Simplify your online presence. Elevate your brand.

Does Labours New Homelessness Strategy Go Far Enough

Tackling Homelessness Early A Priority In New Strategy Royal Borough
Tackling Homelessness Early A Priority In New Strategy Royal Borough

Tackling Homelessness Early A Priority In New Strategy Royal Borough We have been waiting on this strategy for 18 months now, yet somehow it still looks as if it’s been rushed out. it falls far short of what the sector has consistently been calling for throughout this time. This is both unlawful and deeply damaging. the government has inherited a housing and homelessness crisis. not enough social and affordable housing has been built for decades.

New Chelmsford Strategy Sets Out Plans To Tackle Homelessness City Life
New Chelmsford Strategy Sets Out Plans To Tackle Homelessness City Life

New Chelmsford Strategy Sets Out Plans To Tackle Homelessness City Life But charities have said labour's national plan to end homelessness "falls short" and contains "important gaps", meaning the party will not be able to achieve their stated goal of halving the. The government has set broadly the right destination for the homelessness system, but the changes it proposes aren’t enough to get it there. The government has unveiled its long term homelessness strategy, a £3.5bn plan which aims to reduce rough sleeping and focus on prevention. but does it go far enough? ella jessel rounds up the sector’s reaction. New official figures show that 9,574 people were sleeping rough in july 2025, an increase of 94 per cent compared with july 2021. this confirms that current approaches are not improving the situation and that many people are becoming trapped in homelessness rather than helped out of it.

New Chelmsford Strategy Sets Out Plans To Tackle Homelessness City Life
New Chelmsford Strategy Sets Out Plans To Tackle Homelessness City Life

New Chelmsford Strategy Sets Out Plans To Tackle Homelessness City Life The government has unveiled its long term homelessness strategy, a £3.5bn plan which aims to reduce rough sleeping and focus on prevention. but does it go far enough? ella jessel rounds up the sector’s reaction. New official figures show that 9,574 people were sleeping rough in july 2025, an increase of 94 per cent compared with july 2021. this confirms that current approaches are not improving the situation and that many people are becoming trapped in homelessness rather than helped out of it. Yet beneath the headlines, important questions remain. does the strategy go far enough – and does it offer anything genuinely new? here, we share our reflections on what the strategy means for the private rented sector (prs). But this labour government is choosing, instead, to make ending homelessness and rough sleeping the priority it should be. we will do this by catching people before they fall by addressing the. The uk government has just announced "a national plan to end homelessness". nish and coco break it down with alison mcgovern mp, minister for local government and homelessness, in this week’s. Homelessness: labour criticised the impact of successive conservative governments on homelessness, highlighting a “sharp rise in hidden homelessness”. therefore, the manifesto committed to collaborating with mayors and councils to “put britain back on track to ending homelessness”.38.

Comments are closed.