A Conservative Party spokesperson said:
“Under the Conservatives there is record investment going
in to tackling homelessness – £1.2 billion until April 2020 with
a further £422 million for 2020-21.
“We introduced the Homeless Reduction Act, the most
ambitious set of changes to homeless legislation in decades, but
we know there is more to do. That’s why our manifesto includes
raising Stamp Duty for foreign buyers with the £120m expected
proceeds going to tackling homelessness, and a commitment to end
the scourge of rough sleeping by the end of the next
Parliament.
“A Conservative majority government will get Brexit done
and focus on tackling homelessness by expanding successful
programmes like Housing First and the Rough Sleeping Initiative,
which has proven effective in reducing rough sleeping in areas
where it is running.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors
-
Our Manifesto commits to end rough sleeping by the
end of the next
Parliament (Conservative
Party, Manifesto 2019, 24 November
2019, link).
-
Our Manifesto also commits to increasing Stamp Duty
for foreign buyers and directing the proceeds towards tackling
homelessness. We will
apply a higher rate of stamp duty to individuals and companies
not tax resident in the UK. This will help make homes in the UK
more affordable for UK residents and people building a life
here and the money raised will help tackle
rough sleeping (Conservative Party, Manifesto
2019, 24 November 2019, link).
-
We have invested a total of £1.2 billion
to tackle homelessness, because everyone should have the
dignity of a roof over their
heads. This includes £316 million of
local authority prevention and £617 million in flexible
homelessness support grant funding for local authorities. This
funding is giving local authorities the flexibility to tackle
homelessness strategically in their local area.
-
Our Homelessness Reduction Act places a duty on
local authorities to intervene early to prevent people becoming
homeless. It significantly reformed
England’s homelessness legislation by placing duties on local
authorities to intervene at earlier stages to prevent
homelessness in their areas. It also requires housing
authorities to provide homelessness services to all those
affected, not just those who have ‘priority need’
(MHCLG, Homelessness code of guidance for local
authorities, 15 April 2019, link).
-
We produced a £100 million Rough Sleeping
Strategy to end rough sleeping completely by 2027 by offering
rapid and specialist support to help people to find a new home
quickly and rebuild their lives. The
cross-Government Strategy – developed with charities
and experts - provides timely support to those
at risk of rough sleeping, intervening to help people already
on the streets get the support they need, and helping people
recover and rebuild their lives. The ambition of the strategy
will now be brought forward to 2024.
-
Rough sleeping is falling for the first
time this decade – but we know there is still much more to
do. In February 2019, the number of
vulnerable people sleeping on our streets fell for the first
time since 2010.
-
Cutting rough sleeping in the worst affected
areas using our Rough Sleeping
Initiative. The programme is
providing £76 million for 246 areas across the
country – funding 2,600 beds and 750
staff – and has reduced the number of vulnerable
people sleeping rough in these areas by 32 per
cent.
-
Bringing forward three innovative ‘Housing First’
pilots, a proven approach, with £28 million to help people off
the streets and back on their
feet. These pilots, in Manchester,
Liverpool and the West Midlands, will provide 1,000 people with
stable, affordable accommodation and help them recover from
complex health issues, such as substance abuse and mental
health difficulties.
-
Launching 11 rough sleeping hubs across England to
provide specialist support for thousands of vulnerable
people. 11 rough sleeping hubs to be
launched across England – providing specialist support for
thousands of vulnerable people with locations including
Bristol, Derby and West London.