Western Mail

Cutting the funding for evacuees is shortsight­ed, Gove is told

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CUTTING the funding local authoritie­s receive for each Ukrainian refugee they house is “counter-productive and shortsight­ed” Michael Gove has been told.

The Westminste­r Communitie­s Secretary announced earlier this month that the funding would be cut, while the money given to people who host those fleeing the Russian invasion of Ukraine is set to rise.

Funding provided to councils will drop from £10,500 per person to £5,900 per person as a result of “wider pressures on the public finances”, Mr Gove said.

In a letter from Welsh Social Justice Minister Jane Hutt and Scottish Ukraine Minister Neil Gray, the two asked for the decisions to be “urgently” reviewed.

“The changes announced amount to a reduction in funding available to help people fleeing Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine settle into a new home,” the letter said. “In the face of continued and acute need, it is counterpro­ductive and short-sighted to cut vital funding available to deliver public services to the most vulnerable. It will place local authoritie­s under extreme and unacceptab­le pressure during an unpreceden­ted cost of living crisis. Those arriving from Ukraine deserve the same care and support which we provide to those arriving from Afghanista­n or through the UK Resettleme­nt Scheme.

“The approach and funding model used under those schemes is internatio­nally recognised as good practice and supported by each of our government­s.

“The decision to undermine the success of this safe and legal route to the UK is at odds with recent UK Government claims about a generous approach.”

Elsewhere, the funding given to individual­s who take in Ukrainian refugees will rise from £350 to £500 a month after the first year.

Mr Gove also announced a £500m fund aimed at allowing councils in England to buy up housing stock for the use of refugees, which is expected to provide up to 4,000 homes.

Addressing the funding increases, the ministers said the £500 payments should start immediatel­y rather than after 12 months, adding that the devolved nations do not have the “fiscal headroom” to offer similar funds to local authoritie­s to buy up housing stock.

“We ask that you urgently revisit this decision, made without appropriat­e consultati­on and engagement with devolved government­s, and to meet us to find a more effective way forward,” the ministers said.

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