- Government announces £10 millions Cold Weather Payment for
councils to help to keep rough sleepers safe this winter
- Additional £2 million will go to faith and community groups
to help them get rough sleepers into accommodation
- This is on top of over half a billion pounds the government
is already spending to tackle homelessness and rough sleeping
this year alone
- Guidance on safely reopening shelters to save lives will also
be published
Rough sleepers and those at risk of becoming homeless will be
helped to keep safe this winter through a package of support,
Communities Secretary has announced today (13 October 2020). This will give
local areas the tools and funding they need to protect people
from life-threatening cold weather and the risks posed by
coronavirus.
Today’s announcement includes:
- A new £10 million Cold Weather Fund to support councils get
rough sleepers off the streets during the winter by helping them
to provide more self-contained accommodation.
- An additional £2 million for faith and community groups to
help them provide secure accommodation for rough sleepers.
- Comprehensive guidance to the sector, produced with Public
Health England, Homeless Link and Housing Justice to help
shelters open more safely, where not doing so would endanger
lives.
These measures will help councils build on their existing plans
to protect people over winter which have been supported by the
£266 million Next Step Accommodation Programme – the aim of which
is to keep people safe and ensure that as few people as possible
return to the streets.
Communities Secretary, Rt Hon MP said:
“As we approach winter, we are focusing on the best way to
protect rough sleepers from the cold weather and coronavirus.
“The funding and guidance I’m announcing today will mean that
working with councils and community groups, some of the most
vulnerable people in society are given support and a safe place
to stay this winter.
“The government is spending over half a billion pounds to tackle
homelessness and rough sleeping this year alone and working with
our partners, some of the most vulnerable people in our society
have been helped into accommodation or other support during the
pandemic and we are accelerating plans for thousands of new
homes.”
, Minister for Housing and Rough Sleeping said:
Winter is clearly a dangerous time for people who sleep
rough. These extra measures will help to protect this
vulnerable group from life-threatening cold weather, as well as
the risk of contracting COVID-19, and also provide them with
support into move-on accommodation.
The work councils, providers, and the NHS has done since the
start of the pandemic has saved lives and through this extra
funding we will continue help them to rebuild their lives, part
of our commitment to end rough sleeping for good.
Kathy Mohan from Housing Justice said:
Cold weather shelters in this country are predominantly staffed
by volunteers and often operate on tiny budgets. These are
people motivated purely by the desire not to walk by on the
other side of the street while someone is affected by
homelessness in their community. During the first wave of the
pandemic shelters reacted phenomenally, working around the
clock until they were able to safely transfer guests to
self-contained accommodation.
We are pleased the Night Shelter Operating Principles are here
and more than 150 organisations who provided night shelters in
the last year have the facts they need to make tough decisions
on their operations this winter.
Rick Henderson, Chief Executive of Homeless Link, comments:
People should not be facing a choice between the cold streets
or an unsafe night shelter. Traditional night shelters should
only open as a last resort if self-contained accommodation is
not a possibility.
We welcome the operating principles published today, which will
help make shelters open as safely as possible if they do become
a necessity. We ask that local areas adhere to these principles
in order that people sleeping rough can be supported safely in
line with COVID-19 guidance.
We welcome the new £2 million Transformation Fund, which we
will be administering to provide funding to voluntary and
community sector groups to transform spaces and make more
self-contained emergency accommodation locations available.
This funding will be essential to groups that usually operate
on extremely tight budgets, enabling them to provide
appropriate support for people sleeping rough over the winter.
During the pandemic, the government has worked closely with local
authorities and charitable organisations to offer vulnerable
people safe accommodation and support. This year, the government
has committed half a billion pounds for rough sleeping and
homelessness. Allocations for 3,300 additional homes this year
for rough sleepers across the country will also be announced
soon, giving people a place to call their own, and to rebuild
their lives away from the streets, part of the government’s
commitment to end rough sleeping once and for all.
Public Health England, Homeless Link, Housing Justice, councils
and representatives from the shelter sector have been involved in
developing the shelter operating principles, so
that if shelters do reopen, they can do so as safely as
possible, providing communal facilities only if there is no other
alternative.
-
The Cold Weather Fund was first launched in 2018. The fund
was used to enhance accommodation provision such as access to
the private rented sector, provide space in existing
supported housing projects and fund more emergency
accommodation for rough sleepers. These aim to
quickly support vulnerable people off the
streets through the winter.
-
The government has made clear that no one should be without a
roof over their head, which is why we have committed to end
rough sleeping within this Parliament. This demonstrates our
commitment to supporting the most vulnerable in society.
-
We have provided £4.8 billion to help councils to manage the
impacts of COVID-19, which includes their work to support
homeless people, including £3.7 billion which is not
ringfenced, and over £1.1 billion specifically to support
social care providers.
-
Also, we have accelerated plans – backed by £433 million over
the next four years – which will deliver 6,000 additional
homes for former rough sleepers across the country.
-
On 18 July, we launched the Next Steps Accommodation
Programme (NSAP). This makes available the financial
resources needed to support councils and their partners to
prevent these people from returning to the streets. The NSAP
is made up of 2 sources of funding: £161 million to deliver
3,300 units of longer term move-on accommodation within the
next 12 months (part of the £433 million total); and on 17
September we announced the allocation of £92
million of funding to pay for interim support to ensure that
people do not return to the streets.
-
The Greater London Authority has received an NSAP allocation
of £19 million which is specifically designed to support the
move on of people and to provide some “off the street”
accommodation options for people currently sleeping rough.
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We are supporting these efforts as part of our landmark
commitment – backed by over half a billion pounds this year –
to break the cycle of homelessness and end rough sleeping for
good.
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See further information on the night shelter
operating principles.