The number is the result of a national survey conducted in 2020, which allowed the identification, in total, of 8,209 homeless people.
The survey to characterise this population, published on the website of the National Strategy for the Integration of Homeless People (ENIPSSA), reveals that the vast majority of these people are concentrated in the metropolitan area of Lisbon (AML).
In this area, 4,786 homeless people were accounted for, representing 58.3 percent of the total, followed by the metropolitan area of Porto (AMP) with 1,213 people.
Per 100,000 inhabitants, the most worrying situation is in the Alentejo, in the municipalities of Alvito and Beja, which have, respectively, 11.35 and 9.72 people per 100,000 inhabitants in a homeless situation.
Of the total of approximately 8,200 people in this situation, the majority are men aged 45 to 64 years, who have been homeless for up to one year. The main causes are associated with dependence on alcohol or psychoactive substances (2,442), unemployment or job insecurity (2,347) or financial insufficiency associated with other reasons (2,017).
Despite this being the generic characterisation of the homeless population, there were also 734 couples. In AML, the vast majority of these couples (339 out of 392) are homeless, but live in temporary accommodation centres, specific accommodation for homeless people or in rooms paid for by social services or other entities.
In the country, just over half of the homeless people live in these options (4,789), but there are still 3,420 homeless, who live on the streets, in emergency shelters or in precarious places.
The report also indicates the number of people who left living on the streets and obtained permanent housing, and that last year there were 485 cases, 39 percent more compared to 2019.
The survey promoted by ENIPSSA resulted from a survey of the 278 municipalities in mainland Portugal and reflects the 275 responses obtained, through the articulation of different institutions with local intervention.
With a response rate of 99 percent, this is the most complete survey since 2018.
In a statement, the Ministry of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security states that there was an increase in the number of homeless people compared to the previous year, which it justifies with the “improvement in the diagnosis process throughout the country”.
“The Government has been committed to providing housing solutions for homeless people, in an approach that puts housing first and, from then on, working on their social inclusion and autonomy”, he adds.
On the same day we read “Rents on the up”: this would be laughable if it weren´t tragic. Gvrt supporting Golden Visas and channelling most of investment in Tourism and then it likes to play coy and say: “The Government has been committed to providing housing solutions for homeless people, in an approach that puts housing first and, from then on, working on their social inclusion and autonomy”(…)”. No notion of ridicule, and all is done at the expense of (local) ppl´s misery.
By guida from Lisbon on 01 Oct 2021, 05:10
WELL SAID. You could not have put it better. !!!!!!
By J from Lisbon on 01 Oct 2021, 10:36
It is scandalous how people cannot afford housing unless they are very wealthy foreigners. Rentals are only for a couple of months and then go sky high over summer. What kind of rental market is this? Where do Portuguese people live? And Portugal has the worst housing quality in EU - time for change.
By K from Algarve on 03 Oct 2021, 09:37