Migration trends and people leaving direct provision driving homelessness, Government paper shows

The six-page document – which the Department of Housing only released following an appeal under FOI laws – said that single adults exiting international protection accommodation were now the “main reason” for new presentations for emergency housing in Dublin.
Migration trends and people leaving direct provision driving homelessness, Government paper shows

Ken Foxe

A confidential government paper warned that rising numbers of people leaving direct provision and wider migration trends were among the most significant factors driving homelessness.

The six-page document – which the Department of Housing only released following an appeal under FOI laws – said that single adults exiting international protection accommodation were now the “main reason” for new presentations for emergency housing in Dublin.

It said non-Irish nationals were “over-represented” in homeless services when compared with their share of the overall population.

The paper said pressures on housing were rising due to the number of applicants being granted international protection.

It said this was a particular problem when it came to family reunification, with successful refugees allowed to bring spouses or kids to live in Ireland.

The research said: “This has been reported by the local authorities as presenting challenges where family reunification is granted and no accommodation is available, frequently requiring the provision of emergency accommodation.

“As the numbers of people granted international protection increases, there is potential for increased pressures in this area.”

At the time it was written, 46 per cent of the more than 10,000 adults in homeless accommodation were not Irish citizens.

Of those, around 25 per cent were from non-European Economic Area (EEA) countries and 22 per cent were from Europe or the UK.

In Dublin, the proportion of non-Irish adults was higher at 54 percent, the paper said.

The department warned that future social housing demand could rise further as thousands of beneficiaries of temporary protection, mainly Ukrainians, approach five years’ residence in the state.

It said that after that time, they may qualify for social housing if renewal of their permission to remain in Ireland continues.

At that stage, 110,000 people had been granted temporary protection, around 59,000 of whom were in state-supported accommodation.

The paper, which was prepared for the Department of the Taoiseach, said Ireland’s future population growth was “very hard to project.”

It said future housing demand would be highly dependent on how many new people came to Ireland and that county councils would need additional resources.

However, it said the benefits to Ireland of migration were clear, including higher labour force participation, especially in essential services like health and social care.

The paper warned that continuing growth will need to be matched with more housing, improved homelessness supports, and infrastructure.

The Department of Housing had withheld the document for almost a year, saying it was prepared for the Taoiseach’s department to help plan national policy and strategy.

During an appeal under FOI laws, they told the Information Commissioner (OIC) there was “much public discourse around migration” and that release of the draft document “risks creating an incorrect or fragmented perception of the situation and the direction of public policy.”

In its decision, the OIC said they could not see how the release of the document would damage the proper working of the Government and directed its release.

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