As homelessness surges across the UK, the festive season offers the perfect opportunity to address more than just the housing crisis – it’s a chance to redefine how we treat one another.
At Social Bite, we’ve been opening our doors to serve free Christmas meals with all the trimmings to anyone who needs it for 10 years. A decade later, economic challenges facing society at large have meant that homelessness statistics have worsened, affecting more people in more ways and for longer periods.
Social Bite has backed the call to declare a national housing emergency in Scotland as the issue has reached a crisis point in many of our towns and cities. In Edinburgh, there’s been a 5% increase in homelessness applications year-on-year. In Glasgow, that number rises to 15%, and the number of households living in temporary accommodation in the city has increased to over 3,000 in the past 12 months.
Meanwhile in England, the number of people living in temporary accommodation has soared to the highest point since records began more than 25 years ago. It’s bleak: one in 200 UK households are experiencing homelessness – the highest rate in Europe.
While these numbers paint a grim picture, the real crisis lies beyond the statistics. It’s easy to get caught up in the stats – and they certainly are shocking. But this isn’t just about a lack of social housing, the cost-of-living crisis or cuts to council funding. It’s about how we treat other human beings.
Increasingly, organisations in the homelessness sector are recognising that homelessness is a social problem. Simon Community Scotland refer to homelessness as ‘a people emergency, not a housing emergency.’ At Cyrenians, they’re drawing attention to homelessness as a public health concern. At Social Bite, we believe that kindness also plays a part in ending homelessness.