Crawley council spends millions on B&Bs for homeless

A homeless person in Victoria, London. PA Photo. Picture date: Thursday January 16, 2020. Photo credit should read: Nick Ansell/PA WireA homeless person in Victoria, London. PA Photo. Picture date: Thursday January 16, 2020. Photo credit should read: Nick Ansell/PA Wire
A homeless person in Victoria, London. PA Photo. Picture date: Thursday January 16, 2020. Photo credit should read: Nick Ansell/PA Wire
Crawley council spent millions of pounds on housing homeless people in bed and breakfasts last year, new figures show.

Crawley council spent millions of pounds on housing homeless people in bed and breakfasts last year, new figures show.

Housing and homelessness charity Shelter said families are being pushed into homelessness and living in "awful" temporary accommodation across the country due to unaffordable rent and lack of social homes.

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Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities figures shows Crawley council spent a total of £2.9 million on temporary homeless housing in the year to March, up from £2.7 million the year before.

Bed and breakfasts accounted for a significant amount of spending with £1.7 million paid – 57% of the total expenditure for temporary accommodation last year.

Last year's spending is also higher than the amount spent five years ago when £2 million was put towards temporary homeless accommodation in the area – equating to a real-terms increase of 32%.

Across England, an estimated £1.6 billion was used by local authorities towards short-term accommodation for people facing homelessness in 2021-22 – up 5% from the previous year and a 62% real-terms increase from five years ago.

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Of last years total expenditure, £407 million went towards bed and breakfasts and hostels. Spending on bed and breakfasts alone has increased 7% in real terms since 2016-17.

Polly Neate, chief executive of Shelter, said: “Homelessness is bad for the economy and it’s even worse for the people whose lives it destroys.

“It defies all logic to shell out over £1.6 billion on grim B&Bs and grotty flats, instead of helping people to keep hold of their home in the first place."

Ms Neate added housing benefit – which assists people who are unemployed, low-income, or on other benefits to pay rent – has been frozen since 2020 "despite private rents rocketing".

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