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Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence

Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence

Perth Now4 hours ago
Women and children escaping family violence are being "ping-ponged" between services, as support sectors try to manage inadequate resources and critical underfunding.
In Victoria, family violence is the biggest driver of homelessness.
In 2022/23, more than half of all women, young people and children who visited a specialist homelessness service reported they were experiencing family violence.
Yet a report by Council to Homeless Persons and Safe and Equal found about one in five victim-survivors receives two referrals to homelessness or family violence services, but ultimately ends up with no crisis accommodation.
Chronic underinvestment in social housing is being blamed for increasingly long waitlists with women, young people and children who have family violence prioritisation waiting 19 months for accommodation.
"What homelessness looks like in Victoria today is a woman aged between 25 and 39 with a child under the age of 11 with her," Council to Homeless Persons chief executive Deborah Di Natale told AAP.
"Imagine fleeing violence with your children, knocking on two different doors, and still sleeping in your car that night."
Ms Di Natale said a staggering 20 per cent of women fleeing violence experienced a "revolving door" of referrals to various services but ultimately were not able to access accommodation.
"Often because the crisis and emergency accommodation isn't there, services end up referring people to hotels and motels which aren't set up to respond to family violence," she said.
But women were opting to sleep in their cars or return to their violent partners rather than stay in motels and caravan parks.
"People with lived experience say staying in motels is often scarier than staying in a violent household ... they worry they are not safe from the person using violence," Ms Di Natale said.
"Being crammed in a hotel with kids after fleeing your home without any wraparound supports like counselling is isolating."
The report makes 10 key recommendations to the Victorian government to enable immediate and long-term change.
These include building 7990 new and additional social homes every year for 10 years and funding services that provide immediate and appropriate responses to people experiencing family violence and homelessness.
It also recommends the state government invest in perpetrator interventions and advocate for all social payments to be brought above the Henderson poverty line of $612.18 per week, per single person.
"Women and children are disproportionately affected by homelessness brought on by threats to their physical and psychological safety," Ms Di Natale said.
"We must improve our systems to protect them."
1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)
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'It's rife': third of young workers report wage theft
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'It's rife': third of young workers report wage theft

Cafe worker Mia McDowall was initially shocked to discover she'd been underpaid by thousands of dollars but soon learnt it's an experience all too common in the hospitality industry. The 22-year-old has worked for multiple employers who either didn't pay her correctly, forced her to work through legally mandated breaks or didn't pass on deducted superannuation to her fund. "Wage theft is absolutely rife, for sure," Ms McDowall told AAP. "I know more people my age who have spent any significant amount of time in hospitality that have had wages lost than haven't." Ms McDowall is among more than one in three young workers who report being ripped off, according to University of Melbourne research released on Tuesday. Two-thirds were forced to pay for work-related items such as uniforms or protective equipment, almost one-third were not paid compulsory super and more than one-third were banned from taking entitled breaks. One in five said they had been paid off the books, almost 10 per cent were paid in food or products and eight per cent said they never received a pay slip. "The extent of all the different ways that people are being denied their entitlements or employers are breaking the law shocked me," study lead John Howe said. "The majority of employers are doing the right thing, but there's obviously a significant proportion of employers cutting corners with their young workers wherever they can." About one-third reported being paid as little as $15 a hour, well below the national minimum wage of $24.95 per hour, but Professor Howe worries the true scale of underpayments could be greater. "It could be a lot higher, because a lot of workers weren't sure if they were being underpaid," he said. "Vulnerable workers are worried about raising complaints or asking questions about their entitlements because they don't want to jeopardise their job." 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"It's so important that we are teaching young people how to determine what their pay should be and how to teach people how to have those conversations," she said. Cafe worker Mia McDowall was initially shocked to discover she'd been underpaid by thousands of dollars but soon learnt it's an experience all too common in the hospitality industry. The 22-year-old has worked for multiple employers who either didn't pay her correctly, forced her to work through legally mandated breaks or didn't pass on deducted superannuation to her fund. "Wage theft is absolutely rife, for sure," Ms McDowall told AAP. "I know more people my age who have spent any significant amount of time in hospitality that have had wages lost than haven't." Ms McDowall is among more than one in three young workers who report being ripped off, according to University of Melbourne research released on Tuesday. Two-thirds were forced to pay for work-related items such as uniforms or protective equipment, almost one-third were not paid compulsory super and more than one-third were banned from taking entitled breaks. One in five said they had been paid off the books, almost 10 per cent were paid in food or products and eight per cent said they never received a pay slip. "The extent of all the different ways that people are being denied their entitlements or employers are breaking the law shocked me," study lead John Howe said. "The majority of employers are doing the right thing, but there's obviously a significant proportion of employers cutting corners with their young workers wherever they can." About one-third reported being paid as little as $15 a hour, well below the national minimum wage of $24.95 per hour, but Professor Howe worries the true scale of underpayments could be greater. "It could be a lot higher, because a lot of workers weren't sure if they were being underpaid," he said. "Vulnerable workers are worried about raising complaints or asking questions about their entitlements because they don't want to jeopardise their job." Researchers expected to find exploitation among hospitality workers but also identified workers being ripped off in utilities industries such as gas and water, agriculture, forestry and even unionised workforces, including mining. Some 2814 workers younger than 30 took part in the survey conducted by the Melbourne Law School as part of its Fair Day's Work project. Only one in three reported seeking help from a union or body such as the Fair Work Ombudsman, with Prof Howe recalling many expressed helplessness over their situation. Now a women's organiser for Trades Hall, Ms McDowall believes her experiences fighting for her minimum entitlements were vital in gaining the skills she needs in her new career. She encouraged anyone to stick up for themselves, pointing to the Fair Work Wage Calculator and Young Workers Centre as great places to start. "It's so important that we are teaching young people how to determine what their pay should be and how to teach people how to have those conversations," she said. Cafe worker Mia McDowall was initially shocked to discover she'd been underpaid by thousands of dollars but soon learnt it's an experience all too common in the hospitality industry. The 22-year-old has worked for multiple employers who either didn't pay her correctly, forced her to work through legally mandated breaks or didn't pass on deducted superannuation to her fund. "Wage theft is absolutely rife, for sure," Ms McDowall told AAP. "I know more people my age who have spent any significant amount of time in hospitality that have had wages lost than haven't." Ms McDowall is among more than one in three young workers who report being ripped off, according to University of Melbourne research released on Tuesday. Two-thirds were forced to pay for work-related items such as uniforms or protective equipment, almost one-third were not paid compulsory super and more than one-third were banned from taking entitled breaks. One in five said they had been paid off the books, almost 10 per cent were paid in food or products and eight per cent said they never received a pay slip. "The extent of all the different ways that people are being denied their entitlements or employers are breaking the law shocked me," study lead John Howe said. "The majority of employers are doing the right thing, but there's obviously a significant proportion of employers cutting corners with their young workers wherever they can." About one-third reported being paid as little as $15 a hour, well below the national minimum wage of $24.95 per hour, but Professor Howe worries the true scale of underpayments could be greater. "It could be a lot higher, because a lot of workers weren't sure if they were being underpaid," he said. "Vulnerable workers are worried about raising complaints or asking questions about their entitlements because they don't want to jeopardise their job." Researchers expected to find exploitation among hospitality workers but also identified workers being ripped off in utilities industries such as gas and water, agriculture, forestry and even unionised workforces, including mining. Some 2814 workers younger than 30 took part in the survey conducted by the Melbourne Law School as part of its Fair Day's Work project. Only one in three reported seeking help from a union or body such as the Fair Work Ombudsman, with Prof Howe recalling many expressed helplessness over their situation. 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"I know more people my age who have spent any significant amount of time in hospitality that have had wages lost than haven't." Ms McDowall is among more than one in three young workers who report being ripped off, according to University of Melbourne research released on Tuesday. Two-thirds were forced to pay for work-related items such as uniforms or protective equipment, almost one-third were not paid compulsory super and more than one-third were banned from taking entitled breaks. One in five said they had been paid off the books, almost 10 per cent were paid in food or products and eight per cent said they never received a pay slip. "The extent of all the different ways that people are being denied their entitlements or employers are breaking the law shocked me," study lead John Howe said. "The majority of employers are doing the right thing, but there's obviously a significant proportion of employers cutting corners with their young workers wherever they can." About one-third reported being paid as little as $15 a hour, well below the national minimum wage of $24.95 per hour, but Professor Howe worries the true scale of underpayments could be greater. "It could be a lot higher, because a lot of workers weren't sure if they were being underpaid," he said. "Vulnerable workers are worried about raising complaints or asking questions about their entitlements because they don't want to jeopardise their job." Researchers expected to find exploitation among hospitality workers but also identified workers being ripped off in utilities industries such as gas and water, agriculture, forestry and even unionised workforces, including mining. Some 2814 workers younger than 30 took part in the survey conducted by the Melbourne Law School as part of its Fair Day's Work project. Only one in three reported seeking help from a union or body such as the Fair Work Ombudsman, with Prof Howe recalling many expressed helplessness over their situation. Now a women's organiser for Trades Hall, Ms McDowall believes her experiences fighting for her minimum entitlements were vital in gaining the skills she needs in her new career. She encouraged anyone to stick up for themselves, pointing to the Fair Work Wage Calculator and Young Workers Centre as great places to start. "It's so important that we are teaching young people how to determine what their pay should be and how to teach people how to have those conversations," she said.

Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence
Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence

Women and children escaping family violence are being "ping-ponged" between services, as support sectors try to manage inadequate resources and critical underfunding. In Victoria, family violence is the biggest driver of homelessness. In 2022/23, more than half of all women, young people and children who visited a specialist homelessness service reported they were experiencing family violence. Yet a report by Council to Homeless Persons and Safe and Equal found about one in five victim-survivors receives two referrals to homelessness or family violence services, but ultimately ends up with no crisis accommodation. Chronic underinvestment in social housing is being blamed for increasingly long waitlists with women, young people and children who have family violence prioritisation waiting 19 months for accommodation. "What homelessness looks like in Victoria today is a woman aged between 25 and 39 with a child under the age of 11 with her," Council to Homeless Persons chief executive Deborah Di Natale told AAP. "Imagine fleeing violence with your children, knocking on two different doors, and still sleeping in your car that night." Ms Di Natale said a staggering 20 per cent of women fleeing violence experienced a "revolving door" of referrals to various services but ultimately were not able to access accommodation. "Often because the crisis and emergency accommodation isn't there, services end up referring people to hotels and motels which aren't set up to respond to family violence," she said. But women were opting to sleep in their cars or return to their violent partners rather than stay in motels and caravan parks. "People with lived experience say staying in motels is often scarier than staying in a violent household ... they worry they are not safe from the person using violence," Ms Di Natale said. "Being crammed in a hotel with kids after fleeing your home without any wraparound supports like counselling is isolating." The report makes 10 key recommendations to the Victorian government to enable immediate and long-term change. These include building 7990 new and additional social homes every year for 10 years and funding services that provide immediate and appropriate responses to people experiencing family violence and homelessness. It also recommends the state government invest in perpetrator interventions and advocate for all social payments to be brought above the Henderson poverty line of $612.18 per week, per single person. "Women and children are disproportionately affected by homelessness brought on by threats to their physical and psychological safety," Ms Di Natale said. "We must improve our systems to protect them." 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 Women and children escaping family violence are being "ping-ponged" between services, as support sectors try to manage inadequate resources and critical underfunding. In Victoria, family violence is the biggest driver of homelessness. In 2022/23, more than half of all women, young people and children who visited a specialist homelessness service reported they were experiencing family violence. Yet a report by Council to Homeless Persons and Safe and Equal found about one in five victim-survivors receives two referrals to homelessness or family violence services, but ultimately ends up with no crisis accommodation. Chronic underinvestment in social housing is being blamed for increasingly long waitlists with women, young people and children who have family violence prioritisation waiting 19 months for accommodation. "What homelessness looks like in Victoria today is a woman aged between 25 and 39 with a child under the age of 11 with her," Council to Homeless Persons chief executive Deborah Di Natale told AAP. "Imagine fleeing violence with your children, knocking on two different doors, and still sleeping in your car that night." Ms Di Natale said a staggering 20 per cent of women fleeing violence experienced a "revolving door" of referrals to various services but ultimately were not able to access accommodation. "Often because the crisis and emergency accommodation isn't there, services end up referring people to hotels and motels which aren't set up to respond to family violence," she said. But women were opting to sleep in their cars or return to their violent partners rather than stay in motels and caravan parks. "People with lived experience say staying in motels is often scarier than staying in a violent household ... they worry they are not safe from the person using violence," Ms Di Natale said. "Being crammed in a hotel with kids after fleeing your home without any wraparound supports like counselling is isolating." The report makes 10 key recommendations to the Victorian government to enable immediate and long-term change. These include building 7990 new and additional social homes every year for 10 years and funding services that provide immediate and appropriate responses to people experiencing family violence and homelessness. It also recommends the state government invest in perpetrator interventions and advocate for all social payments to be brought above the Henderson poverty line of $612.18 per week, per single person. "Women and children are disproportionately affected by homelessness brought on by threats to their physical and psychological safety," Ms Di Natale said. "We must improve our systems to protect them." 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 Women and children escaping family violence are being "ping-ponged" between services, as support sectors try to manage inadequate resources and critical underfunding. In Victoria, family violence is the biggest driver of homelessness. In 2022/23, more than half of all women, young people and children who visited a specialist homelessness service reported they were experiencing family violence. Yet a report by Council to Homeless Persons and Safe and Equal found about one in five victim-survivors receives two referrals to homelessness or family violence services, but ultimately ends up with no crisis accommodation. Chronic underinvestment in social housing is being blamed for increasingly long waitlists with women, young people and children who have family violence prioritisation waiting 19 months for accommodation. "What homelessness looks like in Victoria today is a woman aged between 25 and 39 with a child under the age of 11 with her," Council to Homeless Persons chief executive Deborah Di Natale told AAP. "Imagine fleeing violence with your children, knocking on two different doors, and still sleeping in your car that night." Ms Di Natale said a staggering 20 per cent of women fleeing violence experienced a "revolving door" of referrals to various services but ultimately were not able to access accommodation. "Often because the crisis and emergency accommodation isn't there, services end up referring people to hotels and motels which aren't set up to respond to family violence," she said. But women were opting to sleep in their cars or return to their violent partners rather than stay in motels and caravan parks. "People with lived experience say staying in motels is often scarier than staying in a violent household ... they worry they are not safe from the person using violence," Ms Di Natale said. "Being crammed in a hotel with kids after fleeing your home without any wraparound supports like counselling is isolating." The report makes 10 key recommendations to the Victorian government to enable immediate and long-term change. These include building 7990 new and additional social homes every year for 10 years and funding services that provide immediate and appropriate responses to people experiencing family violence and homelessness. It also recommends the state government invest in perpetrator interventions and advocate for all social payments to be brought above the Henderson poverty line of $612.18 per week, per single person. "Women and children are disproportionately affected by homelessness brought on by threats to their physical and psychological safety," Ms Di Natale said. "We must improve our systems to protect them." 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 Women and children escaping family violence are being "ping-ponged" between services, as support sectors try to manage inadequate resources and critical underfunding. In Victoria, family violence is the biggest driver of homelessness. In 2022/23, more than half of all women, young people and children who visited a specialist homelessness service reported they were experiencing family violence. Yet a report by Council to Homeless Persons and Safe and Equal found about one in five victim-survivors receives two referrals to homelessness or family violence services, but ultimately ends up with no crisis accommodation. Chronic underinvestment in social housing is being blamed for increasingly long waitlists with women, young people and children who have family violence prioritisation waiting 19 months for accommodation. "What homelessness looks like in Victoria today is a woman aged between 25 and 39 with a child under the age of 11 with her," Council to Homeless Persons chief executive Deborah Di Natale told AAP. "Imagine fleeing violence with your children, knocking on two different doors, and still sleeping in your car that night." Ms Di Natale said a staggering 20 per cent of women fleeing violence experienced a "revolving door" of referrals to various services but ultimately were not able to access accommodation. "Often because the crisis and emergency accommodation isn't there, services end up referring people to hotels and motels which aren't set up to respond to family violence," she said. But women were opting to sleep in their cars or return to their violent partners rather than stay in motels and caravan parks. "People with lived experience say staying in motels is often scarier than staying in a violent household ... they worry they are not safe from the person using violence," Ms Di Natale said. "Being crammed in a hotel with kids after fleeing your home without any wraparound supports like counselling is isolating." The report makes 10 key recommendations to the Victorian government to enable immediate and long-term change. These include building 7990 new and additional social homes every year for 10 years and funding services that provide immediate and appropriate responses to people experiencing family violence and homelessness. It also recommends the state government invest in perpetrator interventions and advocate for all social payments to be brought above the Henderson poverty line of $612.18 per week, per single person. "Women and children are disproportionately affected by homelessness brought on by threats to their physical and psychological safety," Ms Di Natale said. "We must improve our systems to protect them." 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491

Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence
Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence

Perth Now

time4 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Service gap a revolving door for women fleeing violence

Women and children escaping family violence are being "ping-ponged" between services, as support sectors try to manage inadequate resources and critical underfunding. In Victoria, family violence is the biggest driver of homelessness. In 2022/23, more than half of all women, young people and children who visited a specialist homelessness service reported they were experiencing family violence. Yet a report by Council to Homeless Persons and Safe and Equal found about one in five victim-survivors receives two referrals to homelessness or family violence services, but ultimately ends up with no crisis accommodation. Chronic underinvestment in social housing is being blamed for increasingly long waitlists with women, young people and children who have family violence prioritisation waiting 19 months for accommodation. "What homelessness looks like in Victoria today is a woman aged between 25 and 39 with a child under the age of 11 with her," Council to Homeless Persons chief executive Deborah Di Natale told AAP. "Imagine fleeing violence with your children, knocking on two different doors, and still sleeping in your car that night." Ms Di Natale said a staggering 20 per cent of women fleeing violence experienced a "revolving door" of referrals to various services but ultimately were not able to access accommodation. "Often because the crisis and emergency accommodation isn't there, services end up referring people to hotels and motels which aren't set up to respond to family violence," she said. But women were opting to sleep in their cars or return to their violent partners rather than stay in motels and caravan parks. "People with lived experience say staying in motels is often scarier than staying in a violent household ... they worry they are not safe from the person using violence," Ms Di Natale said. "Being crammed in a hotel with kids after fleeing your home without any wraparound supports like counselling is isolating." The report makes 10 key recommendations to the Victorian government to enable immediate and long-term change. These include building 7990 new and additional social homes every year for 10 years and funding services that provide immediate and appropriate responses to people experiencing family violence and homelessness. It also recommends the state government invest in perpetrator interventions and advocate for all social payments to be brought above the Henderson poverty line of $612.18 per week, per single person. "Women and children are disproportionately affected by homelessness brought on by threats to their physical and psychological safety," Ms Di Natale said. "We must improve our systems to protect them." 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491

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