I warmly welcome your passion for ending homelessness once and for
all, and I want to assure you that this is something shared by myself and my
ministerial colleagues. I read Crisis’s recent report with interest and I
sincerely recognise the very real costs of homelessness highlighted in the
research, both to individuals and to society.
I completely and wholeheartedly agree that everyone deserves a
safe and stable place to call home. Through the Renters (Reform) Bill, the
Government will abolish Section 21 evictions which will give tenants greater
security without the threat of a ‘no fault’ eviction. There is also a firm
commitment to delivering more social and genuinely affordable homes,
underpinned by the £11.5 billion Affordable Homes Programme (2021-26) which
will deliver tens of thousands of new homes. I note that Crisis’s research
draws on the particular importance of social rent, which is why you may be
interested to know that the Government has proposed amending national planning
guidance to make clear that local planning authorities should place greater
importance on social rent.
The Government is investing £2 billion between 2022 and 2025 to
tackle homelessness and rough sleeping, targeted to areas where it is needed
most. This will work alongside the ‘Ending Rough Sleeping for Good’ strategy
which puts prevention at the heart of the Government’s plans to end rough
sleeping once and for all. I was encouraged to see the strategy set an ambition
for no one to leave a public institution – whether that’s a prison, hospital or
care – to the streets. I have been assured that the Government is committed to
reducing the need for temporary accommodation by preventing homelessness before
it occurs. I understand that, since 2018, over 640,000 households have been
prevented from becoming homeless or supported into settled accommodation
through the Homelessness Reduction Act.
Rightly, Government funding for accommodation for people facing
homelessness reflects the fact that there is no one size fits all approach.
There is, for example, a £10 million Night Shelter Transformation Fund to
increase the availability of quality single-room provision within the night
shelter sector. Meanwhile, investment in longer-term housing solutions includes
a new £200 million Single Homelessness Accommodation Programme which will
deliver up to 2,400 homes and wrap-around support.
One person without a roof over their head is one too many. While there is much more to do, I hope that this response has provided you with some assurance about the action already being taken and commitment across government to work towards a future without homelessness.
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