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The British government has announced “the largest ever cash boost” to tackle soaring destitution in England, which Minister for Homelessness Rushanara Ali has admitted is “the worst housing crisis in living memory.”
Councils across the country will receive almost £1 billion ($1.27 billion) in new funding next year, it was revealed on Tuesday. The amount is equal to what councils spent on temporary accommodation for homeless families over the past year, recent figures show.
The funding aims to prevent “households becoming homeless in the first place,” according to a press release.
Earlier this month, housing charity Shelter reported that homelessness had risen by 14% in a year, with at least 354,000 people homeless in England, including 161,500 children.
The charity previously called on the government to “invest in genuinely affordable social homes” instead of “sinking billions into temporary solutions every year.”
The Labour government has said that “successive years of failure” to invest in prevention had resulted in a record number of households being homeless across England.
Ahead of the general election in July, which ended more than a decade of Conservative rule, The Guardian newspaper published an opinion piece identifying Tory policy decisions since 2010, such as repeated capping and freezing of local housing benefits, as a “direct cause” of soaring homelessness.
According to Shelter’s figures, the total cost of homelessness in England has doubled in the past five years, reaching £2.3 billion between April 2023 and March 2024. The figure includes £1 billion spent by councils on temporary accommodation for homeless families, and housing benefits.
Homelessness is a pressing issue in other parts of the UK. The government in Scotland declared a national housing emergency in May. In Wales, spending on temporary accommodation rose seven-fold between 2018 and 2022. In Northern Ireland, the number of placements in temporary accommodation has risen nearly four-fold since 2019.
A recent survey suggested that 57% of the British public do not believe the government will ever be able to eradicate “significant levels” of homelessness.
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https://www.rt.com/news/609543-uk-homelessness-new-funding/
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We imported a lot of people we didn't have housing for.
Send them home and I bet you find that there's plenty of housing for everyone and the cost for housing drops.
A government made problem. If you think the problem is bad. Wait until you see the solution.
Politicians these days seem to concentrate on short-term virtue signalling but have no idea about any long-term consequences.
Who knew that importing over 700,000 new people every year could result in any kind of housing problem?
Those insensitive motherfuckers!
THEY'RE UNHOUSED! Not homeless.
Geez!
Now I feel better. See how I fixed the problem?
(Sarcasm for those wondering)
Does their coddling of migrants have anything to do with this?
I heard getting rid of the UK govt would clear that right up...
Fight Club those high rise financial buildings in dragonville Old London...
At the very least, piss in their soup
The problem is that building new homes for subsisted rents does not make any profits for the construction companies and their subsidiaries, they refuse to build them unless they are given lots of ££££ and are allowed to limit the amount of public homes in any build.
In a build of say, 100 homes to sell then about 12 of them will be rabbit hutches for rental to the plebs.
Another complication is that the building safety and construction standards are determined by the site surveyor, there are no nationwide building standards anymore.
I would say that the building companies should be nationalized, or at the very least nationwide construction standards with regulatory teeth.
"You may say I'm a dreamer......"
Stable population growth = stable housing. Seems to me, just like here in the US people keep complaining about housing as well, maybe it is time to start sending non citizens back home to the country that they are citizens of. You over inflated your population too quickly?