Department of Housing won’t comment on claims non-EU nationals may be removed from homeless list - Asylum Ireland

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Monday, May 7, 2018

Department of Housing won’t comment on claims non-EU nationals may be removed from homeless list

Department of Housing won’t comment on claims non-EU nationals may be removed from homeless list

THE DEPARTMENT OF Housing has declined to comment on claims that there were plans in train to remove non-EU nationals and those in long-term healthcare facilities from the official homeless figures.


Last week, TheJournal.ie revealed that Louth County Council had been instructed to remove certain categories of people from its official homeless numbers, including people the council itself deemed to be homeless.


The issue of growing monthly homeless figures has proved to be something of a thorn in Housing Minister Eoghan Murphy’s side, with much focus placed on the issue of Ireland’s national figure approaching the milestone 10,000 number for the first time.


This has led to accusations that the government is attempting to massage the figures in order to make them more presentable to the public.


A report in today’s Sunday Independent suggests that senior Housing officials had informed Murphy that hundreds of non-EU nationals, who may not be entitled to housing, and as many as 2,000 people in long-term healthcare, may be currently listed as being homeless in error.


That article suggests that Murphy is understood to be considering removing both cohorts of people from the monthly published figures.


TheJournal.ie contacted the department for comment regarding those claims.


A spokesperson, without addressing the issue of non-EU nationals directly, replied that the department is ‘awaiting’ a report from an interdepartmental group regarding the underlying causes of homelessness.


“The department along with the Dublin Regional Homeless Executive and local authorities continues to work to ensure that emergency accommodation is provided to all those who find themselves homeless,” they said.



The most important thing is that we show compassion for people in times of crisis. That is why we proceed on a care and shelter first basis.


Last month, Murphy told TheJournal.ie, following a delay in the publication of the monthly report on homelessness, that the government needs a better way of collating the figures in order to secure greater accuracy.


At present the Department of Housing receives individual reports from each local authority before compiling its own report.


‘Right to stay’


Housing charity Focus Ireland, meanwhile, suggested this morning, in response to the Independent’s reporting, that roughly five homeless families are “trying to prove their right to stay in Ireland”.




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