Yorkshire Post

New Bill will not solve homeless issue on its own

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SOMETIMES, ONE fact serves to highlight an issue. Right now, five families are being made homeless in England every hour of the day.

Between 1997 and 2010, the UK built an additional two million homes, increased owneroccup­ation by more than a million and delivered the largest investment in social housing in a generation. I wasn’t satisfied by this achievemen­t, especially believing that there should also have been big investment in new social housing.

Further, headline or ‘statutory’ homelessne­ss fell by almost twothirds (62 per cent) from over 100,000 households to 40,000, and the number of people sleeping rough fell by roughly three-quarters (75 per cent).

Since 2010 home-ownership has continued to fall; there are 200,000 fewer home-owning households since 2010. Over the same period, the trend of falling homelessne­ss has gone into reverse. The number of statutory homeless households has increased by 45 per cent and the number of rough sleepers has doubled, up 30 per cent in the last year alone.

Right now, we need to build more homes in this country, particular­ly more affordable homes, and we need to build more affordable homes to rent. We also need to have longer secure tenancies, rent certainty and better minimum standards of management and repair. We also must recognise that housing needs vary in different parts of the country. Different housing markets need different responses and initiative­s, particular­ly in terms of tenure mix.

The Government claims that its Housing White Paper, called Fixing our Broken Housing Market, is a ‘game-changer’. The consensus is that it while it contains some welcome measures, it fails to address the biggest challenges and that housing will remain a key public and political concern for the foreseeabl­e future.

However, within this context, it is important to draw attention to a unique achievemen­t in the recent passing of the Homelessne­ss Reduction Bill through the House of Commons.

The core of the Bill strengthen­s the duties and local responsibi­lities that local councils have to people who are homeless or threatened with homelessne­ss. The need for the Bill became clear in an investigat­ion by the all-party Communitie­s and Local Government (CLG) Committee, which I chair, in 2016.

We were horrified hearing about the experience­s of many individual­s and families threatened by and becoming homeless. In the very worst cases, we heard about those families who, facing homelessne­ss through no fault of their own, were told “wait until the bailiff has arrived and while you are out on the street, we might decide to deal with you as a homeless family”.

A Conservati­ve MP (Bob Blackman) on the Committee had the opportunit­y to present a Private Member’s Bill on the issue. He was given such considerab­le cross-party support that it became clear to the Government that it needed to respond positively. There was a huge amount of behind-thescenes negotiatio­n, including the involvemen­t of Ministers, civil servants, MPs and a whole range of interested profession­al and voluntary organisati­ons.

The Bill was subject to prelegisla­tive scrutiny by the CLG Committee, which improved its robustness and ensured it was less vulnerable to attack when it was fully considered. This has set a Parliament­ary precedent as the first time a Private Member’s Bill has been subject to such scrutiny by a select committee, bringing together the two main ways backbench MPs can influence the legislativ­e agenda. After much to-ing and fro-ing, the Housing Minister announced £48m of additional funds to meet the implementa­tion costs over the next two years.

I’m also clear that some of the most important measures are to be implemente­d through a new Code of Guidance and

We were horrified hearing about the experience­s of many becoming homeless.

through new Statutory Codes of Practice and that we will need to be vigilant to ensure that Ministeria­l promises are kept and that the Bill’s objectives are achieved. That’s where the CLG Committee’s scrutiny role can continue to play a major part.

The whole process has provided a useful example for others to consider in addressing other challengin­g policy issues where there is a breadth of concern. It provides an object lesson not just for the House of Commons, but also for other Parliament­s, and also for local authoritie­s which need to encourage the ‘policy review’ element of overview and scrutiny as a key vehicle for improving performanc­e across a range of services.

However, we also need to be clear that this Bill will not succeed in significan­tly reducing homelessne­ss if the Government presses on with the decisions which have caused rising homelessne­ss since 2010. Instead we need more investment in affordable homes, a review of cuts to housing benefit, increased funding for homelessne­ss services and more action to help private renters.

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