COVID-19: changes to your services. Click to view details.
Help us give people with disability a real shot! Donate today.
View our current retirement living homes for sale.
Did you know we have a coffee shop? Where is my coffee now open!
Search
Contact Us
Close
Services to keep you independent
One on one care and support
Support to help you stay at home
Allied health support services
Everyone deserves a break
Government or privately funded
Personalised care and support
Principles of Montessori
Tailored to individual interests
Helping everyone adjust
13 locations across Victoria.
If you care for someone, we’re here
Maintain your quality of life
Here for people of all ages
Take a break and have some fun
Independent living for over 55s
Our latest properties available
Inner Melbourne communities
Camberwell
Deepdene
Brand new development
Hawthorn
Toorak
Suburban communities
Clayton
Kyneton
Trentham
Eltham
Bacchus Marsh
Pakenham
Balwyn
Brunswick West
Greensborough
Torquay
Everyone deserves a home
services for 18+
Great places to call home
Reach your developmental goals
Pathways to paid employment
Small group programs
Stay independent at home
Get the best out of your NDIS plan
support for 13-18 year olds
Reach developmental goals
Fun programs for your teenagers
NDIS planning
programs for 0-12 year olds
Support for developmental delays
Fun programs for your kids
A school where your child can shine
About St Paul’s College
Prepare your child for school
View our for school policies
Commited to the safety of your child
Menu
Back
Enter your search term below
5 October 2022
Guanghui (Tony) Huang fled China in December 2014 for a better life in Australia. Months later he found himself completely isolated and living in a tiny room in an over-crowded share home. He was in poor health, with limited finances, no job, and no support.
“I was down and even thought I was lessened and forsaken,” recalls Tony, who suffers from depression.
Then Tony met Case Manager Amy Yuen from for-purpose organisation VMCH, and his life turned around.
October 16-22 is Anti-Poverty Week, aimed to increase society’s understanding of poverty and encouraging people to take action collectively to end it.
Amy supports 66 seniors who are on a low income and are homeless, or at risk of homelessness, through the Assistance with Care and Housing (ACH) program. Thirty per cent of her clients are from CALD backgrounds, a group already at higher risk of housing distress.
Housing for the Aged Action Group (HAAG) reports many older migrants, particularly those from China and India, often come to Australia later in life and haven’t been able to buy a house, or have come to live with family and if it hasn’t worked out, have nowhere to go.
According to the 2021 census, 15 per cent of the homeless population are migrants (arrived in the last five years). That’s more than three times the size of new migrants in the general population. Language barriers and a lack of knowledge and understanding around Australian systems and services are among the obstacles.
Tony meets with VMCH Case Manager Amy Yuen.
All rang true for Tony, who also struggles with poor eyesight, rheumatoid arthritis and anemia.
“I tried my hardest to find a job here in Melbourne, I am well educated, but no employer would hire me because they thought I was too old, and I did not hold a diploma or skills certificate accredited in Australia,” Tony explains.
His greatest worry was accommodation, and he was forced to choose between paying for better quality rentals, or his medication. He chose the latter, and so his only option was a small, windowless room inside private rental accommodation shared with several families.
With restricted access to the kitchen and bathroom, he took a bath once a month and cooked meals in his rice cooker in his room.
“I often woke up during the night because of the cold. I felt stifled in scorching hot weather in summer.” Thankfully, Amy helped Tony apply for public housing, and in June, he moved into a comfortable home in Box Hill, complete with newly-donated furniture from Eastern Emergency Relief Network.
He says living in the new house gives him hope for the future.
Now I can cook what I really like, read in the house and take a bath every day. Hopefully, after living in the new environment, my health will gradually improve and I will be able to do something good for society, in return for the benefits I have received from the government and for the help from VMCH.
Amy says helping people like Tony to find suitable housing and support (she’s also linked him with medical and age-related care) is a huge collaborative effort, and she works closely with government agencies, councils health services and other non-profits, including the Migrant Information Centre.
Personally, Amy finds achieving positive outcomes for her clients rewarding but says more needs to be done across the board to help older migrants settle into their new country.
“We need more community education for health care professionals, housing and migrant support services on the vulnerability of new migrants who are socially isolated and need to access the public housing system or affordable housing. The government also needs to have close supervision of the owners of rooming houses to ensure they provide sufficient support for new migrants to meet their basic needs.”
Do you need support from the ACH program? Call us on 1300 698 624.
More news articles in Mission
Locating the information you need has become far easier with our useful guide. Answer a few simple questions and you will be on your way.
Not sure where to start?
Contact us
→
Who needs our services?
Our Digital & Marketing Agency - ID Digital Agency
Locating the information you need has become far easier with our useful guide.
Answer a few simple questions and you will be on your way.