Community Care logo
Loading

Email newsletter ad

You are in:   News

Housing associations must "co-operate" more closely with councils to provide homes for the homeless, deputy prime minister John Prescott has urged.

Thursday 30 September 2004 00:00

Housing associations must "co-operate" more closely with councils to provide homes for the homeless, deputy prime minister John Prescott has urged.

Speaking at the National Housing Federation annual conference last week, Prescott said he wanted housing associations to play their part in providing homeless people with a "permanent home of their own".

The move has been welcomed by homelessness charities, which said councils were increasingly reliant on housing associations to provide suitable lettings as they were becoming the dominant social landlords.

Shelter policy manager Jim Bennett said: "Some housing associations had exclusion policies for some groups and difficulties sometimes arose with nomination agreements between the council and associations."

Homeless Link director of policy and regions Tara Bradley said: "What we would stress is that closer partnerships between councils and housing associations must include a range of housing options with support for single homeless people with varying needs in environments that do not ghettoise or exclude them."

Acting head of the London Housing Federation Laura Hare said there were tensions between councils and housing associations because of conflicting government priorities.

"Councils need to get homeless people out of temporary accommodation and housing associations need to sustain mixed communities. The two need to communicate better to ensure both priorities are met."

Prescott also told delegates the government had "reduced from over 6,000 to virtually zero" the number of children in bed and breakfast accommodation for longer than six weeks since it became law in April 2004.

The latest government statutory homeless second quarter figures for England and Wales show that about 60 of the 1,050 households with dependent children or expectant mothers had been resident in B&B accommodation for more than six weeks. However, this had increased by 30 since March 2004.

Meanwhile, Housing Corporation chief executive John Rouse warned housing associations at the conference to share the burden of refugee housing associations by providing "move-on" accommodation for refugees.

He told delegates that refugee provision, which is a government priority, will be tracked using its regulatory statutory return (RSL).

More from Community Care

Inform promo