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Reduction in number of people sleeping rough in Dublin

Monday, 17 Apr 2023

Updated / Monday, 17 Apr 2023 17:19

The spring 2023 rough sleeper count has found that 83 people were

sleeping rough over a week in March (File image)

By Ailbhe Conneely

Social Affairs & Religion Correspondent

There was a 9% reduction in the number of people sleeping rough in

Dublin last month compared to spring and winter in 2022.

That is according to the latest Dublin Homeless Regional Executive

figures released this afternoon.

The Rough Sleeper Count takes place bi-annually to measure the level of

street homelessness in the Dublin region.

The count takes place over a full week, during which the Dublin Simon

Outreach team engage in an assessment of people sleeping rough, or at

risk of sleeping rough.

sleeping rough over the week 6 March to 12 March, 2023.

Most were aged between 26 and 45 and 71% were male.

Of those known to homeless services, 48% were using tents and 5% had

recently lost their tenancies.

During the course of the count week, 48% had a booking for Emergency

Accommodation on another night during the count week.

However, only 32% presented at their accommodation while the rest were

"no-shows".

The majority (79%) of individuals who were found rough sleeping in the

Dublin region during the March 2023 count were Irish, while a further

19% had EU citizenship. The remaining 3% had non-EU citizenship.

CEO of Dublin Simon Community Catherine Kenny described the reduction

as "very good news" and a testament to the hard work put in by

statutory providers to target the issue.

Speaking on RTÉ's Drivetime, she said that numbers are still "a little

high", but trends are going in the right direction.

Ms Kenny added that her team will continue to work until no one is

sleeping rough on the streets.

"We need to identify the long term housing options, need to continue to

tackle the housing market, both emergency accommodation and long-term

accommodation, for every one of those 83 and for those who remain in

short term insecure accommodation," she said.

The Peter McVerry Trust welcomed the decline in the number of people

sleeping rough in the city.

While it acknowledged that the decline is in the context of the growing

number of people entering homelessness nationally, its CEO Pat Doyle

described it as "a success to see the most vulnerable in our society

entrenched rough sleepers – moving on into their own home".

The Peter McVerry Trust says this was made possible by resources

provided by the DRHE through additional emergency beds, intensified

street outreach work by the trust and Dublin Simon and an increase in

Housing First targets for Dublin, which it says has seen more homes

secured for people who were sleeping rough across the city.

In a statement, Mr Doyle said key to reducing the number of people

sleeping rough is "Housing First". "Our Housing First Intake team

provide consistent and effective engagement with rough sleepers across

the city – enabling them to move into their own property and out of

homelessness for good," he said.