Nt shelter on camping ground for katherine homeless problem.
Called the Safe Havens camp, it was built by a charity and a government funded community group, the Safe Havens Trust, which are based in Nt.
It was first erected in the early 90s, but did not have toilets.
The camp, known as St Vincent's Camp is located in the North Shore region of Nt, about 150 kilometres west of Hamilton.
Some are in remote places and homeless people have lived there on the street for many years.
Caitlyn Campbell, who arrived on the camp on March 4 with her husband and three small children, is an unemployed retired school teacher.
Camp has been operating in its current position for three years and was given permission by the City of Hamilton to take on additional staff.
Camp founder and volunteer Karen O'Brien said it would be up to the city to decide whether to put in any more permanent facilities, if it were to get the necessary funding.
"We hope we can make this permanent and get people off the streets, because there are a lot of problems in Hamilton with homelessness," she said.
According to the Safe Havens Trust, it is committed to homeless people's long term well being and protection, but does not seek out shelter from authorities.
"When they make a report we take their feedback seriously, particularly as we need to be really proactive in protecting them," O'Brien said.
The city says it is working with the group, while seeking public funding.
"I think the trust is doing well. We're looking at the different funding options," Coun. John Orlikow said.
However, council was concerned the idea of the shelter would result in new homes built.
The city says it will hold community meetings to talk to local families to explore the options and whether the project can move forward.
Mayor Fred Eisenberger supports the safe houses, but doesn't see them as permanent housing.
If it gets over $50,000, the city wants more time to consider more options before bringing an application to the general public next year.
The city also notes the shelters do help prevent homelessness.
"We know the risk of not building the Safe Havens in places like the North Shore is the risk of people just walking into homelessness," Eisenberger said.
The city says, based on the data available now, the most likely place to be homeless in Hamilton in the next five years is in rural Hamilton-Wentworth and North Shore neighbourhoods.
The safe houses can be found at the city site in St Vincent's Village and at the North Shore North Community Centre.
The group has been providing permanent shelter to thos
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Calls for inquiry into fiji justice system' have been made by both the government and the opposition for years, which has been dismissed by the court as "the worst case of government-funded defamation in the history of Fiji."
Some in the court believe the claims are false or are meant to hurt his bid for presidency.
Some witnesses who gave testimonies to the court, which has not released them for eight weeks, said some lawyers who have lost cases were also targets.
The presiding judge, Chief Justice Peter Gajaki, said it was the court's opinion that lawyers on the fiji justice system were part of the "crowd" for whom it was a matter of "honesty."
"If you are trying to get involved with politics in Fiji, we must not allow the likes of you to ruin your chances," he said.
Gajaki also addressed an earlier hearing from three lawyers, who accused two Supreme Court justices of having "frequent personal vendettas against each other."
On Tuesday, a special court in Fijian capital, Manaha, heard evidence that the court was investigating the claims and whether they were related to the 2016 elections.
In December, the judges issued a ruling that judges could not conduct inquiries into cases under the public interest.
The lawyers' testimony to the Court of Appeal sparked international media attention, which was later confirmed by a spokesman for Fijian President Goodluck Jonathan, who says no such evidence would be obtained to warrant any investigation.
But it was the first time any independent counsel from the island's attorney general's office has presented evidence in relation to the court's rulings.
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