Summer hopes for a better life for her and her cat CD.
Photo: Paul Jeffers
Summer Jackson and her cat share a common start to life – alone and without a family they wound up living on the streets.
The 20-year-old says CD Princess Cheshire chose her as her owner by meowing at her in an alley off Lygon Street, Carlton.
"Before I found her, I was going to suicide," Ms Jackson said.
"I saved her life, while she saved mine. She needed me and I needed her. I don't know my family, she doesn't know hers."
Perched in front of a glossy high-end retailer's window in
Melbourne's CBD, Ms Jackson has setup for the day, laying out a blanket,
bowl of food and toys for CD, which stands for cat-dog in honour of her
friendly personality.
A cardboard sign neatly explaining their predicament and asking for donations is up front.
Behind a second sign advertising $1 pats and $5 photos, sits CD who, unusually for a cat, does not leave Ms Jackson's side.
Homeless
off and on since she was aged 10, Ms Jackson fusses over her, stopping
to rearrange her blanket or give her a reassuring pat as she speaks.
"When my anxiety and stuff starts playing up, I just pick her up and pat her and that helps me cope," she said.
Ms Jackson is one of a growing number of homeless people who keep pets for companionship and security.
But
with conventional social support services unable to provide pet food, a
demand has grown for services to help provide care for these animals.
Yvonne Hong with homeless man Peter McGann and his dog Bella. Photo: Paul Jeffers
Carrum woman Yvonne Hong saw the gap and about four months ago decided to set up
Pets of the Homeless Melbourne, which calls on the public to donate supplies.
Not
all of the few hundred people the group helps are sleeping on the
streets. Some are at risk of homelessness, while others are in temporary
accommodation or are fleeing family violence.
Armed with
plastic zip-lock bags full of dog and cat biscuits, Ms Hong walks the
city's streets on the weekends handing out the pet treats to
those in need.
"I see more and more people with pets on the
street," she said. "A lot of them have no one else in their lives, so
the pet is constantly there with them."
She stops to
meet Peter McGann, 47, who began sleeping on the streets about a year
ago when a workplace accident left him severely injured.
He said a friend bought him English boxer cross, English Staffordshire bull terrier, Bella from the classifieds website Gumtree.
"She helps me with my mental health, my depression, and she protects me at night time," he said.
"I don't have any idiots coming up to me and standing over me."
James Burgess and his dog Yarndi live on the streets in Melbourne's CBD. Photo: Paul Jeffers
Another regular stop is with James Burgess, also 47, who has
been homeless on Melbourne and Sydney's streets on and off since he left
home at age 14 after suffering sexual abuse as an altar boy and regular
beatings.
Life has been traumatic and unstable ever since.
Mr Burgess says Staffordshire bull terrier cross, German shepherd, Yarndie gives him a reason to get up every morning.
"If it wasn't for him, I wouldn't be here," he said.
Kate
Chanter, 34, was first homeless at age 15, but later became a trained
chef before seizures stopped her from being able to work. She's
been back on the streets since July.
She doesn't like to ask people for change, and instead sells
The Big Issue and her drawings.
Kate Chanter and her dog Buckley have been homeless since July.
Photo: Paul Jeffers
Her moodle cross, shih tzu, Buckley, and the dog's father before it, have helped her get through the dark days.
"We feed them before we feed ourselves," she says. "They're our best mates."
Ms Hong said she is sometimes confronted with people who tell her homeless people shouldn't have pets.
"I
just tell them, you shouldn't judge, because what if you have a home
one day and have all these animals that you love and something happens
to you and all of a sudden you're homeless, what do you do, do you just
give them up?" she said.
"Animals don't really care whether you have a house or not, as long you are there for them."
A
video
of animal activists tearing a dog away from a French homeless man, they
accused of using the animal to make money, went viral last month,
prompting outrage at their conduct.
Ms Jackson said this had happened to her too.
"Some people think because I'm homeless, I don't deserve to have a cat," she said.
"So they take her and take her to the pound. I don't use my animal to get money."
Regardless, Ms Jackson lamented that when her cat is not with her, the same people who help her each day ignore her.
Summer Jackson is homeless and living rough with her cat C.D. Princess Cheshire
Photo: Paul Jeffers
Nearby a man in poor physical condition, wearing tattered and
stained clothes, staggers around with his hands cupped asking for money.
No one makes eye contact as the stream of people pass him to visit Ms
Jackson.
Noel Murray, from the Council to Homeless Persons, said
it was "outrageous" for people to suggest homeless people's motivation
to get an animal was for financial gain.
In fact, he said many services weren't able to take in a person with a pet.
"They would rather live on the streets than part with their loved one," he said.
Mr Murray said governments needed to adequately fund services to provide for the growing issue.
In England, a former homeless street musician made his way out of poverty after writing a
New York Times bestseller about how the relationship with his cat saved his life called
A Street Cat Named Bob.
"I think it's pretty cool," Ms Jackson said, familiar with his story.
"CD…. is going to be the next Bob the Cat."