Government failure fuels record homelessness
Government failure fuels record homelessness - The Labour Party
- 4,775 children in emergency accommodation, Government on a go-slow
Labour’s Conor Sheehan TD has said the publication of the latest homelessness figures — showing a record 15,580 people, including 4,775 children, in emergency accommodation — must be a wake-up call for Government. The figures, published today by the Department of Housing, expose the growing scale of a crisis that has spiralled under the watch of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael. Labour is calling for urgent action: a major investment in public housing, stronger protections for renters, and a dramatic reduction in the State’s over-reliance on the private market to deliver homes.
Deputy Sheehan said:
“It has become completely normalised that homelessness figures climb higher every month. This is no longer a housing crisis – it is a housing disaster, and Government is responding with inertia. We cannot accept a situation where 4,775 children have no place to call home. That is the appalling vista we are now living in.
“To have one child in homelessness is a national scandal. But to have 4,775 — in one of the wealthiest countries in the world — is nothing short of a national emergency. This Government is failing these children. The State has the resources to solve this crisis, but not the political will.
“Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael have been promising solutions for years — but what have we seen? Record homelessness, unaffordable rents, and families living under unbearable pressure. While these two parties continue their go-slow approach, thousands of children are being failed. Labour believes we cannot wait any longer.
“We need to create homes that people can afford — homes for families, for young people, and for future generations. We need to build public housing at scale and introduce stronger protections for renters to give people peace of mind and security. We need homes that work for everyone, not just for investors.
“Ireland should never have allowed things to reach this point. But we are here now, and it is time for Government to act like it understands the scale of the crisis. Housing is the issue that defines the future of this country — and the future for the 4,775 children in emergency accommodation is hanging in the balance.
“Government must now turn the tide on this national scandal. They must stop outsourcing housing responsibility to the private market and deliver the public and affordable homes that Ireland so desperately needs.”