The Scarborough News

Young people who desperatel­y need a home: can you help?

Wider homelessne­ss problem is worsening in town, and REPORT especially among the young. George Buksmann reports

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The demand for youth homelessne­ss services in Scarboroug­h is the highest in North Yorkshire, a charity has said. Safe and Sound Homes (SASH) prevents youth homelessne­ss in North and East Yorkshire by placing vulnerable 16 to 25-year-old at-risk young adults in short-term emergency accommodat­ion and long-term supported accommodat­ion, depending on their needs.

Referrals for accommodat­ion were higher in Scarboroug­h than any other area that SASH covers across North and East Yorkshire between 2021 and 2022.

Young people in Scarboroug­h account for 43 per cent of those using the charity’s longterm accommodat­ion and 32 per cent of its emergency accommodat­ion service.

Nicky Olsson, SASH Placement Co-ordinator for Scarboroug­h, said: “The majority of the young people in the Scarboroug­h area referred to SASH are facing homelessne­ss following family relationsh­ip breakdowns.

“We have seen a shift in the ages of young people referred to us. Where we used to see mostly 16 to 18-year-olds, we are now seeing a more even distributi­on of ages between 16 and 24. We think that this shift is partly due to the availabili­ty of accommodat­ion for young people in the area.

“We have also seen this have an increase in length of time that young people are in our accommodat­ion. Some young people have had to move out of the Scarboroug­h area to housing that is available in other areas of North and East Yorkshire.”

The charity supports more than 300 young people on average

each year and matches vulnerable young people with volunteer hosts in the community, giving young people a safe home environmen­t and the support they need to break the cycle of homelessne­ss. SASH also places great emphasis on ensuring the young people they help are accessing education, training or employment and support towards independen­t living, whilst supporting their mental health at all times.

At the same time, the coronaviru­s pandemic has been “especially challengin­g” for the vulnerable young people SASH supports.

The charity said that young people’s mental health was challenged on an “unpreceden­ted scale” after any sense of stability from school, college

or work was removed.

“The pandemic has hit the charity sector hard, and the impact of the pandemic on these young people will be felt for many years to come,” a spokespers­on for SASH said.

Covid has also forced hundreds of Scarboroug­h households into homelessne­ss during the first 18 months of the pandemic, new figures have revealed.

Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s figures show that 527 households in Scarboroug­h sought council support after becoming homeless between April 2020 and the end of September 2021. Of those, 131 were households with children.

Across England, 222,360 households have been pushed into homelessne­ss since April

2020.

Osama Bhutta, director of campaigns at housing charity Shelter, said the pandemic has been “atrocious” for struggling families, even with protection­s like the eviction ban and the £20 Universal Credit uplift.

He added: “Now living costs are spiralling and all the protection­s are gone, even more people will be at risk of losing their homes.

“The economic impact of the pandemic has exposed the true cost of decades of failure to build the social homes we need, leaving millions in insecure homes they can barely afford.”

Bailiff-enforced evictions were banned for a large part of the pandemic – a measure introduced by the Government to prevent renters from being made homeless – though the ban was lifted in England in May last year.

Containing the first three full months’ worth of data after the eviction ban was lifted, the latest statistics show 36,510 English households became homeless between July and September 2021 – the equivalent of 397 every day.

In Scarboroug­h, 95 households needed help because they were homeless over this time – up from 72 during the same period in 2020.

SASH are searching for new hosts across North and East Yorkshire, to welcome local young people at risk of homelessne­ss into their homes.

Ms Olsson added: “We are urgently seeking to recruit and train new hosts to continue providing our vital services. We currently have a waiting list of young people who need our support.”

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 ?? ?? ABOVE: Tiff Wilkey, Anne Unsworth and Nicky Olsson, of the SASH team in Scarboroug­h. 221502a
ABOVE: Tiff Wilkey, Anne Unsworth and Nicky Olsson, of the SASH team in Scarboroug­h. 221502a
 ?? ?? File photo (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) shows a homeless man on a snowy English high street.
File photo (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images) shows a homeless man on a snowy English high street.

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