Sadiq Khan is to invest £10m in safe accommodation for domestic abuse survivors, amid a national crisis of those fleeing domestic abuse being turned away due to a lack of capacity.
Organisations will be able to build new buildings and refurbish existing ones with £10m in funding, taken from the mayor of London’s affordable homes budget and money from central government. Groups working with disabled people, LGBTQ+ people, Black and minority groups, and those with large families will be prioritised for funding.
Councils have a duty to provide survivors of domestic abuse with safe accommodation. But over 15,000 households in England were turned away in 2022-23, with two-thirds of those because the local authority did not have enough housing.
“Safe accommodation is a lifeline for women and children across London, and having affordable housing to move on to after abuse is crucial,” said Nahar Choudhury, chief executive of Solace Women’s Aid.
“London’s housing shortage, and rising rental prices are making it harder for women to find suitable housing but our projects funded by the mayor have already helped over 100 women and children experiencing domestic abuse.”
Survivors are being forced to stay with their abusers, the Big Issue has reported, with charities warning the cost of living crisis puts financial independence further out of reach.