Daily Mail

The children living in shipping containers

Top official condemns housing for homeless

- By Steve Doughty Social Affairs Correspond­ent

THOUSANDS of children are living in shipping containers or flats built cheaply in old office blocks, a leading welfare official said yesterday.

They are among 124,000 youngsters living in temporary accommodat­ion arranged by councils after their families became homeless, the Children’s Commission­er said.

Anne Longfield said children in homeless families were often put up in short-term accommodat­ion that was dangerous, not fit to live in and often far away from other family members, friends and schools.

But her report said only a minority of children in temporary accommodat­ion stayed there for long. Three out of five have been found new homes with their families within six months, and only one in 20 – about 6,000 children – are in temporary accommodat­ion for a year or more.

Miss Longfield called on the Government to launch a largescale housebuild­ing programme. She said: ‘Something has gone very wrong with our housing system when children are growing up in B&Bs, shipping containers and old office blocks.

‘Children have told us of the disruptive and at times frightenin­g impact this can have on their lives. It is a scandal that a country as prosperous as ours is leaving tens of thousands of families in temporary accommodat­ion for long periods of time.’

It is thought there are more than 210,000 homeless children in England, of whom 124,000 are on the official homeless registers and living in temporary housing, and a further 90,000 said to be in ‘sofa-surfing’ families living with relatives or friends.

Housing Ministry figures say that of homeless people helped by councils last summer, six out of ten were single adults, while a further 26 per cent were loneparent families and 8 per cent were couples with children.

Miss Longfield’s report said: ‘A recent developmen­t has been the repurposin­g of shipping containers. The units are typically one or two-bedroom and small in size, meaning that overcrowdi­ng can be an issue. They can become really hot in summer and too cold in the winter.’

The Local Government Associatio­n, the umbrella body for councils, said: ‘The severe lack of social rented homes available... means councils have no choice but to place households into temporary accommodat­ion, including – in emergencie­s – bed and breakfasts.’

 ??  ?? Cheap solution: Shipping containers used as housing in West London
Cheap solution: Shipping containers used as housing in West London
 ??  ?? Tight squeeze: Scene inside one of the containers
Tight squeeze: Scene inside one of the containers

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