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More households with children in temporary accommodation for at least five years

A total of 90 households with children had been in bed and breakfast accommodation for at least five years, the latest figures showed.

Aine Fox
Thursday 03 October 2024 12:25
The number of households with children living in temporary accommodation for at least five years has risen by a quarter (Alamy/PA)
The number of households with children living in temporary accommodation for at least five years has risen by a quarter (Alamy/PA)

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Louise Thomas

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The number of households with children living in temporary accommodation in England for at least five years has risen by almost a quarter.

The latest official figures show that, in the year to March, there were 16,790 such households in some form of temporary accommodation for this length of time.

This is an increase of 24% on the previous 12 months, when the figure stood at 13,530 households with children.

No child should have to face the trauma of growing up homeless, but housing emergency has trapped many families in temporary accommodation for over five years

Polly Neate, Shelter

Shelter said the data, published on Thursday by Government, shows that the “housing emergency has trapped many families in temporary accommodation for over five years”.

A total of 90 households with children had been in bed and breakfast accommodation for at least five years, the latest figures showed.

The number of households with children in temporary accommodation, which is a form of homelessness, for at least five years accounts for more than a fifth (22.5%) of all such households in such accommodation, the Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) said.

Just under half (49.5%) of these households were in private sector accommodation, while a fifth (20.4%) were in local authority or housing association accommodation stock, and a similar proportion (21.4%) were in nightly paid self contained, privately managed accommodation, the department said.

Just over a fifth (22.8%) of households with children were in temporary accommodation for between two and five years, accounting for 16,690, it added.

The most common length of time for households with children to be living in temporary accommodation was less than six months, representing 17,430 (23.4%) of households with children, MHCLG said.

Shelter chief executive Polly Neate said: “No child should have to face the trauma of growing up homeless, but housing emergency has trapped many families in temporary accommodation for over five years.

“Overpriced private rentals and the lack of genuinely affordable social homes are pushing families into homelessness and insecure temporary accommodation.

Families are crammed into small rooms, sharing kitchens and bathrooms with strangers and living out of suitcases, worrying they could be moved miles away overnight.

“The Government must act to end homelessness for good.”

John Glenton, from Riverside, which describes itself as the largest provider of accommodation for people affected by homelessness, said: “It’s very worrying to see a sharp rise in the number of homeless households with children stuck in temporary accommodation for more than five years.

“These children are now spending around a third of their entire childhood living in temporary accommodation rather than a permanent family home.

“This is not acceptable in one of the world’s richest nations.”

A total of 324,990 households were assessed as being owed help from their local authority in the year to March, due to facing a threat of homelessness or already being homeless, up from 298,430 households the previous year.

Adam Hug, housing spokesperson for the Local Government Association (LGA), said while councils “want to turn the tide of rising homelessness” the increase in people needing support “shows the scale and urgency of the issues they face”.

The LGA has called for more support for homelessness services in the Autumn Budget as well as “powers and resources” for councils to “address the national shortage of affordable housing”.

Homelessness minister Rushanara Ali said the numbers “show the devastating impact homelessness has on people’s lives and it is shocking that so many, including families with children, are spending years without a place to call home”.

She said the Government is committed to tackling the root causes of homelessness by “putting in place lasting solutions rather than quick fixes”.

She added: “We are reversing the worst housing crisis in living history by building 1.5 million new homes and are changing the law to abolish Section 21, no-fault evictions – immediately tackling one of the leading causes of homelessness.

“In addition, we’ve announced a new dedicated cross government group, tasked with creating a long-term strategy to end the disgraceful levels of homelessness.”

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