Seven members of the Everyone Home Collective will hold private talks with Housing Minister Kevin Stewart to seek reassurances over plans to prevent homelessness as the Covid-19 lockdown continues to lift.
The group of 27 charities and academic organisations, including Shelter, Crisis and Simon Community Scotland, joined forces back in May to create a united response to the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic and ensure no one returns to the streets.
Their plans will progress today when they discuss extending emergency legislation to halt evictions into homelessness to April 2021 as well as preventing a returning to rough sleeping for people still housed in hotels. The collective will also have a chance to quiz the minister on the role private sector landlords will play in tackling homelessness and plans to scale up Scotland’s Housing First programme.
We need quality, affordable options to end rough sleeping and tackle homelessness
Also up for discussion will be methods of supporting people who are No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF) and do not have access to the full range of benefits or housing due to their immigration status.
Stewart has already been vocal on his opposition to Westminster’s NRPF policy and announced earlier this month that Scotland had spent £875,000 supporting people affected by it. He revealed that ministers have written to the UK Immigration Minister Chris Philp on a number of occasions to demand compensation and a suspension of NRPF but no response has been received. Stewart insists that the Scottish Government is “not prepared to abandon” people living without support while experts from the Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Action Group have also called for a 12-month suspension in their final recommendations after a brief reformation.
The joint-plans submitted by the Everyone Home Collective in May called for prevention to be prioritised in the battle to end homelessness in Scotland. That extended to creating as much housing capacity as possible as well as boosting the supply of homes for social rent alongside preventing a return to the rough sleeping levels seen before the pandemic. They also called for no evictions into homelessness, an end to avoidable evictions and the threat of illegal evictions.