Greater Manchester’s mayor Andy Burnham has admitted that homelessness will get worse before it can fall in his region.
Burnham has also renewed his calls to prime minister Keir Starmer to reform the Right to Buy scheme, which allows council housing tenants to purchase their house at a huge discount, as he says people are struggling to get off the streets due to “the grip of the housing crisis getting tighter every year”.
Commenting on his London counterpart, Sadiq Khan, telling the Big Issue homeless will worsen in his capital, Burnham admitted he is also witnessing the same trajectory in Manchester.
He said: “Sadly, I think that is correct because the grip of the housing crisis gets tighter every year. Why? Because we are still losing net social homes every year. More are being sold off under right to buy than are being built. That means the pressure on housing is increasing as opposed to going in a better direction.
“It is why I have called on the government to make some reforms to Right to Buy. For instance, if our councils are building new social homes, they should be exempt from the Right to Buy provision.”
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The former Labour cabinet minister’s intervention comes as he revealed his office is expanding the ‘A Bed Every Night’ scheme, which provides a bed and personal support for anyone who is sleeping rough in the region.