430 per cent increase in B&B spend on homeless

Councils in England spent £142 million placing homeless households in bed and breakfasts in 2019/20, compared with £26.7 million in 2010/11 - a 430 per cent increase.

The Local Government Association analysis shows that rising numbers of people who are homeless are being placed in bed and breakfasts due to a severe shortage of housing meaning councils are being forced to spend over five times as much money on accommodation as they were a decade ago.

There are currently 10,510 households in bed and breakfasts, according to provisional data, compared with 2,310 a decade ago – more than a 350 per cent increase.

Ahead of this week’s LGA’s Virtual Annual Conference which will see over 1,500 council leaders and officials join together to discuss the most pressing issues facing our country, councils say this underlines the desperate need to build more social housing.

With previous LGA analysis showing council housing waiting lists could double as a result of the pandemic, giving councils further powers and resources to build 100,000 social homes for rent each year would help the government to meet a third of its annual housing target and reduce homelessness.

Councils leaders also say that by reforming Right to Buy so that councils can retain 100 per cent of receipts, have flexibility to combine right to receipts with other Government grants and be able to set the size of discounts locally, councils could go even further.

David Renard, LGA housing spokesperson, said: “Sadly, these figures reflect the scale of the housing challenges that our country faces. Councils will only use bed and breakfasts as a last resort, but the severe lack of suitable housing means they now have no choice. This is hugely disruptive to families with children, and the rising demand for support has come with soaring costs for councils.

“Throughout the pandemic government has trusted councils to get on with the job of protecting the nation, supporting people and putting infrastructures in place to help with recovery. We want to continue this momentum and work with government to tackle the shortage of housing and build the homes the country desperately needs.

“With the right funding and freedoms, councils can help government achieve its ambitions for our national recovery from the pandemic. Giving councils the powers to build council housing on the scale required, would go a significant way towards reducing homelessness and the need to place households in bed and breakfasts.”

Polling by the LGA has also found that 80 per cent of MPs and 88 per cent of Peers think councils should have more financial freedoms and powers to build new homes.

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