The Peterborough Evening Telegraph
City’s rough sleepers count remains stable
There are 24 people sleeping rough on Peterborough streets, the latest information has revealed.
During the latest National Rough Sleeper Count, carried out in November, Peterborough City Council’s housing team found 24 rough sleepers – exactly the same figure as when the count was carried out in 2022.
The count takes place every year at around the same time in autumn, and requires local authorities to submit counts or estimates, to create a snapshot of the state of rough sleeping across the country.
It does not take into account those who have been helped off the streets in the intervening period and is purely a snapshot on one night.
Peterborough’s stable number contrasts with a national rise of 27% from 2022, with an estimated 3,898 rough sleepers in England.
This is a decrease of 9% since 2019, which was before the introduction of Covid-19 related measures and is 18% lower than the peak in 2017. However it is an increase of 120% since 2010, when the snapshot approach was introduced.
The council’s Housing
Needs Operations Manager, Sarah Scase, said: “To be able to maintain the same number as 2022 is fantastic, when nationally there has been such a substantial increase in the numbers of those who are rough sleeping. This is testament to the work of the team and the support of partners.”
Peterborough City Council has created a pathway for those sleeping rough, with a number of schemes either becoming live recently or due to come into effect during this year.
These include:
*A ‘Work Ready’ house to help six Peterborough Rough Sleepers to find work;
*The purchase of 25 onebed properties designed to help rough sleepers with multiple and complex needs;
*Fifteen other rough sleepers with multiple and complex needs are being helped off the streets in an initiative unique to Peterborough. The scheme, funded through Rough Sleeper Initiative funding and delivered by OneCIC, creates offthe-street accommodation alongside intensive support.
Cllr Peter Hiller, Cabinet Member for Housing, Growth and Regeneration, said: “Our housing team has continued its hard work to gain funds towards these projects and look after our rough sleepers.
“We continue to look for new and innovative ways to meet the various demands of our rough sleepers, dependent on their situations.”
Other help is available through charities in Peterborough.
This week it was revealed that three new ‘sleep pods’ had been installed at the Salvation
Army Citadel, offering support and shelter.
The new units at The Salvation Army are part of the Emergency Night Shelter project. Each unit caters for one person and contains a single bed, shower, toilet, sink, a window, storage, and radiators.
If you see a person sleeping rough, report the location to Streetlink at thestreetlink. org.uk
If you can speak to them, direct them to: The Garden House Gravel Walk, Minster Precincts, Peterborough PE1 1YU, which is open from 10am12:30pm and 1:30-4pm every day apart from Wednesday afternoons.