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Warrigunya Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporation

Warrigunya On-Country Housing

Warrigunya On-Country Housing

Warrigunya provides safe, supported accomodation for men leaving prison. We have spent the last four years consulting, planning, liaising, building, and we h...

australia > VIC > regional
01/07/2024 > 30/06/2072

FIELD OF INTEREST

  • Indigenous Communities
  • Education & training

TARGET POPULATION

  • Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander Peoples
  • People experiencing or at risk of homelessness

PROJECT SUMMARY

Warrigunya provides safe, supported accomodation for men leaving prison. We have spent the last four years consulting, planning, liaising, building, and we have constructed four self contained units, a common room/large kitchen, laundry, office, public toilets and workshop on our 20 acre site at Darriman in Gippsland, Victoria.

We will provide holistic support and healing opportunities to enable the men to take a different path in life, one that leads away from prison and towards their families, community, and financial stability. This project is based on interviews with prisoners, people who support them in the justice and community service systems and their families.

The imprisonment rate for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Victorians is significantly higher than the rate for the total Victorian population and the gap continues to widen. The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander imprisonment rate almost doubled between 2011 and 2021, from 965.2 to 1903.5 per 100,000 adults. This is compared to a smaller growth in the overall imprisonment rate, from 110.2 to 138.7. In Victoria the prison population grew by 1% from 2020 to 2021, but for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, it increased by 6%.
According to a AIHW survey, homelessness is far more common among people in contact with the prison system than among people in the general community. About one-third (33%) of prison entrants said they were homeless in the 4 weeks before prison. Furthermore, the link between unstable housing and offending for Aboriginal is recognised in the Victorian Aboriginal Housing and Homelessness Framework Overview, “for those in contact with the justice system unstable housing can precipitate offending and housing is often a condition of bail, parole and corrections orders. Rehabilitation and reintegration into the community rely on stable housing. (AHV3, 2020, p.6).

The lack of social housing in the regional area of Gippsland is extreme and has been well documented in the recent parliamentary enquiry into homelessness (Hansard, 2019). Undertaking a review of current government strategies relating to housing and homelessness and through local consultation, it became clear that the housing crisis in the region had worsened, with people unable to be helped by agencies such as Aboriginal Housing Victoria and Community Housing Ltd due to shortages of housing stock. Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations reported that they were regularly supporting Aboriginal men exiting prison who, within a very short time, found themselves homeless and “sucked back” into a life where return to prison was inevitable.
Often those leaving prison are discharged into a few nights in a motel and then homelessness – sleeping rough on the street or for the lucky ones, on a mate’s couch. We have spoken to Aboriginal men who have found it so difficult on the outside, after the strictly controlled environment in prison, that they deliberately reoffend in order to go back to prison where they will be fed and have somewhere to sleep.
The need for supported transitional housing for Aboriginal men exiting prison that embraces healing as its foundation and embedded in program and service delivery and design was raised across the broad range of stakeholders consulted.

PROJECT OUTCOMES

At its core our project is about reducing contact of Aboriginal men with the Justice System and returning them to healthy relationships with their families, communities and society. We provide a base of stable housing on our 20 acre site, as the foundation, and build on this by employing supportive, knowledgeable staff the men can trust. Before leaving prison, the men will develop a plan for their time at Warrigunya, the goals they wish to achieve to take steps towards a more meaningful and fulfilling life. During the 12 month stay at Warrigunya, the men will walk alongside the staff/mentors who will provide the connections in healing, training and employment opportunities necessary for them to reach their full potential.

Two way learning will be the basis of interactions at Warrigunya - learning from both Western and Indigenous systems of knowledge. The name Warrigunya is a mix of Western and Aboriginal words chosen by the men in Fulham Correctional Centre because they know they need to walk in two worlds. Two-way learning depends on ongoing relationships, understanding and respect between Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and the broader community. The Holistic Support and Wellbeing Mentors at Warrigunya will provide the link to both these communities by outreach and liaison. As relationships are developed information can then be shared in a meaningful and lasting way.

By assisting Aboriginal men leaving prison to live in stable, structured, supportive and culturally safe accommodation for 12 months, providing access to Elders to build connection to culture and spirituality, and creating an environment where they can determine their own goals and strategies; the aim is to develop stronger ties with family, live fulfilling pro-social lives, and become active members of their communities. This solution will also help society as a whole; whereby international research has shown that the costs of intensive housing support are substantially less than the costs of imprisonment and the harms that result from reoffending.

Profile of Warrigunya Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporation

Warrigunya Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporation

Warrigunya's vision is to provide a collaborative holistic model of post release support, from a base of safe and stable housing, for Aboriginal men to enable them to readjust to life and to give them the best chance of becoming financially independent, culturally strong and not re-enter prison.

We are a registered charity, hold DGR1 status and are a not for profit Aboriginal Controlled Community Organisation registered with the Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations.

We secured a 20 acre block of land at Darriman on a 50 year peppercorn lease and became incorporated in 2021. In partnership with ACSO a $3M grant was applied for through Homes Victoria and the first stage of our build began construction in November 2022 and the first 4 of a total of 8 units will be completed in April 2024.

We also have sourced additional funding and donations to construct a large workshop with three phase power, which is fully equipped with woodworking and art materials.

BUDGET BREAKDOWN

TOTAL BUDGET: $628,150
FUNDING
Funding sourceAmount
Homes Vic 4 x Homelessness Packages x 2 years (confirmed)$96,000
Rental pa. estimate on 4 units (unconfirmed)$32,000
Other philanthropic sources (unconfirmed)$440,150
Funding gap (unconfirmed)$60,000
EXPENSES
Expense itemAmount
Salaries$368,000
Consultants (Elders)$16,000
Car (one off cost)$25,000
Car operational costs$20,000
Justice Forum$15,000
Utilities$17,000
Tenancy Management$15,000
Technology (licenses, support)$8,950
Brokerage (memberships, clothes, phones, training fees, linen)$14,000
Shared meals$12,000

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