New government statistics released today show that across England
over 95,000 households started the new year in temporary
accommodation.
The statistics also show that from January – March
2021:
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There was a 25% increase in the number of single
households being placed in temporary accommodation compared to
the same time last year. This reflects the work of local
authorities to support people rough sleeping into emergency
accommodation during the pandemic.
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The use of B&B accommodation increased by 37%
since the same time last year. The majority (88%) of people in
this accommodation were single households.
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Over 50% of households had an identified support
need such as mental health problems, physical ill health or
drug and alcohol dependencies. Since the last quarter (Oct –
Dec 2020) the number of people with a support need has
increased by 9%.
Responding to the figures Jon Sparkes, Crisis
Chief Executive, said: “These statistics confirm that as
we entered a third national lockdown the government was right to
instruct councils to redouble efforts to ensure that people were
provided with emergency accommodation to shelter from the cold
and rising covid cases.
“But we must remember that living in a cramped
B&B is only meant to be temporary and until people are helped
into a home of their own, we’ve not finished the job. We cannot
expect people to be able to rebuild their lives from a single
room where they don’t even have the facilities to cook their own
meals or do their own washing. With the financial impact of the
pandemic continuing to be felt and protections such as the
eviction ban now over, we know that many more people will have
been pushed closer to the edge and face being placed in expensive
temporary accommodation to keep them off the streets unless we
drastically change approach.
“Going forward we urgently need a new national
Government strategy that will deliver
the genuinely affordable homes we need and invests in programmes
like Housing First, so that people with complex support needs can
get the right help to leave homelessness behind for good. Long
lasting recovery for everyone is only possible when we start
providing homes not hotel rooms.”