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Housing crisis ahead: Protesters set up camp in middle of busy Melbourne road

The encampment is drawing attention to the plight of homeless people during National Homelessness Week.
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housing crisis ahead sign at the camp

A median strip on a busy Melbourne peak-hour thoroughfare has been transformed into a mini tent city for National Homelessness Week, with a small group of protesters trying to draw attention to the housing and homelessness crisis. 

In the middle of Saint Georges Road in the suburb of Preston, around half a dozen people have been sleeping in tents for the week-long action. Protesters Shannon and Justin sit on camp chairs and share their thoughts behind setting up the site. 

“We just want to let people know that people are homeless and need help,” Shannon says. 

Shannon and Justin sitting at the camp. Image: Jarni Blakkarly

“Homelessness is swept under the rug quite a lot, a lot of homeless people do try and hide themselves, people feel like they aren’t part of society. We are here, bringing it into the open, putting signs up so people see us and to know there are rough sleepers out there,” he adds. 

Neither Shannon nor Justin are homeless at the moment, but they have been in insecure housing for most of their lives and have slept rough in the past.

“I’ve hardly ever had a lease in my name, so you can just be turfed out at any point. I worry about what would happen if I ever had to look for another rental,” Justin says.

Sign reads ‘Homelessness its pretty in tents’. Image: Jarni Blakkarly

A largely invisible problem

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, at the last Census count in 2021 there were around 30,000 Victorians who were homeless. The majority of those were in temporary, insecure or unsafe housing, with those sleeping rough representing a minority of homeless people. 

Sign reads ‘100,000 empty homes, 30,000 homeless’. Image: Jarni Blakkarly

Tanya Corrie, chair of the North Homelessness Network, says those sleeping rough are just the “tip of the iceberg”.

“There are so many forms of homelessness that people don’t see. So much unsuitable and unsafe accommodation. We are seeing an increase in homelessness across the region and homeless services are at a breaking point,” she says. 

One of the biggest trends, Corrie adds, is the increase in working people seeking housing crisis support services. The majority of those seeking help across the state are women, many with children. 

“The need for services is greater than ever, yet as providers we are scrambling every year just to get the crumbs [of government funding] rather than being funded as an essential service,” she says. 

 The majority of those seeking help across the state are women, many with children

Shannon and Justin say that along with government support for housing there needs to be a change of attitude in society towards homeless people. 

“When you are sleeping rough you are on the down low, you don’t want to be seen by people out there. There is shame attached to it, but there shouldn’t be, it’s not the homeless person’s fault they are homeless, we have got a system that is failing us,” Justin says.


I started journalism at the Malaysian online news organisation Malaysiakini in 2013, before returning to Australia to study a Bachelor of Communications (Journalism) at RMIT in Melbourne. Before joining CHOICE, I worked for four years with SBS News as investigative journalist, digital journalist, cadet and South Australian correspondent. I've worked internationally in Malaysia and Indonesia and on a freelance basis for Al Jazeera English, ABC 730, Radio National, Reuters, BBC World Service and Deutsche Welle. I was winner of the Walkley Foundation's Young Journalist of the Year student category award in 2016 and the recipient of a Melbourne Press Club Michael Gordon Fellowship in 2022. In 2023 I was a Highly Commended finalist in the Quill Awards and I was a winner at the 2024 Excellence in Civil Liberties Journalism Awards. I am a proud member of the journalist's union the MEAA and in 2024 I was elected to serve on the Federal Council (National Media Section). You can find me on Twitter and LinkedIn. Recent articles by Jarni Groceries cost more than twice as much in remote First Nations communities Drive one of these car brands? This is how much of your data they're tracking Medical centres forcing patients to share their personal data Facial recognition technology in use at major Australian stadiums First Nations people missing tens of millions in super

I started journalism at the Malaysian online news organisation Malaysiakini in 2013, before returning to Australia to study a Bachelor of Communications (Journalism) at RMIT in Melbourne. Before joining CHOICE, I worked for four years with SBS News as investigative journalist, digital journalist, cadet and South Australian correspondent. I've worked internationally in Malaysia and Indonesia and on a freelance basis for Al Jazeera English, ABC 730, Radio National, Reuters, BBC World Service and Deutsche Welle. I was winner of the Walkley Foundation's Young Journalist of the Year student category award in 2016 and the recipient of a Melbourne Press Club Michael Gordon Fellowship in 2022. In 2023 I was a Highly Commended finalist in the Quill Awards and I was a winner at the 2024 Excellence in Civil Liberties Journalism Awards. I am a proud member of the journalist's union the MEAA and in 2024 I was elected to serve on the Federal Council (National Media Section). You can find me on Twitter and LinkedIn. Recent articles by Jarni Groceries cost more than twice as much in remote First Nations communities Drive one of these car brands? This is how much of your data they're tracking Medical centres forcing patients to share their personal data Facial recognition technology in use at major Australian stadiums First Nations people missing tens of millions in super