Thursday 26 February 2026
Boost to Inner-City Homeless Services is only the start
Leading bodies SACOSS and Homelessness SA have welcomed today’s election commitment by the Labor Party of $6m to address homelessness in Adelaide’s CBD.
The funding, spread across four years, will support organisations that provide crucial services to people in the centre of Adelaide who are homeless. The organisations to receive the additional funding are:
- Catherine House, which is a service for women facing homelessness due to domestic and family violence),
- Hutt Street Centre, whose Aspire Program supports people experiencing chronic homelessness), and
- St Vincent de Paul Society, which runs the Men’s Crisis Centre in Adelaide.
This funding commitment comes ahead of the government’s review of the homelessness services system, a review which SACOSS and Homelessness SA anticipate will highlight other areas and services where additional funds are needed.
Productivity Commission data shows that there has been a decline in the real value of funding of homelessness services overall since 2021, and SACOSS’ consultations with its member organisations has highlighted that there are many homelessness services operating on limited resources and struggling to meet demand.
SACOSS and Homelessness SA look forward to the government concluding its review and hopes that it encompasses a whole-of-state homelessness response and further funding increases, including the funding of a peak homelessness services body, to enable every South Australian to have a safe and secure location to live.
Quotes attributable to Dr Catherine Earl, SACOSS CEO
As part of our election platform, SACOSS has been calling for a significant increase in funding for homelessness services, and so we welcome this announcement.
Catherine House, Hutt Street Centre and Vinnies are all long-standing and high-profile homelessness services in the CBD, and this additional funding will be a significant boost to their great work.
But I also know from talking to a number of our member groups that homelessness services are under pressure across the board. Homelessness is a hidden problem in regional areas, and services in those areas, as well as the outer suburbs, are struggling to meet demand and find suitable housing options for people in need.
If we really believe that every South Australian has a right to roof over their head, then funding for homelessness services across the state is an important budget priority.
Quotes attributable to Kim Herbert, Chairperson, Homelessness SA
We welcome the targeted funding boost for these CBD services. Specialist homelessness services across SA have gone years without a real funding increase, and are now operating under intense strain.
The alliances reform review currently underway will need to address the funding shortfall. We call on all parties to treat homelessness as an urgent statewide priority because the sector is stretched to breaking point.