Housing experts have praised the UK government’s pledge to keep supported housing in the welfare system after they pledged to scrap proposals including paying through Universal Credit.
The government opened a consultation looking at supported housing – accommodation with services that meets support needs – in October 2017 and mulled over other ways of supporting the most vulnerable like sheltered rent, capping service charges for extra care schemes.
Other proposals included placing local authorities in control of funding short-term accommodation, such as women’s refuges and homelessness shelters, sparking fears that cash would no longer be ring-fenced and diverted elsewhere.
Nearly 3 years totally wasted before Ministers back down completely under @UKLabour and campaigner pressure from plans which caused uncertainty for thousands of hostels and other specialist housing – and freeze on all new schemes https://t.co/ATTiA7v0oe
— John Healey MP (@JohnHealey_MP) August 9, 2018
But the government announced today that all of the proposals will be dropped, alongside plans for a further consultation on long-term supported housing, with all housing costs remaining in the benefit system.
Housing Minister Kit Malthouse MP said: “Protection of the most vulnerable has always been our primary concern, and following our consultation, the case for keeping supported housing in the welfare system became clear.”