The number of households forced to live in temporary accommodation like B&Bs and refuges has soared by over 20 per cent in the past year – despite safeguards introduced under the Homelessness Reduction Act (HRA) last April.
By December last year, 83,700 households had been placed in temporary accommodation in England under the HRA, 5 per cent more than a year earlier. Nearly 70 per cent of those were in London alone.
Polly Neate, chief executive of homelessness charity Shelter, said families are being “pushed to the hard edge of the housing crisis” by “crippling private rents, frozen benefits and endless waiting lists for social homes that don’t exist”.
The new government figures show that three quarters of families in B&Bs and hostels have children, a surge of as much as 267 per cent between 2010 and 2018. There were 124,490 minors housed in B&Bs and hostels by December last year.
Data showing the number of children who have been living in temporary accommodation for longer than six weeks suggests HRA policy has made some improvement, down 8 per cent between 2017-18. However, the overall number – 810 – is up by 440 per cent since 2010.
The government must make sure people can leave #homelessness behind by making sure that the cost of private renting doesn’t lock people in the most #vulnerable circumstances out of a stable home. 3/4
— Crisis (@crisis_uk) May 24, 2019