September 29, 2024
Rising levels of homelessness will require a long-term response
The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has published both its annual rough sleeping snapshot and its quarterly figures for numbers of families in Temporary Accommodation. Both these measures of very different forms of homelessness are now at high or record levels - illustrating the scale of the challenge ahead.
by Matt Wilkins and Tim Gray
It is important to note that this crisis has been building over many years. So substantial is the scale of the challenge demonstrated in these statistics that there are clearly no quick fixes. Solutions require strategic thinking that is long term and sensitive to their potential impact on the financial positions of local authorities.
These figures will, of course, attract significant negative attention. And there are good reasons for this: after all, Temporary Accommodation may not be suited to people’s needs and could be of poor quality. It can also be expensive - and increasingly appears to pose a risk to the financial sustainability of many local authorities.
Nevertheless, before delving into the new headline figures, it is important to remember that Temporary Accommodation represents a vital, legally-enshrined safety net. This contrasts with many other countries, where without this safety net people - including families with children - experiencing homelessness can find themselves either sleeping rough or in other unsuitable or dangerous environments. It is one of our central strategies for preventing homelessness. This is why it is essential that it be used as effectively, and cost-effectively, as possible.
In both sets of statistics, a number of key points are worth drawing attention to.
Rough Sleeping
For a highly readable description of how rough sleepers are counted across the country, please check out this highly readable blog by The Centre for Homelessness Impact’s Director of Evidence and Data, Guillermo Rodriguez-Guzman:
Temporary Accommodation
Taken together, the latest data on the number of households in Temporary Accommodation in England highlight yet again that local authorities are increasingly running out of options for providing people experiencing homelessness with accommodation, causing them to increasingly place people in B&Bs - accommodation which costs the most and can be of poor quality and safety.
Some key points to note:
- Temporary accommodation numbers are at another all time high at 109,000 households, up 10% from the same quarter in 2022, with 69,680 of those families with children, 64% of all the households in temporary accommodation. 142,490 children were living in TA - up 14% from a year ago.
- The number of households in Bed & Breakfast hotels was also at the highest level ever recorded with 14,880 households, up 30% in one year.
- There are 4,680 families with children in Bed & Breakfasts - up 4.5% in one quarter and 65% since the same period in 2022.
- The greatest percentage increase was for families with children living in B&B for over 6 weeks at 2,680 households. This had increased by almost 7% in the last quarter and 121% in the past year. It's worth remembering that this is against the law.
- The impact of the private rented sector on homelessness continues. The biggest cause of homelessness for those owed a prevention duty was the end of an assured shorthold tenancy with 14,340 households threatened with homelessness because of this - 40% of the total.
With challenges such as rising street homelessness and record levels of families staying in Temporary Accommodation there are no magic bullets or short term solutions. Reversing these trends will require sustained attention at system level over many years.
About the authors:
Matt Wilkins is Head of Value for Money at CHI.
Tim Gray is a research associate for CHI.