New UK government statistics released
today (9th
September) show that during much of
the pandemic, over
135,000
of the households in England
who experienced or were at risk of
homelessness also had other support needs.
The statistics show that from April
2020 – March 2021:
-
Overall,
268,560 households
experienced or were at risk of homelessness. This represents a
7% decrease on the year before mainly due to the protections
put in place during the pandemic.
-
Half of households experiencing or at risk of homelessness had one or more
support need. This
includes victims of domestic
abuse, young people leaving their family or care, people with
learning disabilities, and people with experiences of mental
health problems – which was the most common support need
(66,470 people
overall). These experiences
put greater pressure on people and can make ending people’s
homelessness even harder to resolve without the right
support.
-
Compared to the previous
year, 17% more
(86,810
households) were pushed
into homelessness because
family or friends could no longer accommodate them – the single
highest cause of homelessness in this time – and
17% more because of domestic abuse
(31,190
households).
Jon Sparkes, chief executive of Crisis, said:
“These statistics make painfully clear
that you cannot free people from the cycle of homelessness
without a proper home and crucially, the support they need to
keep it long term.
“Half of the households forced into or
put at risk of homelessness in the last year had one or more
support need, which are harder to resolve without a stable home.
For many people with multiple issues relating to mental health,
trauma or addiction, short-term accommodation cannot prevent them
being forced back into rough sleeping.
“We urgently need a national Housing
First scheme that delivers them long term housing, alongside
tailored, unconditional support to rebuild their lives and leave
homelessness behind for good.
“The numbers are not huge: Crisis
research shows that 9,000 people who were given emergency
accommodation through the Everyone In scheme need this support,
out of a total of 37,000. But the difference it would make to
each of their lives would be immeasurable.”
-ENDS-
Notes to Editor
-
Analysis by Crisis estimates that
9,400 people who were helped through Everyone In have support
needs that would be best supported through Housing First. Using
six secondary data sources – CHAIN, Crisis’ survey data, Hard
Edges, MHCLG survey data, and Multiple Exclusion Homelessness -
which have recorded the support needs of people rough sleeping,
sofa surfing and living in temporary accommodation Crisis has
analysed the proportions of people experiencing mental and
physical health needs, drug and/or alcohol needs, exiting the
criminal justice system and care system. Based on existing
evidence we assume a mid-estimate of 9,400 out of the 37,000
people supported through Everyone In have a combination of
these support needs.
-
The research comes as Crisis
relaunches its Home for
All campaign, which shows
that if the UK government does not commit to funding a national
Housing First scheme in the autumn spending review, it is at
serious risk of undermining the progress it has made towards
achieving its commitment to ending rough sleeping by
2024.
-
Housing First works on the principle
that someone is provided with a stable ordinary home first and
then tailored unconditional support, for issues such as trauma,
mental health and addiction, is provided alongside this for as
long as it is needed.
-
By rolling the scheme out
nationally, Crisis analysis shows that for every £1 invested in
Housing First, £1.24 of savings will be made to the public
purse due to the reduction in the use of homelessness and other
related services such as health and criminal justice.