Johnson: Number of rough sleepers is ‘way too high’

The scale of the rough sleeping crisis is “totally unacceptable”, Boris Johnson admitted as he promised further action to tackle the problem.

Although official figures indicated that the number of people sleeping rough on the streets of England has fallen for a second year in a row, the Prime Minister said it remained “way too high”.

The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government estimated that 4,266 people were sleeping rough on a single night in autumn 2019.

The figure is down 411 on the previous year – a drop of 9% – and down 10% on the peak of 2017.

POLITICS RoughSleepers
POLITICS RoughSleepers

However, the total is still 2,498 higher than when the figures were first introduced in 2010 – an increase of 141%.

During a visit to homelessness charity The Connection at St Martin’s in central London, Mr Johnson said: “The rough sleeping crisis is totally unacceptable. The number of people sleeping rough in our country is way too high.

“It is true that they have been coming down in the last year or so, but we want to drive that forward now.

“We want to make a big, big dent in those numbers.”

“These are amazing people and they can turn their lives around if they are given the help and support,” he added.

Homelessness charity St Mungo’s said the figures are “simply not good enough” and called on the Government to invest an extra £1 billion a year in services for the homeless.

BREAKING: New figures show that rough sleeping is still up 141% since 2010. This is simply not good enough.

We're calling on the Gov't to invest an extra £1bn a year in #homelessness services to #EndRoughSleeping.

Sign our petition 👉 https://t.co/Y3TUm2sk8h#HomeforGoodpic.twitter.com/Juru6VgHup

— St Mungo's (@StMungos) February 27, 2020

For Labour, shadow housing secretary John Healey said the official estimates did not show the true scale of the problems.

He said that, even by its own estimates, the Government is set to break its pledge to end rough sleeping by the end of the Parliament which, at the current rate of progress, would not be met until 2037.

“Any apparent fall in street sleeping is welcome, but everyone knows these misleading statistics are an unreliable undercount of the true scale of the problem,” he said.

“Ministers won’t fix the crisis of rough sleeping until they deal with the root causes of the problem, which means facing up to the impact of deep cuts to housing, social security and homelessness services since 2010.”

Local authorities outside London with most people sleeping rough
Local authorities outside London with most people sleeping rough

Earlier this week, the BBC published researched, based on Freedom of Information requests to councils, which showed 28,000 people in the UK were recorded as sleeping rough at least once in 2019, 25,000 of them in England.

The latest snapshot came as Mr Johnson announced £236 million in what he said was additional funding to provide “move on” accommodation for up to 6,000 rough sleepers.

The Prime Minister has also appointed former homelessness tsar Dame Louise Casey to carry out a review into the causes of the problem.

Prime minister visits rough sleeper charity
Prime minister visits rough sleeper charity

Shelter chief executive Polly Neate said: “The Prime Minister rightly wants to end rough sleeping before the end of the parliament, but unless his Government tackles the drought of genuinely affordable homes, homelessness isn’t going anywhere.

“Rough sleeping is only the tip of the iceberg – there are literally hundreds of thousands more homeless people stuck in temporary accommodation.

“You can’t put a plaster on a gaping wound.”

The figures showed the number of people sleeping rough in London has decreased for the first time in six years.

There were 1,136 people estimated to be rough sleepers in the capital – down by 147 on 2018, a fall of 11%

The South West was the only region where there was a notable increase, with 490 people sleeping rough – a rise of 32, or 7%.

The biggest fall was in the West Midlands where there were 319 – down 101 on 2018, a drop of 24%.

Advertisement