The High Cost of Emergency Accomodation
Monday 16 December, 2019 Written by From an article by Colin Marrs 151 NewsFINANCE - Councils in London spent more than £630 million on emergency accommodation since 2010.
The information reveals that Haringey Council spent the most – £197 million – on accommodation including bed and breakfast and hotels over the period.
Westminster came second in the list, with spending of £111 million, followed by Enfield with £59 million.
Campbell Robb, chief executive of Shelter, said: “Our welfare system must be fair, but these figures show that cuts to our housing safety net are simply a false economy, leaving more families stuck in emergency accommodation like bed and breakfasts, while the cost to the public purse soars.
“The only way to bring down these costs is to protect the safety net that stops more of us spiralling down into homelessness, and to build the affordable homes we desperately need.”
Experts in local government finance predicted early last year that government policy changes could lead to large increases in spending on temporary accommodation.
“As a direct result, bed and breakfast numbers are climbing fast, and enforced migration of the homeless away from the areas where there are jobs is already beginning to happen in significant numbers.”
A spokesman for London Councils, which represents London’s 33 local authorities, said: “Councils are facing the double pressure of welfare reforms and the lack of affordable good quality housing…”
The figures also showed that more than 180,000 people were on housing waiting lists in the capital last year.
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