Nov 2, 2015 3 Comments
More than 100,000 vulnerable children in Britain will
wake up homeless on Christmas Day, a leading charity has revealed.
The report by homelessness charity Shelter found the
number of children who will be homeless on Christmas morning has risen by more
than 15,000 on last year. This is equivalent to four youngsters in every UK
school.
It also found the number of children living in
temporary accommodation is at the highest level since 2008, and is predicted to
hit 105,251 by the end of 2015.
Since 2010, the year Prime Minister David Cameron
first took office, the number of families living in bed and breakfast
accommodation has more than trebled to almost 2,700, the report found.
Shelter said it is local authorities’ duty to find
homeless children and their families somewhere secure to live, especially on
Christmas Day.
However, it said councils are under so much pressure
from the affordable housing shortage, they are forced to move more families
into cramped hostels.
As part of its research, Shelter interviewed 20
families living in temporary accommodation.
It heard shocking reports of children seeing their
parents being physically attacked. Other families said the size of their hostel
rooms left them with no choice but to eat meals on the floor.
Many of the families interviewed said their children’s
emotional well-being had been badly affected.
‘Heart breaking’
“There’s nothing more heart-breaking than hearing the
voice of a parent who’s desperately trying to keep a roof over their children’s
heads,” a Shelter spokesperson
said in a statement.
“But the sad fact is, almost every day, we hear from
families who’ve fallen on hard times and found themselves living in a single
cramped room of a B&B or hostel, unable to give their children the
environment they need to grow and thrive in.
“Worrying about your child’s safety every day,
eating dinners on the floor, and sharing beds – this is no way for a family to
live.”
“We urgently need the public’s support to make sure we
can be there for more families this Christmas.”
‘Temporary accommodation still houses families’
The Department for Communities and Local Government
said temporary accommodation still “ensures no family is without a roof over
their head.”
“We have made over £1 billion available since 2010
to prevent and tackle homelessness and support vulnerable households, and
statutory homelessness acceptances are now less than half the 2003-04 peak,”
its spokesperson said.
“Our investment has helped prevent almost a million
households from becoming homeless.
“Of course we recognize the need to build more homes –
which is why over the next five years are committed to deliver 275,000 extra
affordable homes – the fastest rate of delivery for 20 years.”
To help solve this crisis, Shelter has launched an
emergency Christmas appeal, calling on the public to donate £30 to support
families facing eviction.
Speaking to the Mirror, young mother Clare said her
son developed a nervous tic after she was forced to move into a single hostel
room with her four children.
“He was constantly nervous. He was never like this
before,” she told the paper.
According to data released in September, the gap
between income and housing prices in Britain has rocketed to such heights in
the last 20 years that home buyers in the most affordable regions are forced to
spend six times their income.
Via RT. This piece was reprinted by RINF Alternative News with permission or license.
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