The Salvation Army is calling for people newly sleeping rough
since the start of the pandemic to be urgently found
accommodation for the lockdown in England.
The church and charity, which is one of the country’s largest
providers of homelessness services is calling for the Government
to urgently reinvigorate the “Everyone In” initiative launched
during the first national lockdown last March. New people on the
streets include people whose livelihoods disappeared overnight or
when their living conditions, such as sofa surfing became
impossible due to social distancing.
Malcolm Page, The Salvation Army’s Assistant Director of
Homelessness Services said: “The Government is now targeting
funds where demand is high, but not necessarily across the board.
Now that we are back in lockdown in England, we need another
national ‘Everyone In’ initiative to be a high priority. Local
authorities need to immediately be given the necessary funding
and resources to pay for self-contained accommodation to keep
people safe.
“In the face of a growing public health emergency and when we
know rough sleepers are at high risk of coronavirus due to
underlying health conditions, we are repeating our call for the
Government to immediately increase short-term funding. Not only
this but to make up for a decade of austerity, by pledging
sustainable long-term investment to eradicate rough sleeping.”
The Salvation Army is battling to protect people with nowhere
to turn around the country:
- In St Helen’s, The Salvation Army has expanded its work by
converting office space in one of its Lifehouses to provide
additional emergency accommodation and support to seven rough
sleepers in a covid-safe way.
- In London, The Salvation Army has opened bed spaces to rough
sleepers coming out of hospital, helping to reduce pressures on
NHS capacity.
- The corps at Crewe in Cheshire are regularly serving 30
people with hot meals and drinks as although temporarily housed
they can’t afford to buy food.
This front-line care, made possible through generous donations,
is in addition to working with local authorities to support
people housed through ‘Everyone In’ into longer term
accommodation.
The Salvation Army published its own blueprint for tackling
homelessness and rough sleeping last summer, Future-Proof the Roof. The
report highlights a new approach to investment in homelessness
and rough sleeping, which will allow the Government to maintain
the recent progress made through the ‘Everyone In’ initiative and
provide added protection against the wider economic downturn
caused by Covid-19.
Key recommendations from Future-Proof the Roof include:
- Introducing a CHAIN type recording systems in city regions
outside of London with high levels of rough sleeping, so that the
Government can accurately calculate the level of resource and
investment required to end rough sleeping during this Parliament
in line with its manifesto commitment.
- Ensuring that Government introduces a full multi-year
investment plan for homelessness across the course of this
Parliament. At a minimum, this plan must ensure that investment
does not fall below the £700 million invested in 2020/21.
- Ensuring that the social security system prevents rather than
causes homelessness and rough sleeping, by maintaining the recent
increase in the Local Housing Allowance (LHA), so that people can
afford to rent at least three in every ten of the most affordable
properties in any given area. Following the Spending Review in
November, this means the Government must reverse its freeze on
the value of LHA rates from 2021/22 so that its value can
increase yearly in line with inflation.
- In addition, the Government must also make the temporary
£20/week increase to the standard allowance of Universal Credit
and Working Tax Credit permanent from April. The Government must
keep this lifeline to prevent 700,000 more people, including
300,000 children, from falling into poverty overnight, further
increasing their risk of homelessness.