The Mayor of London, , has
activated the pan-London Severe Weather Emergency Protocols
(SWEP) for the first time this year to protect homeless people as
temperatures are forecast to fall below 0°C across London this
evening.
The activation of SWEP compels councils across London (in
association with homelessness charities) to open emergency
accommodation for people who are sleeping rough during the worst
weather conditions.
This year, the pandemic has made the provision of SWEP more
difficult as it had previously relied on communal sleeping
arrangements. Because of the increased risk of Covid transmission
in these settings, it is the Mayor’s position that only
self-contained accommodation such as hotel rooms be used for SWEP
provision this year.
Shared sleeping spaces should be considered by local authorities
only as a last resort, when all options to provide self-contained
rooms have been exhausted. This could be avoided if the
Government increased funding to the Greater London Authority and
boroughs during sustained periods of cold weather to provide
self-contained accommodation throughout the winter.
All London councils have also committed to implementing the
Mayor’s ‘In for Good’ principle, meaning that once someone has
accessed SWEP shelter, they are accommodated until a support plan
is in place to end their rough sleeping - regardless of whether
the temperature has risen above freezing.
The Mayor of London, said:
“Homelessness is an emergency whatever the weather - but the
pandemic has compounded the risks faced by the most vulnerable
Londoners. Local authorities, charities and others supporting
homeless people have been working tirelessly throughout this
crisis and will continue to do so as temperatures fall.
“But it is a simple fact that Covid-secure accommodation costs
more than traditional shelter space, so the Government must
supply appropriate funding as a matter of urgency to ensure
nobody is left on the streets during freezing conditions.”
ENDS
NOTES TO EDITORS
Since winter 2017/18, the GLA has provided guidance for London’s
councils regarding local SWEP plans. This guidance, which has
been agreed by all 33 London councils, introduced a trigger point
for pan-London SWEP activation of 0°C on any one night to ensure
consistency across the capital.