Tue. Nov 5th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Since Hanaa found out she needs to leave her affordable one-bedroom unit by the end of the year she has felt “sick”.

“I haven’t been able to sleep,” she said.

“Where am I going to go on my own?”

Hanaa first came to Australia as a refugee in 2016. Two years before she had fled Iraq after ISIS invaded her village.

Unable to afford a private rental, in 2017 Centrelink suggested she live in a St Vincent’s Care Services facility in Eltham.

The previously derelict units had been renovated by St Vincent’s to house Syrian and Iraqi refugees after the Abbott Government announced Australia would take an extra 12,000 people fleeing the region in 2015.

At first, Hanaa was uneasy in her new environment – now she loves it here.

“I saw all the Arabs living here, all the facilities [and] all the volunteers helping,” she said.

“Now I’m used to being here, I feel safe.”

St Vincent’s Care Services chief executive Lincoln Hopper said at least 60 refugees were housed in the independent living units, which are located on the same grounds as an aged care facility.

At the end of the initial two-year project Mr Hopper said they “successfully transitioned around two-thirds of the original refugee group into suitable, alternative housing elsewhere in the community”.

“The remainder (about 20 people) stayed at our Eltham site because they were aged 55 and over, meeting the zoning requirements of the accommodation,” Mr Hopper said.

“Other non-refugee tenants have moved into the housing over the intervening period.”

Hanaa is now one of 52 tenants living in the affordable units St Vincent’s plan to decommission by the end of 2023.

Buildings becoming ‘uninhabitable’

Last year Mr Hopper said a third-party property consultant found the units were deteriorating significantly due to problems including water and termite damage.

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