Homelessness, mental illness, Australia being unequal for vulnerable people
Thereโs an aggressive mentally ill homeless man thatโs been coming around my place for ages and now heโs sleeping on a bench right outside my window.
So I get to be too scared to put my bin out and he gets to freeze because itโs not safe for me to approach or help him.
Hate the guyโs guts (heโs aggressively had a go at me before and is virulently homophobic) but I donโt want to watch him freeze or have to deal with him.
Iโve been calling the cops for months, psych triage, the local homeless services, nothing has been working.
The best I have is from today - Launch agreeing to pass a โsleep siteโ on to their outreach team to check. But they donโt come out at night and I donโt know where this scary stranger goes in the day. He also drinks which might exclude him from dorm style shelters (which donโt apparently exist in Australia the way you think of them?) and may also not have the awareness to accept help.
Itโs just one of those deteriorating revolving door situations that never ever gets solved. Australiaโs systems are broken. Very surprising for a so called rich country.
Can you somehow make the bench unusable? I get that might be considered cruel but you shouldn't be scared in your own home or to be able to step out of it.
Yeah but are you a part-time drunk or a full-time one because the full-time ones will piss and shit themselves and still carry on mingling with the public.
It goes against my beliefs - Iโm really not a fan of anti-homeless architecture. Unfortunately I donโt want to give him a yoga mat for padding either because that encourages him to use that spotโฆ
Thereโs a disused flat nearby with a porch he could move to but I donโt think he knows itโs vacant. Also itโs still very close to me :/
Itโs not your responsibility to make it a hospitable place for him. Youโve already done the right things to get help for him, and now you need to look after your own safety. Make it unwelcoming for him to sleep there, he may move on if youโre lucky.
There were signs up around the apartment block where we live recently warning about a homeless guy who had been trespassing, and to call strata and the police if you see him.
Just from the photo, he looked creepy AF!
Apparently he spent a couple of nights in the basement carpark, and cut power to the building's alarm system one night. (The strata managers only found out after they reviewed the CCTV footage.)
And anyone angry and drunk shouting homophobic slurs is always scary.
So I can definitely relate to how you must be feeling!
You're doing the right thing by trying to help. But I agree it really is shameful how much our pollies have cut the social safety net these past 40-odd years (and both major parties are to blame!). It means people who need help often don't get it.