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Belfast: Women-only homeless facility to open next month

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Catherine Kenny was found dead in a shop doorway in BelfastImage source, Kenny family
Image caption,

Catherine Kenny was found dead in a shop doorway in Belfast

A new homeless facility for women is to open in south Belfast in April.

Catherine House is named after Catherine Kenny, a vulnerable woman who died in Belfast city centre in 2016.

It will provide accommodation and support for up to 10 women and is being funded by the Housing Executive.

The new facility comes after the closure of Regina Coeli House, Northern Ireland's only female-only homeless hostel, last year.

It had been operating in Belfast since 1935.

Image caption,

Jo Daykin-Goodall (left) and Grainia Long (centre) were joined by Catherine Kenny's sister Lee-Marie Hughes to announce the facility

The new facility is being run by the Welcome Organisation, a charity that provides support for people affected by homelessness.

Jo Daykin-Goodall, its chief executive, said Catherine House will provide women with "more than just a roof over their heads".

"This new women's service will expand on services and will provide 24-hour supported living for ten women experiencing homelessness who are ready to take the next steps to live independently," she said.

"We will have support workers on site 24-hours a day, seven days a week."

Catherine Kenny, who the facility is named after, was 32 when she died.

At the time, her sister Lee-Marie Hughes said she was an "amazing person" who "would have helped the lowest in society".

She highlighted that drugs had a significant impact on Catherine's life.

Announcing the centre, the chief executive of the Housing Executive, Grainia Long, said women experiencing homelessness can expect a "level of service that is appropriate to their needs" at the new facility.

Staff will work with women to "resolve often deeply rooted challenges and always acting with empathy," Ms Long continued.