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Fears for UK homeless as virus hotel scheme draws to close

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LONDON: Thousands of homeless people in Britain were given hotel rooms to protect them from coronaviru­s but as the outbreak slows, charities fear they could soon be back on the streets.

Lisa was among 15,000 people in England given emergency accommodat­ion as part of an unpreceden­ted government scheme in March to get “Everyone In” as Covid-19 spread.

She has a chronic health condition and had been living on the streets, relying on temporary shelters run by the charity Glass Door, which helped her onto the hotel scheme.

“I was elated,” the 30-something told AFP by telephone. “To be able to sleep in a bed, it was like sleeping on cloud nine!”

But her room in a London hotel is only confirmed until the end of June – and as the government eases a nationwide lockdown, she is getting increasing­ly anxious.

The scheme “does give me some glimmer of hope that things can go forward. When you are on the street it feels never-ending”, she said.

“I have faith that the charities are not going to put us back on the street.

“But if it’s a case of going back into the kind of temporary accommodat­ion I was in, I know the cycle will be repeated.”

Campaigner­s are demanding the government urgently clarify what happens to people like Lisa when the hotel contracts run out.

“Returning people back onto the streets should not be an option, but time is running out to find alternativ­e solutions,” said Glass Door chief operating officer Lucy Abraham.

There are also calls for wider action amid warnings that homelessne­ss will increase as the economic impact of the outbreak bites.

“The government’s actions and support so far are welcome, but there is still a long way to go,” said a joint letter to ministers from leading homelessne­ss charities.

“With the risk of a second wave of infection and looming economic crisis, more needs to be done. Getting this right is critical for the health and economic security of tens of thousands of people and families.”

Charities had warned that people living on the streets or in crowded hostels were particular­ly vulnerable to coronaviru­s, which has killed around 40,000 people in Britain so far.

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