• View Digital Editions
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
Menu
  • View Digital Editions
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
Search
Close
Biscuit-Logo-60px-high
Weekender-logo-60px-high
Print
South-Londoner-logo-300px.jpg
  • News
  • Comment
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • South Londoner
  • Bermondsey Biscuit
  • History
  • Public Notices
  • Digital Editions
Menu
  • News
  • Comment
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • South Londoner
  • Bermondsey Biscuit
  • History
  • Public Notices
  • Digital Editions
Home News Housing

Millions pledged for temporary accommodation – but most people will be housed outside Southwark

Katherine Johnston by Katherine Johnston
17th March 2021
in Housing
0 0
1
Exclusive: Newborn had to be taken home to Aylesbury flat with neither heating nor hot water

Aylesbury Estate currently provides much of the council's temporary accommodation housing stock.

13
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Southwark Council has pledged to improve standards in temporary accommodation – but its housing chief admits it is now very unlikely most people will be found homes in the borough.

There were more than 3,000 households living in temporary accommodation in Southwark at the end of 2020, desperately waiting for a permanent home.  Since 2013 the number of homeless applications to the council has doubled.

At last week’s cabinet meeting at Tooley Street, councillors agreed to bring forward new plans that would help improve standards, and also provide more flexibility in a ‘range of locations’.

Key commitments include investing in a ‘Good Homes Standard for Temporary Accommodation’, building on a previous commitment not to use B&Bs for families.

The new standards will help ensure housing is ready to move into and has essential white goods and other essentials, is clean and pest free, and a good size.

But the likelihood of being made offers in Southwark is increasingly diminishing due to widespread housing shortages and rising demand – and cost.

It is a familiar trend over the last few years.  In 2014, just over a quarter of temporary accommodation placements were outside the borough, a figure that stood at 42 per cent by 2018.

Expensive private rents across the borough have an impact, as does unemployment and COVID-19’s impact on job security and the economy.

The council also says Universal Credit has seen rent collections decline and therefore the number of private landlord willing to let via the council drop, and is struggling to find affordable locations anywhere in London.

Now the council wants to look even further afield, but says it will focus on diverse cities with employment opportunities that mirror Southwark’s social make-up.

“Where the council is procuring properties outside Greater London it will, as far as possible focus on more urban areas whose diversity so far as practicable reflects that of Southwark and so are likely to have more facilities and support networks for people from Southwark with particular protected characteristics,” new council papers explain.

“Evidence of the scope and range of employment opportunities will also be taken into account.”

Just how far away the ‘non outer London boroughs’ are in the country is unclear.

In January, at an overview and scrutiny commission meeting at Tooley Street, councillor Helen Dennis, cabinet member for social support and homelessness, had described the situation in the last year as “pretty bleak” and “a bit of a crisis” after the council overspent by nearly £9 million last year to help people who had become homeless or were in need of emergency support due to COVID-19.

Some funding will be recouped from government COVID-19 funding, but long-term the number of people in dire housing situations is set to only rise.

Speaking about improving the standards of housing offered to people waiting for permanent homes, she told the News: “When people find themselves in desperate situations and become homeless, they should expect the help we offer to them to ease their already very difficult circumstances.

“Our ambition with the Good Homes Standard is to ensure that they move to a place of safety, warmth and comfort with their families whilst waiting to find a permanent home, long term.”

An extra £4 million has been put into the council’s 2021/22 budget toward temporary accommodation, both to improve standards but also to cope with surging homeless applications as a result of unemployment, furlough and redundancies during the pandemic.

Tooley Street says it is also taking action to fix the long-term cause of limited, affordable housing stock in the borough.

A new action plan to find suitable temporary accommodation in the borough include buying back 40 ex-council properties a year lost through right to buy, offering incentives for buying properties in a state of disrepair from private landlords and doing them up, and exploring modular homes – essentially modern day prefabs.

Tags: Southwark Counciltemporary accommodation
Previous Post

Exclusive: St John’s Walworth could close ‘by September’

Next Post

Harriet Harman calls for tougher action on kerb crawlers

Next Post
National Unity Government: Harriet Harman dodges ‘caretaker’ talk

Harriet Harman calls for tougher action on kerb crawlers

Comments 1

  1. Karen Connolly says:
    1 year ago

    Why does the words ‘Social Cleansing’ spring to mind? Many of these properties could of and should of been better managed years ago, residents listened too with Council actually knowing what Housing Stock it has on its books and accountability would of helped too. Properties have not only many cases been deliberately declined decades we got a system where our landlords don’t even know what Housing Stock it has some people where I live have six persons crammed into one bedroom properties too. Council funds unaccounted missing are in the billions now should of gone on housing with many people born and bred here have to now be displaced in a bid to clean this up. Passing the buck rather than admit Southwark Council they institutionally failed and continue to do so it’s disgusting and again no accountability what so ever!

Stay Connected

Facebook Twitter Youtube

Popular Articles

Boris Johnson and wife put their Camberwell house up for sale

Boris Johnson and wife put their Camberwell house up for sale

8th August 2022
New private twelve-storey tower block approved on Rotherhithe New Road despite light impact

New private twelve-storey tower block approved on Rotherhithe New Road despite light impact

26th February 2022
Pricebusters priced out as negotiations run past the deadline

Pricebusters priced out as negotiations run past the deadline

27th April 2022
Longstanding small business owner kicked off Rotherhithe site with private block set to be built

Longstanding small business owner kicked off Rotherhithe site with private block set to be built

12th August 2022
Owami Davies: Missing nurse is student at Guy’s and St Thomas’

Owami Davies: Missing nurse is student at Guy’s and St Thomas’

9th August 2022
Police arrest man after discovering cannabis hoard under scooter driver’s seat

Man believed to be a teenager fighting for his life after Sydenham stabbing

9th August 2022

Featured Articles

The Village Fete in Bermondsey is back

The Village Fete in Bermondsey is back

13th August 2022
Killer of Jobari Gooden convicted of manslaughter for ‘frenzied’ broad daylight knife attack

Killer of Jobari Gooden convicted of manslaughter for ‘frenzied’ broad daylight knife attack

13th August 2022
The local line-up for your diary

Pick of family events this summer in south London

12th August 2022
Imperious Sam Curran steers Oval Invincibes to thrilling Hundred win

Imperious Sam Curran steers Oval Invincibes to thrilling Hundred win

12th August 2022
Exclusive: Maydew House: Southwark Council spent £3 million on two attempts to remove estate asbestos, four years apart

Exclusive: Maydew House: Southwark Council spent £3 million on two attempts to remove estate asbestos, four years apart

11th August 2022
‘Shining light’ Rotherhithe shopkeeper could be deported – despite thanks from Queen for pandemic work

Vimal Pandya: Rotherhithe residents pay tribute to ‘beautiful soul’ facing deportation

10th August 2022

USEFUL PAGES

  • Signup for our Newsletter
  • The Paper
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

LEGAL

  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertising
  • Accessibility
  • Modern Slavery Statement

© 2022 Southwark News

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Accessibility
  • Advertising
  • Biscuit Home Page
  • CONTACT US
  • Contribute
  • Cookie Policy
  • Developer Test Page
  • Home
  • Modern Slavery Statement
  • News at Den
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Please contribute and help us to keep providing you with local news
  • Privacy
  • SN Style Guide
  • Terms of Use
  • Test Page
  • Thanks for signing up for our newsletter

© 2022 Southwark News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In