English councils relocating homeless families at nearly triple the official rate

English councils relocating homeless families at nearly triple the official rate

Councils are moving homeless families out of their neighbourhoods at almost three times the rate that has ⁣been⁢ officially recognised, and some have⁤ been uprooted hundreds of ‌miles from ‍their support ‍networks, according to research.

Data released under freedom of information (FoI) revealed that 34,418 households were placed out of area last ‌year, based on responses from⁣ 80% of English councils. This incomplete‌ figure suggests a total that is 172% above what was officially recorded the ‍previous year.

Of the councils that responded, 13‌ admitted placing homeless households more ‌than ​200 miles away.

The latest figures, compiled by Nottingham University and shared exclusively with the Guardian, suggested either a large year-on-year increase or, more likely, that the ⁤practice is⁢ being systematically under-reported in government statistics.

The most recent‍ official homelessness statistics suggested 12,640 homeless ​households were sent by councils ‍to other areas in 2021-22, and 14,620 the year before.

One London​ council told researchers it was moving hundreds of families out of its area, but admitted it‌ had not‌ informed the Department for Levelling Up, ​Housing and Communities (DLUHC) about any of them.

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The finding is part of a ​longer-term project on the impact ​on homeless families of being moved away ⁢from jobs, family and support networks. Figures collected by the Guardian earlier this year found that 6,000 households had been relocated more ‌than ⁣20 miles from their local neighbourhood in the past‌ four years. But Nottingham University’s research suggests ‌many‌ more families have⁣ been moved and at greater distances.

Dr Steve Iafrati, an assistant professor of social policy at the University ​of Nottingham ⁣who led the ‍research, said:⁣ “Both the statistics ​from FoI ‌and information from interviews ⁤we have conducted are deeply ⁣troubling. We now know that the problem is more than twice as bad as ‍DLUHC⁤ data would suggest.

“People cannot⁤ afford⁣ to live in London, and they are therefore being shipped out ​to places​ like Blackburn and Burnley in⁢ the north-west.” Other examples included homeless families on⁤ the south-west coast being moved‍ to the Midlands.

Iafrati said the discrepancy between the official figures and ⁣the FoI response could be ⁢explained by under-reporting.

“Under section​ 208 of ⁣the ‍Housing Act, local ‍authorities have to tell the receiving local authority that they’re moving somebody into‍ their area. What we’re finding is that‌ that ⁢doesn’t happen any more. They ⁤can’t get out of disclosing data ⁣after FoI requests, but⁤ what data they return to DLUHC is clearly within ⁢their gift,” he said.

“We spoke to one ⁢London local ⁢authority, which was moving out hundreds of⁤ families, ⁤who‍ said they reported nothing to the DLUHC [about out of area placements], and they’re clearly not being chased for the numbers. There is huge under-reporting.”

Iafrati…

2023-08-28 05:03:07
Original from‌ www.theguardian.com
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