Sunday, December 22, 2024

Young couple find shelter in a caravan after being left homeless in cut-throat rental market

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Young people aged 12–24 make up a quarter of Tasmania’s growing homeless population. Chloe Hume and Trent Kiely are two of them.

Tamar riverfront in Launceston.()

The banks of the Tamar River, flowing through Launceston in Tasmania, are lush and green.

On one side sits Trevallyn, a hilltop suburb with some of Launceston’s most beautiful views and houses dating back to the late 1800s.

A black and white photo of a young man and a woman walking a dog.
Chloe and Trent head out for their daily walk with Rocky their dog.

On the opposite side, a cluster of homeless people sleeping in cars and caravans have taken over a stretch of land near a $25-million redevelopment, the Silo Hotel.

A young couple walk uphill on grass with their dog, their caravan is in the background
Chloe and Trent head out for their daily walk with Rocky their dog. Their caravan in the backdrop.()

One of the caravans has been home to 20-year-old Chloe, 23-year-old Trent, their cat Dexter and dog Rocky since May last year.

It might seem like a rough way to live, but for Chloe and Trent, it’s the most stability they’ve had in a long time.

“It’s our healing chapter,” Chloe says.

“Our whole lives, both of us have been through hell and back pretty much, both in our own ways,” she says.

“And now it’s just really recovering so we can have a good rest of our life and just be happy. We’re going to take it easy and get our mental health better.

A young woman holds up a dog and gives it a kiss as a young man looks on.
Chloe and Trent with their dog, Rocky.()

Last year, Chloe and Trent became homeless when their rental was sold. The couple found themselves priced out of the rental market with nowhere else to go.

Trent is recovering from a motorbike accident, still needing surgery to walk properly.

Chloe, who grew up in and out of foster care, had become homeless when she ran away from a group home as a teenager.

A young woman wearing converse, slacks and a tank top sits down on a road with her dog.
Chloe with her dog, Rocky.()

“If no one wants you, you just get put into a home with lots of other kids that no one wants.

“I really hated it.”

Finding the caravan meant Chloe and Trent could finally have their own space after being rejected for multiple rental units, a chance to get back on their feet.

They pay $200 a week in rent to the caravan’s owner, and spend $12 a day on petrol for a generator and $20 a fortnight on diesel for heating.

A yard with miscellaneous items can be seen through a see-through plastic curtain.
The couple were rejected from multiple rental units before finding the caravan for rent on Facebook.()

The only support they can lean on is Trent’s family, where help is exchanged back and forward between parents, children and siblings.

“It helps out very well. We do it for the whole family,” Trent says.

For Chloe, living in the caravan has been a positive change from her past.

A young couple sit down on a roadside fence, the woman holds a dog on a lead.
Chloe and Trent do daily walks with their dog, Rocky.()

“I like my life now,” she says.

A young couple hold hands as they walk their dog down an industrial street.
Chloe and Trent hold hands as they walk Rocky.()

“[Trent] is the only person I’ve ever felt comfortable around. I’ve never really felt like I could be myself with anyone.”

The biggest worry now is whether the Tamar River will one day flood their sanctuary.

“The most unstable part of living here. Isn’t that funny,” Chloe says.

A young couple with their backs to the camera look at a gas BBQ stading on grass by a river.
While parts of Launceston are protected from flooding by levees, the stretch of land occupied by homeless people sits right by the water.()

That anxiety was at its peak during the cold and rainy Tasmanian winter.

“Every time it was pouring down, cloudy, it was like, ‘it’s getting higher, I don’t want it’. Oh, my heart was sinking a lot,” Chloe says.

Because Chloe and Trent have had no luck with rental applications, they decided to focus on making the caravan as much of a home as possible.

A small dog lies down on a bed with leaf-patterned sheets and a teddy bear inside a caravan.
Rocky lies down on Chloe and Trent’s bed inside their caravan.()
A young woman with a high ponytail stands in the doorway of a caravan speaking to a mobile phone.
Chloe at the doorway.()
A set of keys hangs on the wall of a caravan.
Keys to the caravan.()
Black and white image of the back of a caravan that says "vista shifta" on it.
Back of the caravan.()
Small square pictures are hung up on the wall of a caravan.
Art on the caravan wall.()
A gas BBQ and small dog house in front of a river.
Gas BBQ outside the caravan.()

At first, they had no way to store food and had to carry water to the caravan in buckets.

“We’d eat noodles every night, and packet pasta and stuff. Lost all our weight,” Chloe says.

A collage with a photo of a woman pulling a garden hose and a man doing the same.
Before the hose extension, the couple used to carry water to the caravan in buckets.()

With a fridge and a garden hose extension to get water straight to the caravan, life is much more comfortable.

There’s one addition that they are especially happy to have: a washing machine.

Miscellaneous items including a bike and a washing machine behind a makeshift fence by a small caravan.
Appliances such as a washing machine have made all the difference in life in the caravan.()

Before having their own washing machine, the pair had to haul their clothes to the laundromat in taxis, and sometimes the cab would drive off on them.

“I felt unhygienic as a chick being here,” Chloe says.

A young woman turns on a water tap on a wall.
Chloe shows where they get their water supply from.()
Clothes drying on wire fences and a clotheslines.
Clothes drying outside the caravan.()
A black and white photo of a jumper hanging on a wire fence outside.
A jumper hangs on a wire fence.()
A young woman sits in a garden chair and shields her eyes from the sun with her hand.
Chloe sits in the front yard.()

Chloe feels there is a stigma attached to homelessness and people assume most homeless people must have substance abuse issues.

A woman and man walk their dog back to their caravan by a river.
Chloe and Trent return to their caravan.()

“We don’t necessarily want to live in a caravan or next to a river, but this is what we have.

A young man and woman walking past a caravan, the picture is focused on the river landscape behind them.
Chloe and Trent head out for their daily walk with Rocky their dog.()

“It sucks because people probably think we’re just, like everyone else, junkies or something, you know?

The heads of a young woman and man are out of focus in the bottom left corner, a jogger is exercising up on a hill behind them.
Chloe and Trent head out for their daily walk with Rocky, their dog.()

“It makes it hard, because people don’t want to reach out. They’re probably too scared.

A young man holding a glass bottle and woman with her hands in her pockets stand in front of a caravan.
Chloe and Trent have a chat while they fill up the water tank in their caravan.()

“It’s not even that bad down here. People actually have to give us a chance.”

Credits

Words: Nelli Saarinen and Abigail Varney

Production: Nelli Saarinen

Photographer: Abigail Varney

The Great Crumbling Australian Dream

This photo essay is part of a larger photojournalism project examining Australia’s housing crisis.

The Great Crumbling Australian Dream is a collaboration between Oculi photographers and ABC News, with support from National Shelter.

The series was made possible with a Meta Australian News Fund grant and the Walkley Foundation.

Oculi is a collective of Australian photographers that offers a visual narrative of contemporary life in Australia and beyond.

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