Statistics are shown for this demographic
Local Government Area
Response rates from 17.1k Melbourne voters.
54% Yes |
46% No |
36% Yes |
45% No |
18% Yes, and create more social programs to provide free food, clothing, and medicine |
1% No, and make it a criminal offense |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 17.1k Melbourne voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 17.1k Melbourne voters.
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Unique answers from Melbourne voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@932FW2M3yrs3Y
Yes, and we should look at why they have refused available shelter i.e. maybe they have had bad experiences before
@B39L9NL7 days7D
i think they should be highly encoraged, but if they seriously dont choose to tell them you cant sleep on public property make that clear first!
@B39HN541wk1W
If they consistently refuse it, they should not be allowed to, as it is their own fault for refusing aid
@B39BYMT1wk1W
Unless they have a good reason i.e bad shelter and housing conditions, they shouldn't be allowed to encamp.
@B38YCYR1wk1W
We all deserve the right to shelter and life’s basic needs. Look at the reasons why and work with the person to gain access to accommodation
@B38WB2R1wk1W
Find out the reason they refused and offer appropriate assistance.There is a lot of ableism among housing staff. Maybe what they were offered was not accessible or safe.
@B35DK7G2wks2W
We’ve paid people to run our country and come up with solutions. The owner should not be on the homeless person but on the team of country managers.
@B327Z832wks2W
No, however we should create programs to help them more and try to find the problem on why they have refused the available shelter so we can improve it.
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