A coalition of 18 charities has united for the first time and
joined forces with the Mayor of London to launch a new campaign
to help rough sleepers in the capital.
Alongside the Mayor’s record levels of City Hall investment in
services to give people sleeping rough somewhere to sleep and
access to the support and help they need, the ‘No one needs to
sleep rough in London’ campaign raises awareness and sets out
how Londoners can help ensure there is a way off the streets
for rough sleepers this winter.
In a new approach, the Mayor , has helped bring together 18
charities that have decades of experience in helping people
sleeping rough in the capital, to form a coalition – the London
Homeless Charities Group. The coalition offers Londoners an
easily accessible single donation point, with all funds
generated going equally to all 18 charities to direct vital
services for people sleeping rough where they are needed most.
The campaign will also show Londoners how they can direct
outreach services towards people found sleeping
rough.
The Mayor launched the campaign on a visit to start work on a
new permanent hub in Hackney for the No Second Night Out
service – a vital programme providing a rapid response to
assess the needs of new rough sleepers and give them an offer
that means they do not have to sleep out for a second night. It
is expected the hub will be open and ready to help people off
the streets early next year.
Work on a second hub and a staging post, both in Lewisham, will
provide short-term accommodation for people the hub can’t help
immediately. Work will begin on site in the spring.
During the visit, Sadiq also announced a major new policy
approach to help people sleeping rough this winter. From now
on, emergency shelters across the capital will be open on every
day of sub-zero temperatures in London, ditching the previous
Mayor’s policy of only making shelters available for people
when three consecutive days of freezing temperatures were
forecast.
Sadiq felt the approach he inherited did not go far enough to
help those on the streets and has changed the policy for all
shelters run by City Hall. He has also helped London councils
to change their policy in line with his new approach – with all
33 boroughs now signed up to open their shelters on the first
day of sub-zero temperatures.
A sharper focus under has resulted in the rise in
the number of people sleeping rough effectively halting for the
first time since 2009, but the fact it doubled from 3,975 in
2010/11 to more than 8,000 in 2015/16 means more support is
needed and that ministers need to tackle the long-term causes.
During the Mayor’s first year in office, he set up the ‘No
Nights Sleeping Rough’ taskforce – a group that brings together
key groups in London to work together and put in place new
interventions to help people sleeping rough. With the help of
the taskforce, the Mayor has secured £4.2m toward new targeted
services, including a programme to ensure the capital’s 350
most entrenched rough sleepers are identified and supported.
It follows a commitment by the Mayor to spend £9m every year on
rough sleeping services in London and a £50m fund announced at
the end of last year to invest in accommodation so that people
can move on from hostels and refuges.
The Mayor is doing everything he can with the powers and
resources available to him at City Hall and is urging Londoners
to join him by donating to the new coalition of charities and
connecting people seen sleeping rough to outreach services, by
using StreetLink – a website which sends an alert to the local
authority or support service to go out and offer them help.
The Mayor of London, , said: “We’ve already
started to make progress in London, but it’s still shocking
that so many people in our city feel they have no choice but to
sleep on the streets. We must continue to take action
because one person sleeping rough is always one too many.“
I know there are millions of Londoners who want to do something
to help rough sleepers get off the streets for good. That’s why
I am pleased to be joining forces with our new coalition of
charities dedicated to this cause, offering a single donation
point for Londoners who want to give money to those who need
help the most. I urge Londoners to donate and join me in
helping people sleeping on our streets to connect with vital
services.
“As Mayor, I am investing in services right across the capital
and doing everything within my power to tackle this issue. But
the government also needs to play its part by providing
additional funding so that we can boost much-needed services in
London, and by tackling the long-term causes of homelessness
and rough sleeping.”
The campaign, which runs for two months, will be promoted on
the underground network and supported across the Mayor’s social
media channels.
Denise Hatton, Chief Executive for YMCA England & Wales,
said: “It should be unimaginable that anyone has to spend a
single night sleeping rough in this country. Homelessness is
the major issue of our time, which is why 18 charities have
come together to form the London Homeless Charities Group,
bringing together expertise across the sector to end rough
sleeping and homelessness in the capital for good.
“It’s a tremendous boost to have the Mayor of London support
our first winter campaign, but we now need your support. We
know that Londoners care passionately about helping people
sleeping rough and through the London Homeless Charities Group,
Londoners now have a central point for donations. Together we
can offer more support to rebuild lives and make sure that no
one has to spend another night living on the street.”
Howard Sinclair, Chief Executive of St Mungo’s, said: “St
Mungo’s is proud to have provided the No Second Night Out
service since its inception in London and, through it, helped
thousands of people to move away from the streets as soon as
possible. Five years of temporary premises, however, has been
very challenging for the service so we very much welcome the
Mayor backing the need to get NSNO hubs on a permanent
footing.
“The new hubs, in Hackney and Lewisham, will help transform the
service NSNO staff are able to provide and result in many more
people, we hope, being able to rebuild their lives.”
Philip Glanville, Mayor of Hackney, said: “We’re proud that the
Mayor of London has chosen to launch his ‘No one needs to sleep
rough in London’ campaign in Hackney, where we’ve been working
closely with him and St Mungo’s to open a permanent hub for No
Second Night Out.
“We’re committed to tackling all forms of homelessness, and we
hope that the new permanent hub in Hackney will help NSNO build
on their record of helping thousands of people off the streets,
transforming even more lives across London.”
Ends
Notes to editors:
- The Mayor is asking people to donate to the London
Charities Homeless Group via a GoFundMe page set up by the
coalition. Details can be found here: www.london.gov.uk/help-rough-sleepers.
- The new coalition of 18 charities - London Homeless
Charities Group consists of:
- Albert
Kennedy Trust
-
Centrepoint
- The
Connection at St Martins
- Crisis
- Depaul
- Homeless
Link
- Housing
Justice
- LandAid
- New
Horizon Youth Centre
-
Providence Row
- Shelter
- St
Mungo’s
- Thames
Reach
- The Big
Issue Foundation
- The
Passage
- The
Salvation Army
- West
London Mission
- YMCA
England
- The campaign will run until mid-February. The donation page
on London.gov.uk and
information for contacting StreetLink will remain.
- The total number of rough sleepers seen rough sleeping in
London in 2016/17 was 8,108. This compares to 8,096 the
previous year. The figure reported in 2010/11 was of
3,975. Chain statistics are here: https://data.london.gov.uk/dataset/chain-reports
- The Mayor has set up the ‘No Nights Sleeping Rough’
taskforce - a London-wide taskforce to oversee the
implementation of the Mayor’s rough sleeping work and funding
priorities. Chaired by , the Deputy Mayor for
Housing and Residential Development, it brings together
partners key to tackling rough sleeping in London (including
boroughs, voluntary organisations and government).
- City Hall also invests £9m a year in a range of pan-London
services for rough sleepers. Last year, the rough sleeping
services commissioned by the Mayor supported more than 1,600
people off the streets and helped a further 1,600 people with a
history of rough sleeping, who are at risk of losing their
accommodation and returning to the streets, to stay in their
homes. More information about those services can be found
here: https://www.london.gov.uk/what-we-do/housing-and-land/homelessness/mayor%E2%80%99s-rough-sleeping-services
- Through his Affordable Homes Programme 2016-21, the Mayor
has made available up to £50m of capital funding to provide
accommodation for people ready to move on from hostels, so that
this group can live more independently and spaces are made
available for those newly in need.
- The ‘No Nights Sleeping Rough’ taskforce helped the Mayor
secure £4.2m from the government to help rough sleepers. That
includes: £2 million (alongside £1 million from City
Hall) for a rough-sleeping Social Impact Bond – an
innovative results-focussed way of helping more than 300 of
London’s rough sleepers with the most complex needs, such as
mental health issues and drug and alcohol problems; £1.875
million for a ‘Safe Connections’ project, to help people who
have slept rough at least twice in the last three months; and
£340,000 for a pan-London ‘Hostels Clearing House’ pilot, to
help councils and the services they commission make optimum use
of London’s hostel spaces for rough sleepers.
- The Mayor is committing £5million toward funding this
permanent hub for No Second Night Out, with St Mungo’s
providing about £600,000. The decision to allocate this money
was taken in October 2017 under Sadiq’s Affordable Homes
Programme (Homelessness Change). This follows lengthy delays to
finding appropriate premises under the previous Mayor who first
announced his intention to fund this project in February 2015.