£66 million funding will provide safe and warm accommodation over
winter Extra help including counselling, rehab and detox services
to support rough sleepers with drug and alcohol issues Part of
government’s drive to end rough sleeping by the end of this
Parliament, backed by £640 million invested each year Rough
sleepers will be helped into safe and warm accommodation and
treatment services for drug and alcohol dependency this winter,
supported by an extra £66...Request free
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- £66 million funding will provide safe and warm accommodation
over winter
- Extra help including counselling, rehab and detox services to
support rough sleepers with drug and alcohol issues
- Part of government’s drive to end rough sleeping by the end
of this Parliament, backed by £640 million invested each year
Rough sleepers will be helped into safe and warm accommodation
and treatment services for drug and alcohol dependency this
winter, supported by an extra £66 million the Department for
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities announced today (29 October
2021).
The support will help rough sleepers off the streets at a time of
year when they face falling temperatures and give them an
opportunity to turn their lives around by ending the cycle of
addiction.
Building on the success of the Everyone In initiative, which
supported 37,000 vulnerable people into longer term accommodation
during the pandemic, this support will continue to help rough
sleepers off the streets.
Today’s announcement will help to deliver the government’s
commitment to end rough sleeping by 2024.
- More than 60 councils have been allocated a share of the up
to £52 million Drug and Alcohol Treatment Grant scheme for
specialist support services for rough sleepers and those at risk,
including one-to-one support and mentoring.
- Voluntary, faith and community groups have been awarded
grants from the £3.8 million Homelessness Transformation Fund to
transform shared accommodation into COVID-secure, self-contained
accommodation, giving rough sleepers safe places to stay.
- Additionally, up to 3,500 rough sleepers will be provided
with emergency accommodation, with areas most in need of support
to tackle rough sleeping invited to bid for funding from the £10
million Winter Pressures Fund.
Rough sleeping has already reduced by over a third but the
government will go even further with £640 million invested each
year over the next 3 years to tackle the issue – a 85% increase
in funding compared to 2019.
This builds on the £202 million for councils to continue to help
people off the streets, funding 14,500 bed spaces for rough
sleepers and 2,700 specialist support staff. This is on top of
£112 million invested last year.
Those at risk of eviction are also being helped through the £310
million Homelessness Prevention Grant, with councils providing
financial support or helping households find new homes. A
£16 million pilot is
also helping end the cycle of homelessness and hospital
admissions by providing temporary accommodation, care and support
for rough sleepers leaving hospital.
Minister for Rough Sleeping and Housing, said:
Rough sleepers are some of the most vulnerable people in our
society and we must help them off the streets and end the plight
of rough sleeping once and for all.
That means providing somewhere safe and warm for them to stay,
and this funding will be a lifeline for thousands as the
temperature drops this winter.
We are also helping those trapped in drug and alcohol addiction
and giving them the stability they need to turn their lives
around.
Minister for Care, , said:
It’s crucial we support people experiencing homelessness –
particularly those wanting to break the cycle of addiction.
This additional funding will not only help those personally
fighting drug and alcohol addiction, but it will also benefit
their friends, families and the communities who are also impacted
by the consequences of substance misuse.
More widely, we continue to support people without a home,
including around access to vaccines throughout the pandemic, and
recently announcing £16 million for pilot projects to support
homeless people being discharged from hospital.
Kathy Mohan, CEO at Housing Justice:
We’re pleased that we have for the second year running, been able
to provide substantial funding for faith and community groups to
provide COVID secure emergency accommodation in their local area.
These smaller organisations are at the centre of many
communities’ response to homelessness, often operating on tight
budgets.
This funding provides an opportunity for extra beds, implementing
new ideas and increasing the options available to people
experiencing rough sleeping
Rick Henderson, CEO at Homeless Link:
As the winter months approach, it’s vital organisations have the
capacity to provide single room accommodation to help reduce the
number of people sleeping rough, while minimising the risk of
spreading COVID-19.
Therefore, I am delighted to announce the list of grantees for
this fund. I hope this winter provides a blueprint for future
models of winter homelessness support, with single room
accommodation becoming the norm.
Programmes and projects to benefit from the announcement include:
-
Leeds: funding a street-based psychologist,
who refers rough sleepers to mental health and substance misuse
services and a drop-in clinic in the city centre which also
provides specialist support.
-
Westminster: funding the Westminster Rough
Sleepers Drug and Alcohol Service, ensuring rough sleepers can
access treatment programmes. Support is also provided for rough
sleepers to access education, employment, or training once they
have completed treatment.
-
Southampton: more staff are supporting those
with complex needs and substance misuse issues and a clinical
psychologist is making sure that those with mental health
issues get the support they need.
-
Cambridge: funding a local charity working in
partnership with the council to provide 20-bed self-contained
rooms for a safe place this winter and route off the streets.
-
London: funding the All People All Places
project that will provide support for 50 people in the winter
months.
The Drug and Alcohol Treatment Grant is entering its second year
and is already supporting people sleeping rough in 43 councils to
access structured drug and alcohol treatment including
counselling, detox and rehab services.
Funding allocations
Rough Sleeping Drug and Alcohol Treatment Grant
and Homelessness Transformation Fund funding
breakdowns
Rough Sleeping Drug & Alcohol Treatment
Grant
Local authority
|
Funding awarded
|
Barnet
|
£256,706
|
Bedford
|
£263,596
|
Birmingham
|
£652,329
|
Blackpool
|
£345,562
|
Bolton
|
£318,633
|
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole
|
£267,808
|
Bradford
|
£376,213
|
Brent
|
£273,000
|
Brighton and Hove
|
£337,623
|
Bristol, City of
|
£539,500
|
Cambridge
|
£380,944
|
Camden
|
£328,759
|
Cornwall
|
£623,569
|
County Durham
|
£91,960
|
Coventry
|
£263,939
|
Croydon
|
£555,500
|
Derby
|
£166,576
|
Doncaster
|
£173,443
|
Dorset
|
£250,820
|
Ealing
|
£601,384
|
Enfield
|
£425,422
|
Hackney and the City
|
£709,874
|
Haringey
|
£343,473
|
Hillingdon
|
£221,305
|
Islington
|
£287,559
|
Kingston upon Hull, City of
|
£321,739
|
Kingston upon Thames
|
£366,554
|
Lambeth
|
£404,187
|
Leeds
|
£444,315
|
Leicester
|
£409,420
|
Lewisham
|
£309,120
|
Liverpool
|
£589,104
|
Luton
|
£228,000
|
Manchester
|
£621,704
|
Middlesbrough
|
£214,917
|
Milton Keynes
|
£270,958
|
Newcastle upon Tyne
|
£170,250
|
Newham
|
£436,030
|
Northamptonshire
|
£393,125
|
Nottingham
|
£370,056
|
Oldham
|
£254,564
|
Oxford
|
£426,200
|
Peterborough
|
£377,136
|
Plymouth
|
£165,500
|
Portsmouth
|
£497,047
|
Preston
|
£383,458
|
Reading
|
£435,061
|
Redbridge
|
£286,428
|
Richmond upon Thames
|
£185,000
|
Rochdale
|
£141,650
|
Salford
|
£383,259
|
Sheffield
|
£376,378
|
Southampton
|
£248,308
|
Southend-on-Sea
|
£228,184
|
Southwark
|
£336,469
|
Stoke-on-Trent
|
£373,173
|
Tower Hamlets
|
£563,051
|
Waltham Forest
|
£183,455
|
Wandsworth
|
£285,800
|
West Sussex
|
£180,441
|
Westminster
|
£1,238,968
|
Wigan
|
£385,922
|
Homelessness Transformation Fund
Local authority
|
Project
|
Funding awarded
|
Bedford
|
King’s Arms Project
|
£144,393
|
Manchester
|
Caritas Diocese of Salford
|
£98,504
|
Westminster
|
Cardinal Hume Centre
|
£40,000
|
King’s Lynn and West Norfolk
|
King’s Lynn Winter Night Shelter
|
£81,199
|
Leicester
|
One Roof Leicester
|
£82,850
|
Medway
|
Kings Church - Caring Hands in the Community
|
£100,000
|
Ipswich
|
Selig Suffolk Trust
|
£85,952
|
Calderdale
|
Christians Together Calderdale
|
£157,596
|
Birmingham
|
St Anne’s Hostel
|
£68,640
|
Worcester
|
Maggs Day Centre
|
£92,437
|
Cornwall
|
Cosgarne Hall
|
£97,500
|
Harborough
|
Falcon Support Services
|
£92,930
|
Newham
|
NEWway Project
|
£95,388
|
Southwark
|
Robes Project
|
£92,420
|
Ealing
|
Hope for Southall Street Homeless
|
£42,350
|
Camden
|
C4WS Homeless Project
|
£95,388
|
Maidstone
|
Maidstone Churches Winter Shelter
|
£36,661
|
Manchester
|
Barnabus
|
£85,342
|
Hyndburn
|
Maundy Relief
|
£27,300
|
Canterbury
|
Catching Lives
|
£23,291
|
Medway
|
Medway Night Shelter
|
£48,620
|
Harrow
|
FirmFoundation
|
£64,689
|
Chesterfield
|
Pathways of Chesterfield
|
£42,140
|
Reigate and Banstead
|
Renewed Hope
|
£22,491
|
Leeds
|
West Yorkshire Destitute Asylum Network
|
£20,000
|
Cambridge
|
It Takes A City
|
£65,000
|
Bradford
|
Hope Housing
|
£50,000
|
Folkestone
|
Folkestone Rainbow Centre
|
£59,126
|
Peterborough
|
Light Project
|
£52,587
|
Haringey
|
Highway of Holiness
|
£92,092
|
Westminster
|
West London Mission
|
£66,082
|
Dover
|
Dover Outreach Centre
|
£30,000
|
Southwark
|
The Outside Project
|
£70,640
|
Bedford
|
SMART CJS
|
£84,983
|
Tower Hamlets
|
This is GrowTH Ltd
|
£96,298
|
Bromley
|
Bromley Homeless
|
£75,050
|
Luton
|
NOAH Enterprise
|
£79,982
|
Rugby
|
Hope 4 (Rugby) Ltd
|
£15,000
|
Camden
|
women@thewell
|
£17,300
|
Derby
|
Derby City Mission Ltd
|
£100,000
|
Waltham Forest
|
Forest Churches Emergency Night Shelter
|
£80,630
|
Gravesham
|
Gravesham Sanctuary CIO
|
£42,700
|
Bristol
|
InHope
|
£89,430
|
West Lancashire
|
West Lancashire Crisis & Information Centre
|
£62,037
|
Weymouth
|
The Bus Shelter
|
£29,484
|
Peterborough
|
Hope Into Action UK
|
£88,000
|
Hackney
|
Hackney Doorways
|
£14,280
|
Barnet
|
Together in Barnet
|
£95,388
|
Buckinghamshire
|
Wycombe Homeless Connection
|
£28,000
|
Greenwich
|
Greenwich Winter Night Shelter
|
£76,790
|
Eastbourne
|
Kingdom Way Trust
|
£18,788
|
Tameside
|
ANEW Approach CIC
|
£50,640
|
Bexley
|
Bexley Winter Shelter
|
£55,200
|
Swindon
|
Swindon Night Shelter
|
£36,995
|
Northumberland
|
StopGap Supported Housing
|
£32,000
|
Haringey & Enfield
|
All People All Places
|
£82,493
|
Reading
|
Faith Christian Group
|
£30,000
|
|