New Government
statistics released today reveal that households with
someone with physical ill health or disability who are owed
a duty by their local council to either prevent or end their
homelessness has risen sharply by 14% in the last 12
months.
Additionally, the
number of people with physical ill health or disability whose
local council have been unable to help prevent or
relieve their homelessness under the Homelessness Reduction
Act (HRA) and now are classed as priority
need for housing has risen by
53%.
Overall, the
number of households found in priority need for
housing has risen by 16%.
Jon Sparkes,
chief executive of Crisis, said: “Being without a safe and secure
home, or being at risk of losing your home, is devastating. Under
the Homelessness Reduction Act, duties are owed to help
people experiencing, or at risk of, homelessness – this
steep increase shows not only the scale of people
requiring help, but the challenges that people already
face, on top of having no place to call home.
“We need to see
Government take action. The HRA is intended as a tool
to prevent people from becoming homeless. But councils
have to be given the resources and ability to exercise this to
its full potential and we need to see transformative
measures taken, such as restoring housing benefit levels to cover
the cost of true rent and an increase in social housing being
built, or we risk seeing these numbers to continue to
rise.”