for loans he’s taken up, Brown admits not much is left.

Brown kept in touch with some acquaintances he knew from back when he lived on the streets.

Aside from exhaustion and hunger, he says a third emotion is at play with homelessness: fear.

He said, ‘Most of them are scared… they're scared of getting attacked by drunks.’

‘Some of them are hungry, but they'd rather go and hide and sleep hungry than go out at night and look for handouts because they're scared.’



Chair of the Gold Coast Homelessness Network Maria Leebeeck said her service has seen a 30 per cent increase in demand this year.

‘We are seeing a spike in people who are 80 years plus coming to our support and charity services,’ Leebeeck said.

‘A lot of people are on pensions and income support, so don't have a lot of money, and that's the challenge. Unfortunately for some people, it has been about moving out of the Gold Coast.’

Rosies, a not-for-profit Queensland group, also provides street outreach with hospitality for those experiencing homelessness, disadvantage, hardship, or social isolation.

CEO Jayne Shallcross mentioned that they’ve also experienced a similar 30 per cent increase in demand for services.



The Queensland government had provided almost $877,000 in financial support to renters on the Gold Coast.

According to Queensland Housing Minister Meaghan Scanlon, ‘We're also providing $15 million for specialist homelessness services on the Gold Coast this financial year to help people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.’

Real estate agent Tiger Malan said that rentals below $800 per week in the Burleigh Heads area were leased ‘within hours’. He added that the increased demand during summer creates a ‘double whammy’ effect to the shortage of available rentals.

‘I think it did improve around winter, and now it's getting tougher again,’ Malan said.

‘A lot of the units and beachfront stuff get swallowed up by the short-term letting market,’ he added.

‘Because you get better rates through Christmas a lot of the apartments that would otherwise ease the burden are currently sitting on Airbnb for $1000 per night—and lots of them are getting it.’

Key Takeaways

  • Over 3,600 people aged 65 and over, including 546 people aged 80 and over, are waiting for public housing in Queensland due to the worsening rental crisis.
  • Data shows the average waiting time for public housing for those with 'high' and 'very high' needs is 19 months.
    [* ] Elderly pensioners and retirees such as Judy Tate are resorting to living in vans, considering homelessness, or being forced out of their cities due to unaffordable rental prices.
  • Demand for homelessness services has seen a 30 per cent increase this year, as rental prices continue to rise and vacancies remain at an all-time low.

What do you think of the current rental crisis? Let us know in the comments below.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
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These days, it’s become so difficult to make ends meet on a fixed income or pension.

Amid the ongoing rental crisis in Queensland, seniors, pensioners, and retirees have found themselves priced out of the rental market and thrust onto a growing waiting list for public housing—worse, find themselves homeless.



According to the Queensland Department of Housing, 546 people aged 80 and above are currently on the waiting list for public housing.

The agency also said that as of August, there are 25,363 applications for public housing in Queensland and more than 41,000 people on the waiting list. Of the forty-odd thousand,a third are homeless.

There are also 3,608 people aged 65 and over registered in public housing, which was higher than in November 2022, which was 2,990.


View attachment 34164
More senior Queenslanders have been waiting for public housing as they cannot afford rent anymore. Credit: Unsplash



The average waiting time for those with ‘high’ and ‘very high’ needs is 19 months,

According to real estate firm Domain's October Vacancy Rate report, only 0.8 per cent of available rental properties nationwide and 0.6 per cent on the Gold Coast are unoccupied, signalling a tight rental market with very few units available up for grabs.

The delicate interplay between supply and demand is putting many Aussies at risk of displacement, with some even being forced to let go of their humble abodes.



People like 67-year-old Judy Tate found it difficult to make ends meet with the prices driving up. She currently sleeps in a van as she was forced to move out of the Broadbeach unit she had lived in for four years.

Tate was paying $370 a week but was unable to adjust when her landlord told her that her rent would be increased to $425.

While she was approved for public housing, she was informed that she might wait two years for a house to become available.

‘Most of us have worked all our [lives], and now we are just nothing to anybody,’ she said.

‘It's not the vendors' fault either—with interest rates going up so high, they have to cover their costs as well. It’s a no-win situation.’

Tate said that the apartment was later leased for $450 a week.

‘I never thought I would be homeless,’ Tate said.

‘My anxiety is just through the roof. I am struggling to cope with it. Mentally, I am a nervous wreck. It is really, really hard.’

For Tate, her feasible option is to park overnight at showgrounds where she can use communal toilets and showers. She sometimes stays with friends or sleeps on her daughter’s couch, which she does not like doing.



Tate also prefers living in a van to living in a shared house with strangers.

‘My daughter said, “Mum, you are 67, you can't live in the van like that,”’ she said.

‘They are in a little three-bedroom townhouse with one bathroom, and there are three kids, two adults, two dogs, and me when I'm staying there.’

‘Even though they say I'm not, you do [impose]. It's just not possible to do it long term.’



Tate isn’t the only one experiencing homelessness.

Sixty-nine-year-old Godfrey Brown has been on and off the streets of the Gold Coast for years. He is currently sharing a small unit with a friend.

‘Sometimes I feel it might be better to go back to being homeless,’ Brown shared.

'I'm on a fortnightly pension, and when you're homeless, it lasts from payday to payday.’

With 40 per cent of his pension going towards rent every fortnight, the bills and food he needs to cover, and payments for loans he’s taken up, Brown admits not much is left.

Brown kept in touch with some acquaintances he knew from back when he lived on the streets.

Aside from exhaustion and hunger, he says a third emotion is at play with homelessness: fear.

He said, ‘Most of them are scared… they're scared of getting attacked by drunks.’

‘Some of them are hungry, but they'd rather go and hide and sleep hungry than go out at night and look for handouts because they're scared.’



Chair of the Gold Coast Homelessness Network Maria Leebeeck said her service has seen a 30 per cent increase in demand this year.

‘We are seeing a spike in people who are 80 years plus coming to our support and charity services,’ Leebeeck said.

‘A lot of people are on pensions and income support, so don't have a lot of money, and that's the challenge. Unfortunately for some people, it has been about moving out of the Gold Coast.’

Rosies, a not-for-profit Queensland group, also provides street outreach with hospitality for those experiencing homelessness, disadvantage, hardship, or social isolation.

CEO Jayne Shallcross mentioned that they’ve also experienced a similar 30 per cent increase in demand for services.



The Queensland government had provided almost $877,000 in financial support to renters on the Gold Coast.

According to Queensland Housing Minister Meaghan Scanlon, ‘We're also providing $15 million for specialist homelessness services on the Gold Coast this financial year to help people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.’

Real estate agent Tiger Malan said that rentals below $800 per week in the Burleigh Heads area were leased ‘within hours’. He added that the increased demand during summer creates a ‘double whammy’ effect to the shortage of available rentals.

‘I think it did improve around winter, and now it's getting tougher again,’ Malan said.

‘A lot of the units and beachfront stuff get swallowed up by the short-term letting market,’ he added.

‘Because you get better rates through Christmas a lot of the apartments that would otherwise ease the burden are currently sitting on Airbnb for $1000 per night—and lots of them are getting it.’

Key Takeaways

  • Over 3,600 people aged 65 and over, including 546 people aged 80 and over, are waiting for public housing in Queensland due to the worsening rental crisis.
  • Data shows the average waiting time for public housing for those with 'high' and 'very high' needs is 19 months.
    [* ] Elderly pensioners and retirees such as Judy Tate are resorting to living in vans, considering homelessness, or being forced out of their cities due to unaffordable rental prices.
  • Demand for homelessness services has seen a 30 per cent increase this year, as rental prices continue to rise and vacancies remain at an all-time low.

What do you think of the current rental crisis? Let us know in the comments below.
The rental crisis is definitely a tragedy. The Australian Government needs to reassess their Public Housing tenants. Having worked as a Social Worker for a Christian Welfare Organisation for over 15 years, I know first hand of families who have lived in Public Housing for many years, raised their families who have grown and flown the nest and even some who have been widowed who are still living in 3 and 4 bedroom Public Housing on their own. These properties need to be freed up for families by relocating singles and couples residing in multi bedroom homes to single bedroom properties. These properties are owned by the Government, not the residents, and therefore should be made available to those most in need. This would definitely help with families on the Public Housing waiting list.
 
These days, it’s become so difficult to make ends meet on a fixed income or pension.

Amid the ongoing rental crisis in Queensland, seniors, pensioners, and retirees have found themselves priced out of the rental market and thrust onto a growing waiting list for public housing—worse, find themselves homeless.



According to the Queensland Department of Housing, 546 people aged 80 and above are currently on the waiting list for public housing.

The agency also said that as of August, there are 25,363 applications for public housing in Queensland and more than 41,000 people on the waiting list. Of the forty-odd thousand,a third are homeless.

There are also 3,608 people aged 65 and over registered in public housing, which was higher than in November 2022, which was 2,990.


View attachment 34164
More senior Queenslanders have been waiting for public housing as they cannot afford rent anymore. Credit: Unsplash



The average waiting time for those with ‘high’ and ‘very high’ needs is 19 months,

According to real estate firm Domain's October Vacancy Rate report, only 0.8 per cent of available rental properties nationwide and 0.6 per cent on the Gold Coast are unoccupied, signalling a tight rental market with very few units available up for grabs.

The delicate interplay between supply and demand is putting many Aussies at risk of displacement, with some even being forced to let go of their humble abodes.



People like 67-year-old Judy Tate found it difficult to make ends meet with the prices driving up. She currently sleeps in a van as she was forced to move out of the Broadbeach unit she had lived in for four years.

Tate was paying $370 a week but was unable to adjust when her landlord told her that her rent would be increased to $425.

While she was approved for public housing, she was informed that she might wait two years for a house to become available.

‘Most of us have worked all our [lives], and now we are just nothing to anybody,’ she said.

‘It's not the vendors' fault either—with interest rates going up so high, they have to cover their costs as well. It’s a no-win situation.’

Tate said that the apartment was later leased for $450 a week.

‘I never thought I would be homeless,’ Tate said.

‘My anxiety is just through the roof. I am struggling to cope with it. Mentally, I am a nervous wreck. It is really, really hard.’

For Tate, her feasible option is to park overnight at showgrounds where she can use communal toilets and showers. She sometimes stays with friends or sleeps on her daughter’s couch, which she does not like doing.



Tate also prefers living in a van to living in a shared house with strangers.

‘My daughter said, “Mum, you are 67, you can't live in the van like that,”’ she said.

‘They are in a little three-bedroom townhouse with one bathroom, and there are three kids, two adults, two dogs, and me when I'm staying there.’

‘Even though they say I'm not, you do [impose]. It's just not possible to do it long term.’



Tate isn’t the only one experiencing homelessness.

Sixty-nine-year-old Godfrey Brown has been on and off the streets of the Gold Coast for years. He is currently sharing a small unit with a friend.

‘Sometimes I feel it might be better to go back to being homeless,’ Brown shared.

'I'm on a fortnightly pension, and when you're homeless, it lasts from payday to payday.’

With 40 per cent of his pension going towards rent every fortnight, the bills and food he needs to cover, and payments for loans he’s taken up, Brown admits not much is left.

Brown kept in touch with some acquaintances he knew from back when he lived on the streets.

Aside from exhaustion and hunger, he says a third emotion is at play with homelessness: fear.

He said, ‘Most of them are scared… they're scared of getting attacked by drunks.’

‘Some of them are hungry, but they'd rather go and hide and sleep hungry than go out at night and look for handouts because they're scared.’



Chair of the Gold Coast Homelessness Network Maria Leebeeck said her service has seen a 30 per cent increase in demand this year.

‘We are seeing a spike in people who are 80 years plus coming to our support and charity services,’ Leebeeck said.

‘A lot of people are on pensions and income support, so don't have a lot of money, and that's the challenge. Unfortunately for some people, it has been about moving out of the Gold Coast.’

Rosies, a not-for-profit Queensland group, also provides street outreach with hospitality for those experiencing homelessness, disadvantage, hardship, or social isolation.

CEO Jayne Shallcross mentioned that they’ve also experienced a similar 30 per cent increase in demand for services.



The Queensland government had provided almost $877,000 in financial support to renters on the Gold Coast.

According to Queensland Housing Minister Meaghan Scanlon, ‘We're also providing $15 million for specialist homelessness services on the Gold Coast this financial year to help people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.’

Real estate agent Tiger Malan said that rentals below $800 per week in the Burleigh Heads area were leased ‘within hours’. He added that the increased demand during summer creates a ‘double whammy’ effect to the shortage of available rentals.

‘I think it did improve around winter, and now it's getting tougher again,’ Malan said.

‘A lot of the units and beachfront stuff get swallowed up by the short-term letting market,’ he added.

‘Because you get better rates through Christmas a lot of the apartments that would otherwise ease the burden are currently sitting on Airbnb for $1000 per night—and lots of them are getting it.’

Key Takeaways

  • Over 3,600 people aged 65 and over, including 546 people aged 80 and over, are waiting for public housing in Queensland due to the worsening rental crisis.
  • Data shows the average waiting time for public housing for those with 'high' and 'very high' needs is 19 months.
    [* ] Elderly pensioners and retirees such as Judy Tate are resorting to living in vans, considering homelessness, or being forced out of their cities due to unaffordable rental prices.
  • Demand for homelessness services has seen a 30 per cent increase this year, as rental prices continue to rise and vacancies remain at an all-time low.

What do you think of the current rental crisis? Let us know in the comments below.
I am still living in the house we should have vacated last Friday the 2nd of November but we have applied for over 30 properties in the last month because we need certain things for a semi-infirm person like me & my non-related carer. like 2 bathrooms & a largeish garden for 2 dogs, we are constantly knocked back. We had high hopes of the perfect property last week & even moved up the list, only to be knocked back at the last hurdle. I know life wasn't meant to be easy but at 86 why has it turned so hard? Just so the owner of this property can make more millions to add to his coffers. We also had to cull 90% of the useful sh** we had collected over the 15 years we have lived here. the only help the aged care could offer was a place in an afed care home for me . But nothing for my dogs or my carer who helps me to stay together. I would rather die than go into one of those places.
 
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This is alarming. In this day & age to have so many homeless people.

Can the unavailable rentals be related to the amount of immigrants Australia is taking? Many of those people have the money to afford the rents Landlords are asking. They receive incentives which assist in this. A family of immigrants l know managed to buy a house by offering way over the asking price. One of the adults in the partnership is in business taking cash in hand, no tax.

l always believe that charity begins at home & priority should be to our elderly who have lived here all their lives & paid taxes.


Surely there are Government buildings laying empty which could accommodate street people!!
 
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This is alarming. In this day & age to have so many homeless people.

Can the unavailable rentals be related to the amount of immigrants Australia is taking? Many of those people have the money to afford the rents Landlords are asking. They receive incentives which assist in this. A family of immigrants l know managed to buy a house by offering way over the asking price. One of the adults in the partnership is in business taking cash in hand, no tax.

l always believe that charity begins at home & priority should be to our elderly who have lived here all their lives & paid taxes.


Surely there are Government buildings laying empty which could accommodate street people!!
There are but for some reason the gov won’t open them up and use them. 🤔
 
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We are getting so desperate that poor Jaz is applying for anything that seems reasonable. It is getting desperate now unfortunately it really means trying in areas we would never live in like the Logan area where the houses are all old & not suitable for someone with mobility issues. This is also where the kids roaming the streets at night wreak havoc and live with their no-hoper parents, who never worked in their lives. While we are both pensioners we have paid our dues over our working lives.
 
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