Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsBuilding a tiny house for youth

Building a tiny house for youth

Hannah attended Tewantin Primary then Sunshine Beach State High, dropping out of school at 15 when she experienced a complete breakdown of family relationships and mental health issues. She landed up living in a dilapidated party house with a group of youths, doing drugs and alcohol.

After six months and a few close calls, Hannah realised that she needed to get out and needed help.

Hannah was referred to Youturn (formerly United Synergies) and was accepted into their supported accommodation program where she lived for 12 months.

“Youturn gave me time to recover and process. I did not need to be nervous, on guard or weary or jump through people’s hoops,“ she said “They offered me a safe place – a haven. Youturn supported me with emotional counselling, teaching me about budgeting and even delivering food parcels when I could not make ends meet.“

After the year, Hannah met a guy, and soon after moving in fell pregnant. Unfortunately the relationship did not last but today she has a beautiful son – Harley, who is her reason for getting up each morning.

Hannah has consistently been employed since 2018, has a healthy lifestyle and has recently reached out to Youturn to help with their fundraising efforts.

“I feel lucky to have received the support I did, and I feel it’s important to give back and do what I can for someone else like me,” she said.

Last week in the lead up to World Homelessness Day on 10 October Tewantin community members swapped their work clothes for superhero suits and took on the challenge issued by Youturn Youth Services to raise money for homeless youth.

Youturn spokeswoman Antoinette Lloyd said all money raised by the Homelessness Heroes would go toward their project to raise $100,000 to build their first tiny house located in the Noosa Shire to provide transitional accommodation for people moving from homelessness to independence.

“There is a gap when they can struggle and need to gain additional support for three to six months,“ she said. “It will accommodate two young people or a mum and children to help put them back on their feet.“ Since launching the project a couple of months ago they have raised about $10,000 and are in discussions with Noosa Council on locating a place for their tiny house, she said.

“Noosa-Sunshine Coast is a popular holiday destination, but a tough place to live for many young people to settle due to extreme housing costs, low average wages, social housing shortage and high rental competition,“ she said. “Add to this, COVID-19 impacts of business closures, unemployment and health concerns, 2020 has seen more local people and particularly young people experiencing homelessness.“

Over the January-March 2020 quarter, 249 young people presented to Noosa-Sunshine Coast homelessness services.

“Just because you don’t see people sleeping rough in our streets doesn’t mean our community is immune to the problem, and there is just not enough affordable accommodation available to us to help home our young people,“ she said.

Anyone can experience homelessness with unplanned life events (health, job loss, family breakdown) putting many of us at-risk, and only a few small steps away from needing support or being homeless.

Youturn data shows the number of Australians aged 18 to 24 who experienced higher levels of housing stress increased threefold between April and May 2020, from 10.3 per cent to 27.5 per cent and young service industry employees have been hit hard by Covid-19 impacts.

Homeless persons often experience poor mental health, poverty, trauma, substance abuse, social isolation and are victims of crime.For more information or to donate visit www.youturn.org.au

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Warning over illegal dumping

Illegal dumping of garden waste across Noosa’s bushland, reserves and national parks is causing serious and long-lasting environmental damage, Noosa Council has warned. While dropping...

Remembering Gwen

More News

Mortgages on the rise

Noosa residents and local hospitality businesses are set to feel the squeeze following the Reserve Bank of Australia’s first interest rate rise of 2026....

First grade take the one day flag

1st Grade One Day Semi Final The One Day semi-final against Glasshouse was another big test. With the bat, Mick and Samadhi again got us off...

February fires up with events

From sporting action to lantern-lit nights on the lake, February is shaping up as an exciting month on the Sunshine Coast events calendar. Locals and...

Choirboys bring rock n roll to Noosa

Back in 1978, a group of twenty-something mates from Sydney’s Northern Beaches formed a band called Choirboys. Surrounded by the wild, hedonistic chaos of...

Pressure on provider

Katie Rose Cottage Hospice has temporarily suspended patient admissions as funding shortfalls and revised government timelines place growing pressure on the Noosa-based end-of-life care...

Noosa Fights Parkinson’s

Noosa-based support networks are playing a critical role in helping people live with Parkinson’s disease, as the condition affects an estimated 2,000 residents across...

Measures cut bat entanglements

Wildlife rescuers have conducted a daily rescue mission for more than a week to save the lives of little red flying foxes that have...

The Freddys in February

Local favourites The Freddys bring vintage classic rock to Tewantin-Noosa RSL on Valentine’s Day, Saturday 14 February, 8-11pm. So if you feel like dancing...

Ballet double act

After a year filled with travel, family milestones and time abroad, FitBarre founder Angelika Burroughs has returned to the barre - and to the...

Council asks: what makes Noosa liveable

Five years after Noosa Council conducted its first Liveability Survey in November 2021 it is asking residents to complete the 2026 survey to gain...