Thousands of families are facing homelessness in the final
quarter of this year due to the Conservative’s failure to end
no-fault evictions, new analysis from Labour has
found.
Labour estimates on current trends 5,758 households
could be threatened with homelessness in the final quarter of
2023, covering the Christmas and New Year period.
The analysis also suggests on current trends up to
2,447 households face being evicted by bailiffs in a so-called
‘accelerated procedure’.
It comes as Labour’s Deputy Leader and Shadow
Housing Secretary and Shadow Minister for
Homelessness is due to visit a Crisis
centre in London this coming Tuesday
(19th December). There, they will reiterate
Labour’s commitment to get the job done and bring an
end to no-fault evictions.
The Government’s recently introduced a Renter’s
Reform Bill which makes provision to end Section 21 evictions,
but they have since admitted that these evictions won’t be
made illegal until “reforms to the justice system are in
place”.
, Labour Deputy
Leader and Shadow Housing Secretary,
said:
“A toxic mix of rising rents, the cost-of-living
crisis and a failure to end no-fault evictions is hitting
the most vulnerable this Christmas.
“On the Tories’ watch, a homelessness crisis has
erupted. People are dying on the streets, record children
are living in temporary accommodation and private renters have no
legal protection against their landlord making them homeless on
whim.
“Having waited years for ministers to deliver on
their promise to end no fault evictions, tens of thousands more
families now face the risk of homelessness because of this
further delay. The next Labour Government will get the job
done.
“Only Labour has the vision and will to tackle
homelessness, and we know that we can meet our ambitions because
we have done it before. We will usher in the long-term
structural change needed to bring an end to the Tories’ housing
crisis with our plan for safe, secure, affordable
homes.”
Ends
Notes
S21 homelessness
The government’s statutory homelessness live
tables, published on 30 November, show 6,640 households were
threatened with homelessness as a result of no-fault
evictions in Q2 2023, more than any quarter since the relevant
data was first published in 2018. This is a year-on-year increase
of 10.3 per cent from 6,020 in 2022.
Q4 2022 figures show 5,220 households threatened
with homelessness because of valid Section 21 notices. Applying a
10.3 per cent uplift finds up to 5,707 households could be
threatened with homelessness in the final quarter of this year
because of no fault evictions, covering the Christmas and New
Year period.
Statutory homelessness figures can be found here:
https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/live-tables-on-homelessness
Difference Q2 2022-23
|
620
|
% Difference Q2 2022-23
|
10.3%
|
Q4 2022
|
5,220
|
Applying 2022-23 uplift to Q4 2022
|
5,758
|
Bailiff evictions
The government’s mortgage and landlord possession statistics,
published on 9 November, show 2,307 people were evicted by
bailiffs due to no-fault evictions (the ‘accelerated procedure’)
in Q3 2023, with one more quarter of data available than the
homelessness statistics. This is a year-on-year increase of 28.7
per cent from 1,792 in Q3 2022.
Q4 2022 figures show 1,924 households evicted by bailiffs due to
S21 orders. Applying a 28.7 per cent uplift finds up to 2,447
households could be evicted by bailiffs in the final quarter of
this year because of no fault evictions, covering the Christmas
and New Year period.
Mortgage and landlord possession statistics can be found on table
eight here: https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/mortgage-and-landlord-possession-statistics-july-to-september-2023
Difference Q3 2022-23
|
515
|
% Difference Q3 2022-23
|
28.7%
|
Q4 2022
|
1,924
|
Applying 2022-23 uplift to Q4 2022
|
2,447
|
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-8756/