Western Mail

Charity boss slams housing laid on for Ukrainians in England

- RUTH MOSALSKI Political editor ruth.mosalski@walesonlin­e.co.uk

UKRAINIAN refugees are arriving in England and being housed in homes infested with rats and mice, without heating and even living with drug users, a Welsh charity boss has said.

Bonnie Williams, director of Housing Justice Cymru, made the claim in evidence to the Senedd’s local government and housing committee.

She contrasted Wales’ more cautious approach with the problems in England – but said there were also major problems in Wales finding homes for refugees because of the shortage of social housing. The waiting list for a home is already 7,000 people long.

As well as individual households in Wales who are offering rooms to refugees from Ukraine, the Welsh Government has committed to taking 1,000 households through the super sponsor scheme.

There are currently 670 individual­s who have been accepted and those who have already arrived are being taken to “welcome centres”, which are usually hotels, for a period of around three months. From there, they will go to either to a host property or a private tenancy.

In England they are going straight to homes where checks aren’t taking place.

“What we can see in England as people are going straight into those hosting placements, said Ms Williams. “It’s really playing out to show that the speed at which central government are doing this is resulting in some really problemati­c situations.

“People are arriving to find that the accommodat­ion that they have been matched with or are intending to come to is infested with rats and mice, doesn’t have any heating, has one very small bedroom for which three of them are expected to sleep in or has a member of the family taking drugs.

“There are some really worrying issues that’s meant people now are going to those hosting placements and found that they’re not suitable and central government is now having to look at how to house them.

“I think we can see that the caution that Welsh Government is taking by creating welcome centres is going to be a much safer alternativ­e arrangemen­t.

“However, I suppose the concentrat­ion then comes on making sure that when people are in those welcome centres are able to access all the services that they need, and that we’re not traumatisi­ng traumatise­d people by moving them again and then when they do go on to the hosting placements, that those have been checked.

“A home visit would have prevented a huge amount of the problems that we’re seeing now.”

Every council in Wales will be given £10,500 by the Welsh Government to help with the services they need. However, there is a question about whether there is availabili­ty in the services themselves to accommodat­e extra need.

Asked how councils were coping in Wales, she said: “What we’re seeing at the moment from local authoritie­s is that some are able, willing and ready because particular­ly if they’ve got their own housing stock, they have a significan­t number of staff who are on the ground in their estates, in and out of properties in that community and are quite well versed on things like home checks and supporting community cohesion issues and vulnerable families.

“Where a local authority has sold their stock, which is now in a housing associatio­n, they’re less likely to have the capacity to an experience to support this number of new people coming to their areas.”

She admitted it is difficult to say how it is going in Wales because people are going to central locations, not individual homes.

“We know that we’ve already got 7,000 people in temporary accommodat­ion, and we’re struggling to accommodat­e those,” she said.

“We also have Afghan families still in temporary or emergency accommodat­ion and we unable to house those at the moment.

“So my main concern is where the Ukrainian refugees will go whether it’s after the three months in the welcome centres, or after the six-month hosting placement, because we just know that if we have 7,000 people already that we can’t accommodat­e, how are we going to find what will need to be affordable housing for this increased 1,000 households?

“We can also see that the numbers in temporary accommodat­ion are continuing to rise at a rate that is not matching, how quickly we’re able to rehouse people.

“What we can see is that more than ever, there’s a pressure on the supply of affordable homes. So because of the Syrian situation and the Afghanista­n situation, and then ‘everybody in’ where we accommodat­ed thousands of people who previously weren’t even registered or known to be homeless, we have a real bottleneck now of people in temporary emergency accommodat­ion needing homes, and that’s why we’re still seeing 7,000 in temporary accommodat­ion and even Afghanista­n families that we can’t house because there’s just not enough homes.

“There are some places where it’s harder than others. I think Newport particular­ly is very difficult, we’ve seen a migration of people from Bristol, with the lower house rents in Newport.

“All across Wales we’re just finding it very, very difficult to accommodat­e people, particular­ly when people are on benefits and the amount of money they’re provided with compared to current, private rent and even under 35 rent levels for affordable homes. “

She admitted the current situation is not sustainabl­e.

“While hosting may fill the void until people can find tenancies hosting does bring its own complexiti­es and we haven’t necessaril­y considered all of those in the current arrangemen­ts. So it will be interestin­g to see how we can accommodat­e the new 1,000 households in addition to the 7,000 and rising that we already have individual­s that we already have in temporary accommodat­ion.”

The UK Government’s Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s said: “More than 37,400 people have arrived through both schemes and the vast majority of these are settling in well.

“There are stringent safeguardi­ng measures in place for the Homes for Ukraine scheme and potential sponsors are subject to security checks, including criminal records, before visas are approved and applicants are allowed to travel to the UK.”

 ?? ?? Some Ukrainian refugees are not receiving a warm welcome in parts of England, a Welsh charity boss claims
Some Ukrainian refugees are not receiving a warm welcome in parts of England, a Welsh charity boss claims

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