15-18C
Mostly cloudy

Find a...

Date Job Car Home







  • NEWS
  • Martin wades into abortion debate

    As the Dáil committee hearings continue on the abortion bill, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has waded into the debate saying it is important that Christian believers "be, and seen to be, on the side of life, especially when life is most vulnerable".

  • Payment cuts see families pay rent shortfall

    Limits on rent supplement payments set by the Government are forcing thousands of families to make undeclared top-up payments to landlords to secure places to live.

  • WORLD
  • Anger as North Korea launches another missile

    North Korea fired a short-range missile from its east coast, a day after launching three more of these missiles, a South Korean news agency said.

  • How Star Trek predicted the future

    WHEN Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry first dreamed up the concept of a television show based in the unexplored universe of Outer Space in 1964, the world was a very different place.

  • BUSINESS
  • Warnings over future of eurozone

    The eurozone is heading towards a break up unless there are moves towards much closer political and fiscal union, according to chief economist with State Street Global Advisers, Chris Probyn.

  • Bruton defends corporate tax rate

    Ireland will be able to maintain its current corporation tax code in the face of international pressure to prevent multinational corporations avoid paying their fare share of tax, Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton said yesterday.

  • SPORT
  • Mayo’s statement of intent

    Galway 0-11 Mayo 4-16 Five minutes to go in Salthill yesterday and James Horan was still cajoling his men to sew it into Galway.

  • Wilkinson inspires Toulon to glory

    ASM Clermont Auvergne 15 Toulon 16 Not for the first time this season, a matchday performance and the result have made a mockery of the statistics.

  • LIFESTYLE
  • What Lenny did next

    LENNY Abrahamson has directed three feature films: Adam & Paul, Garage and What Richard Did.

  • Clothes maketh you mad

    Trying on clothes, said Ewart, produced "sensations which bring deep peace and perfect contentment" to the female mind.





Homelessness - Services cuts show where priorities lie

About one in five homeless people did not qualify for a medical card in 2008, because they were in employment.

It appears that they are using the hostels because they cannot afford to pay rent.

Fr Peter McVerry, who has been one of the most effective and articulate campaigners for social justice over the past two decades, finds it difficult to understand how anyone living in emergency hostel accommodation could hold down a job. The emergency hostels are “awful places”, he warns.

They present an unsafe, chaotic environment that is full of drugs and mental problems. Fr McVerry is especially critical of the dormitory style of accommodation. Many of the homeless people are particularly vulnerable, because of past experiences. For example, men who were sexually abused as boys may have a neurotic fear of sleeping in the same room as men.

Such people need their own cubicle. This need not be that spacious, but it should be possible for the person to lock the door and feel safe. Those who have no such fears may sleep well only to find that what little money or valuables that they had, were stolen while they were asleep.

Many of those who use the hostels have drug habits, especially alcohol addiction, and others have mental problems. As a result many very vulnerable people would rather sleep rough than use a hostel for the homeless.

The majority of women in need of homeless services have histories of victimisation, often going back to childhood. A recent study conducted by researchers at Trinity College Dublin found that 93% of the homeless women that they interviewed had spoken about violent or abusive upbringings.

Despite a distinct increase in the number of women accessing homeless services, there has been a reduction in the amount of women-only accommodation. Yet even before that reduction, those services were already oversubscribed, because women, who suffered violent and abusive upbringings, are frequently terrified of mixed-gender facilities.

Cutting essential services at the time of greatest need is not only detrimental for the homeless, it is equally damaging for our society as a whole, because it is a damning indictment of the Government’s sense of priorities. Home

More from the Irish Examiner