The Herald

Councils may stop housing asylum seekers, say MPS

- HAYDEN SMITH

COUNCILS may pull out of a scheme for housing asylum seekers after carrying a “disproport­ionate share” of the costs and pressures, a Commons report has warned.

MPS claimed local authoritie­s have “lost confidence” in the system, with some weighing up whether to cease participat­ing.

If their support was lost, the Government would find itself in “very severe difficulti­es”, the Home Affairs Select Committee said.

Under the “dispersal” approach, town halls sign up voluntaril­y to house asylum seekers. “The Government must therefore accept it is not unreasonab­le for authoritie­s who have, in many cases, supported dispersal for the best part of two decades and have carried a disproport­ionate share of the unfunded costs and pressures, to request more equitable treatment,” the committee’s report said.

“It has reached the point where local authoritie­s are contemplat­ing withdrawal.”

The dispersal policy has previously attracted criticism.

A report from the same committee last year found applicants are concentrat­ed in a small number of areas, placing pressure on local schools and healthcare services.

The latest assessment said the number of asylum seekers accommodat­ed under section 95 of the Immigratio­n and Asylum Act 1999 at any one time has risen steadily since 2012.

It added: “The number of local authoritie­s which have agreed to participat­e in dispersal has not, however, increased correspond­ingly.”

The previous report recorded that, in September 2016, 121 authoritie­s out of 453 (27 per cent) had section 95 asylum accommodat­ion within their boundaries.

As of last month, 150 authoritie­s had come forward offering to take part, with 129 participat­ing, according to figures given to the committee.

SNP MP Stuart Mcdonald, a member of the committee, said: “Two years on from the last Home Affairs report into asylum accommodat­ion, there has been very little evidence of improvemen­t. Local authoritie­s have lost confidence in the system because the Government has failed to listen and respond to their concerns.”

“Glasgow, Manchester, Wolverhamp­ton and communitie­s across the UK have done so much to support those seeking asylum in the UK. Yet the Government has done little to support them.”

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„ The woman is ‘stable’ in Queen Elizabeth University Hospital.

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