Posted: 2023-02-27 04:45:32

Ruth Rory has travelled eight hours by bus to Katherine from the remote Northern Territory community of Borroloola.  

She's in town to visit family and see the doctor after attending a funeral.  

She has been sleeping at a public toilet block.

"That's my only shelter," Ms Rory said. 

"Sometimes I go to the post office to sleep, just to get away from the rain."

The 49-year-old said she wanted more accommodation for remote visitors.

"It's not fair for everyone that is sleeping out on the street," she said.

"For them, and for myself, we need a shelter."

For decades, Katherine has battled extreme rates of homelessness, recording 31 times the national average.

Jason Fuller, from the remote community of Barunga, is among them.

"I sleep everywhere," he said.

"I sleep on the tents, I sleep at ANZ bank on top of the stairs and I sleep at the library door."

an Aboriginal man with a salt-and-pepper beard, wearing a short-sleeved button-up shirt and an Essendon AFL hat
Jason Fuller says Katherine needs more safe places to stay.(ABC News: Samantha Dick)

He said Katherine desperately needed more accommodation.

"You know in Darwin, Salvation Army has a hostel in the city ... but they haven't got one here," he said.

'Feasibility study' due to begin this year

The township of Katherine, about 300 kilometres south-east of Darwin, is a major regional hub servicing dozens of remote communities, spanning an area bigger than Tasmania.

It's where thousands of people come to see a doctor, buy groceries, spend time with family and visit the bank.

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