A spotlight on Homelessness Week in Wellington

Origami houses at Parliament House in Melbourne highlight housing and homelessness crisis. Photo: Contributed

Community sector agencies and community groups across Victoria are seeking to fold 60,000 origami houses to highlight the scale of Victoria’s homelessness crisis.

The 60,000 houses represents the number of households who are on the Victorian Housing Register needing public or community housing immediately.

The 6000 origami houses (representing 10 per cent of the 60,000) was presented at state parliament last Wednesday (July 31), in preparation for Homelessness Week (August 5-11) in a Houses at Parliament campaign to demand more action to build more public and community housing.

There are a number of ways you can be involved in the campaign.

The Victorian Homelessness Network has campaign kits, a kit developed for schools, social media tiles, instructions on how to fold the paper houses and ideas for getting others involved. Anyone can add to the tally of houses folded.

There has been an increase in the number of people approaching local agencies for support due to homelessness.

Across the Gippsland region in the 2023/24 financial year, more than 3920 people accessed a Homelessness Entry Point seeking assistance and support.

In March, there was 7179 households on the Victorian Housing Register (VHR) that have chosen a broadband within the Gippsland region, 1108 in Wellington Shire.

These households are on the priority VHR and have demonstrated they are experiencing homelessness and/or family violence.

The Wellington Shire members of the Gippsland Homelessness Network are holding an event at the Gippsland Centre Sale on this Friday, (August 9) during National Homelessness Week in partnership with other local services.

The Gippsland Homelessness Network Co-ordinator, Chris McNamara says community support for the campaign shows Victorians are demanding the government take action and step up to end homelessness for good.

Victoria’s homelessness crisis is unacceptable, and local homelessness agencies are calling for urgent solutions.

“The first step to ending homelessness is ensuring people have access to housing they can afford. There needs to be a commitment to build a pipeline of public and community housing,” Chris McNamara said.

The theme for this year’s National Homelessness Week is ‘Homelessness ACTION NOW!’

To get involved or for more information on the Houses at Parliament campaign see vhn.org.au/housesatparliament