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Agenda item

Labour Motion - London Charter to End Rough Sleeping

Hackney Council notes:

 

1.  Despite the Government’s commitment in 2019 to end rough sleeping by 2024, estimates show there has been an increase in rough sleeping in all regions of England, with London and the south-east accounting for almost half of the rise.

2.  Rough sleeping has increased under this Government, with the number of rough sleepers having increased by 74% since 2010.

3.  The most recent annual count by the London-only Combined Homelessness and Information Network (Chain) showed 10,053 rough sleepers spotted on London’s streets between April 2022 and March 2023. A total of 4,068 people were counted between July and September 2023 for the most recent quarterly update with half of those new to the streets.

4.  The majority of people sleeping rough in England are male, aged over 26 years old and from the UK. Meanwhile the Office for National Statistics found men who are living on the street outnumber women at a ratio of six to one.

5.  Women are often missing from rough sleeping counts because they tend to be less visible than male rough sleepers due to the risk of violence on the streets. A coalition of homelessness and women’s organisations in London conducted a women’s rough sleeping census in October 2022 and found 154 women, including trans and non-binary women, sleeping rough in London in a week. That number was higher than previously thought with an extra 71 women found across 13 London boroughs when the data was compared to the latest official rough sleeping count.

6.  The cost of living crisis has exacerbated longstanding drivers of homelessness, such as a shortage of affordable housing, an often punitive welfare system and increasingly stretched health services.

7.  Local authorities and homelessness charities state that street homelessness is just the tip of the iceberg and estimate the number of people living without a home is much higher than the figures show, with many people in informal living arrangements such as sofa surfing.

8.  The number of households living in temporary accommodation (TA) in England are at an all-time high. As of March 2023, 104,510 households were living in TA, including 65,000 households with children.

9.  Over 3,000 households in Hackney were among more than 300,000 nationwide who spent Christmas without a home. In Hackney this includes 3,500 children, and around 50% of TA placements are now outside our borough, severing people from their livelihoods and support networks.

10.Like other local authorities, Hackney has seen a precipitous increase in the number of homelessness applications. The number of households seeking support is up by 44% from 2017/18 to 2021/22. The Council anticipates the number of approaches will continue to increase at around 8% per year.

11.Hackney’s Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy, adopted at Cabinet in December, will ensure we strengthen the advice, support and tools available to people at risk of homelessness need, and make sure that no one in Hackney is left facing homelessness alone. This will include maximising access to short and long-term affordable housing, tackling rough sleeping and addressing homelessness among young people in Hackney.

 

Hackney Council further notes:

 

12.That the Mayor of London’s Rough Sleeping Charter was created by a pan-London coalition working to end rough sleeping, and enshrines principles and actions needed to tackle the issue; an example of London’s commitment to working together to end rough sleeping for good.

13.The Charter sets out six principles for signatories to uphold in their work including:

14.Accepting that whilst people sleeping rough may have problems, they aren’t problem people

15.Recognising that everyone rough sleeping is unique, and there should be meaningful options for all, regardless of immigration status

16.Ensuring that people sleeping rough are safe from violence, abuse, theft and discrimination and that they have the full protection of the law

17.The Charter also includes key actions that signatories commit to undertake and support:

18.Acknowledging people when they talk to you or ask you for money, even if you decide you would rather not give it to them directly

19.If you see someone sleeping rough who needs help, let Streetlink London know

20.Volunteer, donate, or support a charity who has joined this pledge

 

The Council resolves to:

 

21.Ask the Mayor of Hackney to sign the London Charter to End Rough Sleeping on  behalf of Hackney Council.

22.Continue to call on the Government to:

23.Remove the cap on Housing Benefit subsidy for TA, which is currently set at the 2011 Local Housing Allowance rate, to enable local authorities to provide more TA locally.

24.Increase the Homelessness Prevention Grant in 2024-25.

25.Implement an emergency increase in Discretionary Housing Payments in the current financial year.

26.Provide additional grant funding to acquire Private Rented Stock released by landlords (currently 40% of all sales listings in London).

27.Invest in new build affordable housing – bringing London’s Affordable Homes Programme target back up to at least 35,000 homes.

28.Increase the 40% cap on the proportion of individual sites that can be funded through Right to Buy receipts and allow boroughs to use receipts in conjunction with grant funding (particularly Affordable Homes Programme grant).

29.Address the financial shortfall created by the 7% rent cap in 2023/24

30.Deliver a long-term rent settlement post-2025 which puts social housing on a sustainable financial footing

31.Fully fund the new Decent Homes Standard and ensure a long-term and more easily accessible funding pot for home retrofit measures.

 

Proposer: Cllr Sharon Patrick 

Seconder: Cllr Joseph Ogundemuren

 

Sources

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2023/feb/28/rough-sleeping-in-england-rises-cost-of-living

https://cityharvest.org.uk/blog/homelessness-uk-increased-by-74-since-2010/#:~:text=Recent%20statistics%20indicate%20a%2035,ongoing%20challenges%20in%20addressing%20homelessness.
https://www.bigissue.com/news/housing/britains-homelessness-shame-cold-hard-facts/

 

 

Supporting documents: