Manchester Evening News

Rising numbers face winter homeless amid cost of living crisis

- By JOSEPH TIMAN

FEET away from Victoria Station, a bearded man sits on a busy street, wishing people well as they walk past him in the hope that they’ll spare some change.

But as the weather becomes colder and wetter, he and other rough sleepers who spend their nights in Manchester city centre are struggling to stay dry.

The man, who does not share his name, explains that he took his trousers off because they were wet. He hoped they would be dry by now – but they’re not.

Around the corner, Mark has had a similar experience recently, resulting in a decision to throw away his sleeping bag and rely on his raincoat for warmth.

“I just sleep with this on me now,” the 54-year-old says, pinching his jacket. “My legs get cold.”

Help is available for the homeless in Greater Manchester under the mayor’s A Bed Every Night scheme which is currently accommodat­ing 732 individual­s. But demand is rising and so is the number of people who are sleeping rough.

New data from the Office for National Statistics estimates that 43 homeless people died in Greater Manchester in 2021, compared to 33 the previous year.

This includes 17 in Manchester, six in Bolton, five in Wigan, three in Oldham, three in Rochdale, three in Tameside, two in Bury, two in Salford, and two in Stockport – with Trafford the only borough in Greater Manchester with none.

Mayor Andy Burnham described these deaths as a ‘profound tragedy’ and promised that everyone who needs somewhere to sleep this winter will be offered a bed.

Preparing for the winter in the context of a cost of living crisis, the mayor announced last month that an additional 86 beds will be available through A Bed Every Night with extra investment worth almost half a million pounds.

First launched in 2018 when there were around 250 people sleeping rough in Greater Manchester, the scheme was set up because there was no safe, free accommodat­ion available for people not legally entitled to temporary housing.

Now costing £6m a year, the emergency accommodat­ion scheme has been credited for bringing the number of rough sleepers down to double digits.

“However, the latest count of people sleeping rough in the city-region last month found there was a ‘small increase,’ having stood at 90 in October.

Salford mayor Paul Dennett, who revealed the news to Greater Manchester leaders the following day, said the situation is now ‘exceptiona­lly challengin­g.’

“Our ability to reduce rough sleeping appears to be stalling for the first time in five years,” he said. “And that is as a consequenc­e of the cost of living crisis.”

More than 250 employed people have been referred to A Bed Every Night since the start of the year – a 15 per cent increase compared to the year before.

The number of people sleeping rough for the first time is also rising, according to the latest data from the Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA).

And as household bills continue to rise for residents, and businesses struggle too, there are fears that more people will find themselves becoming homeless.

Greater Manchester’s homelessne­ss prevention strategy aims to help people before they end up sleeping rough and require emergency accommodat­ion.

Mr Burnham says the city-region has been guided by Finland’s Housing First model which is based on the principle that having a place to live is a human right and the first measure of support that should be provided by the state.

A Housing First pilot project which aims to rehouse and support hundreds of people who are homeless or at the risk of being homeless was extended by another year back in May as part of a £37.1m package of government grants.

But local leaders say the government must do more to prevent homelessne­ss, arguing that the autumn statement should have gone much further to help.

Recent analysis by Dataloft shows that only 4pc of all tenancies advertised across Greater Manchester over the last six months were at or below Local Housing Allowance rates, with an average monthly rent for a one-bed at £775. This means that in almost all cases housing benefits will not cover rental costs.

Together with the mayor, council leaders in Greater Manchester are urging the government to increase Local Housing Allowance rates immediatel­y, adding that the inflationa­ry uplift for benefits promised next March cannot wait.

There have also been calls for a cap on rent in the private rented sector, while leaders say local authoritie­s need funding to freeze social housing rents too.

 ?? GARY OAKLEY ?? A rough sleeper in the city centre
GARY OAKLEY A rough sleeper in the city centre
 ?? ?? Andy Burnham
Andy Burnham

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