Most homeless households will have to leave Lambeth, says council

protest banners outside civic offices
Homeless people protesting at Lambeth Council offices

The most vulnerable homeless households in Lambeth will be prioritised for temporary accommodation in the borough under a review of the system for allocating the dwindling supply of available housing, the council said today (19 November).

It has proposed a series of changes to its Placement Policy, in the face a huge increase in spending on housing homeless families in temporary accommodation (TA), which now costs the council more than £100m a year.

The council said it expects that the majority of homeless households will have to move out of the borough – and often out of the South East, but that there will be “strict criteria” to support families with children in local schools or specific care or medical needs to stay in or as close to the borough as possible.

The policy, which sets out how the council matches families in housing need with available accommodation, has remained largely unchanged for more than a decade – despite spiralling costs, increased demand and an acute shortage of affordable homes.

“That shortage follows a national failure over the last two decades to build the social housing our communities desperately need,” the council said.

“Lambeth council is doing what it can, building the first new council houses in a generation, and seeking every opportunity to work with partners to develop new affordable homes. But it’s still not enough.”

The council said its revised policy “lays bare the fact that the crippling impact of the housing crisis means a tenancy in the private sector will be the most suitable option for homeless households who at the moment are likely to be placed in insecure and often poorer quality temporary accommodation.

“Lambeth has worked hard for many years to keep residents within the capital and largely within the borough, unlike many councils who have used placements much further afield for many years,” the council said.

“But the number of homeless households supported by the council has increased by 50% in the last two years, and Lambeth is now providing temporary accommodation for over 4,600 homeless households every night.

“Although TA is meant to be for short periods, the reality is that 2,900 homeless households have now been in these insecure placements for more than two years and over 1,500 for more than five years.

“The use of TA properties has severe impacts on homeless individuals and families – but the financial repercussions for Lambeth as a whole are also huge.

“The rising demand for TA has contributed to Lambeth’s budget challenge, with the council needing to find £183m in savings over four years, with £99m agreed and a further £84m to be identified before March next year.”

group of people with placards pose for photo
Cllr Adilypour (centre) with housing campaigners in Brixton town hall earlier this year

Cllr Danny Adilypour, deputy leader of the council and cabinet member for housing, investment and new homes, said: “Our new placement policy reflects the challenging reality we face – record numbers of families presenting themselves as homeless in Lambeth every day and unsustainable pressure on council finances caused by our increased need to source temporary accommodation to keep these families off the streets.

“We are determined to continue meeting our moral and legal duty to homeless families in Lambeth, whilst ensuring the financial stability of the council.

“Whilst this will mean placing families further away from Lambeth than they would like to be, we are determined to give them the stability and security they desperately need by giving them longer term placements in areas that will meet their family, cultural and community needs.’

Cllr Adilypour said this would allow them “to plan for the future, knowing they have a safe and secure home”.

The council’s updated placement policy will, in future, prioritise the allocation of TA in or close to the borough based on factors including:

Education – with children at key stages of education (GCSEs, A-Levels), to be prioritised for accommodation within a reasonable distance of their schools.

Care needs – ensuring those providing care (and in receipt of carer’s allowance), are given priority for accommodation in Lambeth and its vicinity.

Medical needs – where these mean the applicant needs to stay close to medical facilities.

Lambeth council is one of the country’s biggest social housing landlords, with more than 20,000 rented council homes, but there are also 28,000 households waiting for a council home.

Only around 800 council properties become available to let each year, yet 478 households approached the council for assistance in September this year alone.

The TA crisis has been made more acute by the gap between soaring private sector rent levels and the level of benefits in Lambeth, which have been frozen by successive governments at 2011 levels.

The council says this means it is forced to look outside the borough for homes that residents can afford to live in.

“By providing an offer of a decent, secure and affordable home in another part of the country, we can support families to live in a home that meets their needs and ends the uncertainty of temporary accommodation,” the council said.

A council report on the proposed changes, published today, states that the aim is “to secure accommodation that is affordable and can provide settled long-term housing for families affected by homelessness”.

It added: “The revised placement policy sets out a transparent, lawful approach to placing homeless households in suitable accommodation, ensuring fairness while reflecting the severe shortage of affordable housing locally.

“While many applicants understandably wish to remain in Lambeth, the lack of affordable suitable housing means that sustainable placements are often outside the borough.

“The aim of the placement policy is that moves are sustainable in the long term.”