Midlands Simon and Sophia warn of increased numbers sleeping rough in region

Sophia and Midlands Simon Community are raising concerns on the increased numbers of people sleeping rough in the midlands and are calling on the Government to act urgently to meet this growing need.

Midlands Simon Community provides emergency accommodation, outreach support and long term supported accommodation to people who are experiencing homelessness across the Midlands. Their outreach service encounters 30 people sleeping rough each quarter, and these numbers are growing.

June Carley, Midlands Simon Outreach worker, said that she is “coming across people rough sleeping in sheds, derelict buildings, under bridges and it’s not just towns, it’s in villages too".

Mark Cooney, Chairperson of Midlands Simon Community, said: "The perception is that homelessness is something that is confined to the large urban areas, it's not. It’s in the midlands, in rural areas, smaller towns and it doesn’t get the recognition and the funding it should."

Last year, the Government spent €1.3m on private B&B emergency accommodation in the Midlands, for every €1 that Midlands Simon Community receives in funding to provide homeless services it has to raise €1 in donations. This they say is unsustainable. They have said that there is an urgent need for increased funding to meet the needs of homeless people across the Midlands.

Mark Cooney, Chairperson of Midlands Simon, put the need starkly: "We’re struggling every month, looking to see if there’s enough money there to meet the wages and to keep the services going and we just need that additional funding to reflect what is happening."

Sophia and Midlands Simon Community are collaborative partners, together the two organisations provide supports to over 150 people the Midlands. In the coming years the two organisations have the potential to provide 145 supported homes for people in need of housing. However, Sophia and Midlands Simon Community CEO Tony O’Riordan has noted an urgent need to speed up the process of funding and approval of these projects to meet the growing and immediate need of people experiencing homelessness across the midlands.

Midlands Simon Community and Sophia have specialised in adapting and developing the Housing First model through providing housing with Support. The Midlands Simon Community’s Regional Support Service (homelessness) supports over 108 cases at any one time.

"We urgently need the Department of Housing to speed up the pace of reviewing applications and approving applications and bring an urgency to responding to the issue, which is now a crisis," said O'Riordan.

Sophia has been approached by Religious Congregations who are providing lands and buildings which are being developed into homes for people who have experienced homelessness across the Midlands. Two projects in Portlaoise and Portarlington are in advance stages of predevelopment, with the project in Portlaoise due to go to tender this year. Other sites such as the Franciscan Brothers in Clara have yet to get approval from the Government to move forward.