Thousands are struggling to survive the pandemic while homeless - Shelter comments on new figures
Thursday, 28 January 2021 10:45
The government has released new figures on homelessness in England
today for the period July to September 2020, which show: Even with
curbs on legal evictions, many households were tipped into
homelessness over the summer. Almost 70,000 households approached
their local council and were found to be homeless or at risk of
homelessness. Between July and September 2020, councils were only
able to help one in five (20%) households at risk of...Request free trial
The government has released new figures on homelessness
in England today for the period July to September
2020, which show:
- Even with curbs on legal evictions, many households were
tipped into homelessness over the summer. Almost 70,000
households approached their local council and were found to be
homeless or at risk of homelessness.
- Between July and September 2020, councils were only able to
help one in five (20%) households at risk of homelessness to
stay in their existing home.
- Half (49%) of households found to be homeless by their
local council were not helped to find a home – showing the
impact of a lack of suitable social housing.
- The three most common triggers of homelessness between July
and September were households no longer being able to stay with
families and friends (33%), the loss of a private tenancy (13%)
and domestic abuse (12%).
Polly Neate, chief executive of Shelter, said: “Covid-19 has
ripped open the cracks left by the gross shortage of decent
social homes in this country. Thousands of people are
struggling to survive the pandemic without a home thanks to
decades of political neglect.
“Even with the curbs on legal evictions, people are still being
thrown into homelessness as they have throughout. From the
taxi-driver sleeping rough because the council say they cannot
help, to the mother fleeing domestic abuse in search of a place
of safety – this pandemic continues to be a never-ending
nightmare.
“Too many people have suffered too much. The government cannot
continue to fail its citizens by allowing homelessness to rise
through inaction. There is only one exit strategy that will end
this crisis for good, and that is rapid investment in genuinely
affordable social homes.”
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