Homelessness charity Crisis was formed 50 years today in response to unacceptable levels of homelessness in the UK. It was never meant to be still campaigning half a century later. Crisis is marking its anniversary with a conference in London bringing together housing experts, politicians, academics and campaigners.
The Ending Homelessness conference, which will be followed by events in Glasgow on May 15 and Cardiff on May 24, is the start of a year-long project that will lead to “a plan to show how together we can end homelessness once and for all.”
This plan will be published at the end of Crisis’s 50th year, in April 2018.
Today’s event in London includes a keynote speech from Shadow Minister for Housing Andy Slaughter MP, sessions on the innovative Housing First approach championed by the Big Issue, and the Homelessness Reduction Bill, plus Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government Sajid Javid outlining government plans for ending homelessness.
The conference takes place at the start of a General Election in which homelessness should be a huge issue. Rising house prices, falling wages, benefit sanctions and the removal of housing benefit for young people are just some of the issues that have led to the increase in homelessness in this country. Former Health Secretary Andy Burnham has already called for homelessness to be at the centre of the campaign: “I challenged the Prime Minister today on record levels of homelessness in Greater Manchester. No answer. Needs to be General Election issue,” he Tweeted.