The Department of Levelling
Up, Communities and Housing (DLUHC) has allocated £34.6m to
tackle rough sleeping in over 70 areas of the country,
providing up to 4,300 additional beds and 630 more support
staff.
On the anniversary of the launch of the Government’s Rough
Sleeping Strategy, today’s announcement allocates funding to
areas ‘most in need of support’ to help people off the streets
more quickly.
DLUHC say this funding is on top of the original allocation of up
to £500 million over three years, which was announced earlier
this year, which has provided 14,000 beds for people who are
rough sleeping and 3,000 staff to provide tailored support across
England.
Matt Downie, chief executive of Crisis, said:
“While it’s positive to see the Westminster Government providing
funding to support people sleeping rough, it is the bare minimum
of what’s required. All forms of homelessness are increasing. A
combination of rising living costs, soaring rents and huge demand
for properties is leaving households across Britain unable to
find or keep an affordable home.
“To tackle rough sleeping for good, we need to see decisive
action that prevents people from losing their homes in the first
place – this includes urgent investment in housing benefit so it
covers the cheapest of rents. The emphasis must be on tackling
rather than ‘managing’ homelessness. Truly affordable homes,
rather than beds, are desperately needed – without this, people
who are helped off the streets run the risk of being forced to
return as there is simply nowhere affordable for them to live
long-term.”