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Hong Kong residents in need avoid heat shelters, poll finds

Shelters’ remote locations and lack of privacy among reasons underprivileged prefer to cool down in fast-food restaurants, groups say

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Greenpeace campaigner Ng Hon-lam (left) and  Impact HK programme manager Isaac Ho Cheuk-hin. Photo: Jonathan Wong
Edith Lin

About 65 per cent of needy Hong Kong residents have never used government heat shelters due to their remote locations, and users hope the lack of privacy at the facilities can be improved, a survey by advocacy groups has found.

Greenpeace Hong Kong and ImpactHK, an NGO for the homeless, on Tuesday also called on the government to increase the number of such facilities in areas where low-income groups lived and improve the services offered.

Ninety-seven respondents took part in the survey, carried out in June and July. They were interviewed on the streets, in fast-food restaurants, at heat shelters or in support centres for the homeless in eight districts.

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“It is the government’s responsibility to provide resting spaces that allow people to rest with privacy and in dignity,” Isaac Ho Cheuk-hin, ImpactHK’s programme manager, said.

“The survey reflects that they still have room for improvement.”

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The government opens 19 community halls or centres in all 18 districts as temporary heat shelters and reserves space in another eight facilities for daytime refuge when the Observatory issues a “very hot weather” warning. The facilities also provide bedding for users between 10.30pm and 8am the next day.

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