Buy a triplex or 4plex. You can do it with a first time buyer FHA loan. You will only be debt loaded for 1/3rd to 1/4th of the value of the loan because you will have rent coming in. In a few years then you can buy a regular home because the bank will look at your plex as investment income.
Unless Mick has a minimum of $20,000 cash left for liability insurance, maintenance, repairs, vacancies, vandalism and legal fees to deal with the multitude of issues that come with renters, this is a quick way to lose everything he now has and possibly be faced with foreclosure and/or bankruptcy. If a tenant cooks a little meth and gets caught your property may be condemned, razed, and you will pay the bill for it. And the bottom line is you will still be living in an crappy apartment which you could just rent and not lose your ass trying to keep it.
A rental property will be beat to shit in a matter of months, will not build any measurable equity, and it can take upwards of a year to actually get rid of a problem tenant. Plus, you will live in a shitty neighborhood with shitty neighbors. After a couple years of having no time to even enjoy your (home) you'll likely be ready to cheap-sell it and run.
Buy a nice home, as new as you can get, not too big (size=maintenance cost) but make sure it has 2 bathrooms or it will be a bitch to re-sell when the time comes. Single-level homes are the easiest to resell, a second story rules out most buyers with seniors in their family. A neighborhood with a lot of rentals or industrial/commercial property also kills your ability to profit from home ownership, as does NOISE (trains, traffic, airports). A more recent red flag that kills resale value is a neighbor with barking dogs in the yard. Especially pit bulls or any large dog that might be scary to some people.
Home buyers generally shop in contrast to how renters shop. Most renters want to be on a bus line, close to shopping, don't care much about the neighbors or neighborhood condition. Home buyers are polar opposites from that.
Mick has a decent paying union job and could buy a nice home in a nice neighborhood and watch his equity grow between 5%-20% a year for the foreseable future. And still have free time and money to spend enjoying it.
I'm not saying owning rentals is a bad idea, if you have a home already. I'm saying it's a bad idea to risk your chance at home ownership on it. Buy a home, then watch for a good deal on a rental on the side.