Everyone in our community should have a safe and secure home.
The Homeless Persons’ Legal Service (HPLS) protects and promotes the rights of people who are homeless or at risk of becoming homeless.
We provide free legal help to clients and challenge unfair laws and practices that prevent people from having a safe and secure home.
If you need legal help, find out who we can help and how to apply for help.
HPLS uses the experiences of our clients to expose systemic injustice and tackle the factors that cause and perpetuate homelessness. Our work includes:
Our work makes a real difference for clients experiencing significant vulnerability and disadvantage. Many of our clients require specialised support due to complex needs, including concerns relating to mental health and substance abuse. HPLS works actively to reach clients who face challenges accessing mainstream services.
Our small team of in-house solicitors are trauma-informed and work collaboratively with case workers and community services to provide a holistic legal service. We receive pro bono support from leading law firms to deliver legal advice to clients at locations across Sydney. This gives people experiencing or at risk of homelessness access to legal help in locations where they feel safe and supported.
A person who needs legal help can see a lawyer face-to-face and receive advice and/or referrals to other services able to help with the person’s problem. For some matters, we provide ongoing assistance and representation in a court or tribunal.
Ashley is a young woman who came to HPLS with a debt of more than $12,000 in unpaid fines. Most of the fines were for sleeping on a train without a ticket.
Ashley had no safe place to stay and her Jobseeker payments would not cover the cost of a train ticket after she’d paid for food, medicine and shoes (which were often stolen while she slept). She was reliant on homelessness services to meet her basic needs, including clean clothes, showers and meals.
HPLS lawyers were successful in getting nearly all of Ashley’s fines waived. This meant Ashley could work on getting her life back on track without the crushing weight of debt.
Ashley’s experience illustrates the added cost of disadvantage and homelessness. The people in our community who are most likely to accumulate unmanageable debts are those with the least ability to pay. Without services like HPLS, Ashley would have to deal with her creditors alone and attempt to meet her basic needs without incurring further debts – all while being homeless.
* Name has been changed to protect our client’s identity.
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The Justice and Equity Centre is a leading independent law and policy centre. We help build a fairer, stronger society by tackling injustice and inequality.
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Gadigal Country
Level 5, 175 Liverpool Street
Sydney, NSW, 2000, Australia
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F +61 2 8898 6555
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