Shazzler77998 wrote: » Some of you are so brainwashed, you haven't got a clue. I'm homeless, and I'm in my late 20s. I'm not an addict or an alcoholic, infact I don't drink or take drugs. I'm lucky i'v a friend who's putting me up through this cold weather snap. If it wasn't for them i'd be dieing on the streets. I'v stayed in alot of the hostels in the city centre, The Bru, Merchants quay, cedar house, Portobello house, Little Britain to name but a few, you can't blame the staff(well some of them) but you wouldn't let a dog live in them. Try being sober and homeless, and share a mat on a floor with 30 others, mostly addicts, Gearing up in front of you, leaving needles beside you, defecating and vomiting where you sleep, needle bins in showers and the bathrooms. The little valubles you have are been robbed on a daily basis. Mentally your been put through it by the minute. You get no help from the local authority, just the usual, "apply for the HAP". I have done and its literally impossible to find a place. Id rather take my chances on the streets than hostels, I feel safer. They need certain hostels for different types of people. Addicts/alcoholics/mental health and people who are just homeless needs to be seperated into different hostels. Im homeless because of circumstances , I cant get a job because its been so long since my last one(recession, i was completely unemployed for 6 years), that noone even replys to my CVS. I do cv drops daily, and the looks I get from from some potential employers would leave you not wanting to go again. If I cant get a job I cant afford somewhere to live. This is modern day Ireland, and its a joke. Those in government are the worst, they dont even care! All I need is a little help to get me on my feet, a job and a bed. But for the last 6-8 years im being denied this, which accumulated my homlessness. I probably die on the streets, but i'll die knowing people in government and council knew my situation and did f... all about it.
corner of hells wrote: » Don't work in the southeast , there's quite large teams in the hostels I've worked in. Night staff do checks all thrugh the night , there are drug users and people alcohol issues , there are significant numbers who don't drink at all , lots more stable on methadone. Occasionally you get chaotic drug users . If any staff members sees any resident with alcohol or any paraphernalia you're asked to dispose of it.There's certainly no rampant drug or alcohol use , easily managed. There's significant numbers who have addiction or alcohol issues at all. Night's are often very quite.
https://www.rte.ie/news/2016/0118/761135-homeless/ Complaints have also been made about the treatment of homeless people by accommodation staff. There were several complaints from people who had been asked to leave or removed from accommodation without being given any reason. They believe they were evicted because they complained about conditions.
whisky_galore wrote: » If there's no investment in educating and otherwise stopping people from getting addicted in the first place and investing in adequate supports when they do, you shouldn't be surprised to see this problem.
Agent Coulson wrote: » That is an addiction issue not a homeless issue. Blame the government for someone's personal choice to use drugs that's an easy blame game.
Agent Coulson wrote: » corner of hells wrote: » That hostels are understaffed and rampant with drug use and alcohol use. Really I know of 4 hostel in the southeast that have one staff member on duty for 16 hour shifts alone 365 days a year they work from 5p to 9 am on there own with the number of service user between 11 and 24 staying every night. You may work in the lucky hostel that is over staffed then. So none of the service users in the hostel you work in drink or do drugs at night while in the hostel?
corner of hells wrote: » That hostels are understaffed and rampant with drug use and alcohol use.
Always number 1 wrote: » No point providing housing if you don't provide the supports for them to stay in the housing.. address the issues which lead to them becoming homeless, help them get training to get a job and help them become more self sufficient.
whisky_galore wrote: » So you're saying there's no problem therefore we do nothing? The sheer numbers of shuffling wrecks and junkies and street sleepers...ah sure they've been here for years upon years, haven't they? Just a normal part of Irish urban life? Sure it'll be grand, won't it all work out in the end?
Agent Coulson wrote: » Ok so give us the answer that will end homeless here in Ireland right now. No Country has ever solved homelessness.
Hector Bellend wrote: » They might want to try providing housing
Agent Coulson wrote: » corner of hells wrote: » That's not true , I work in a homeless hostel. What's not true?
corner of hells wrote: » That's not true , I work in a homeless hostel.
Agent Coulson wrote: » corner of hells wrote: » I think there's one wet hostel in the city , there's a load of different types of hostels not all have active addicts/residents with mental ill health etc. The type of support varies hugely. One official wet hostel. You go into every single homeless hostel in the country and you will find drink and drugs are in rampant use with those hostels. Every single one of those hostels are understaffed.
corner of hells wrote: » I think there's one wet hostel in the city , there's a load of different types of hostels not all have active addicts/residents with mental ill health etc. The type of support varies hugely.
whisky_galore wrote: » That kind of learned helplessness is the trademark of the current govt. Ah shur what can you do only throw your hands in the air?
Andy From Sligo wrote: » hello - excuse the niave post and I am most probably come up with an idea thats come up before or its just not feasible. but , you know there are a lot of people sleeping in shop doorways and some ofd them might not want accomodation (though why they wouldnt especially in freezing cold weather like this I will never know) But why dont the local authorities get some waterproof tents set up in a town centre location with waterproof sleeping bags rather than see homedless end up sleeping in doorways? what have I missed here? - be more shelter from the winds and rain and snow and warmer for them.
Agent Coulson wrote: » Homelessness has always been here and will always be here.
Agent Coulson wrote: » It also doesn't help when hostels are understaffed and allowed to be wet hostels this enables those with addictions instead of being a stepping stone to recovery. So the choice for some trying to recover is either stay in a wet hostel where drink and drugs are everywhere and not enough staff to monitor it or sleep outside. Then you also have those who go into hostels as homeless to deal or intimidate those staying in the hostels who are trying to get their lives together. Then you have the repeat homeless people who have been and will be for years gone by and year to come be homeless and it has become their lifestyle. Homelessness has always been here and will always be here. You can house everyone who is homeless tonight and give them all houses and tomorrow the next group of homeless will appear.
SEPT 23 1989 wrote: » I have serious issues with hotel dwellers holding on for a house they are not homeless in my eyes But the lads on the street would I deny them a poxy sleeping bag or a tent on a night like tonight No chance I pay commercial rates in this city
Andy From Sligo wrote: » yep i have heard this as well - comes to something when its actually safer on the streets than spending a night in a hostel or shelter!
end of the road wrote: » it's not only just those with alcohol/substance/mental health issues who refuse to sleep in a hostel. many people who would be on the streets for other reasons refuse to use them because they are not safe and little is done to make them safe.
splinter65 wrote: » Fr McVerry says young people still living at home because they can’t afford to move out are homeless. That is all.