Christmas in central Birmingham, as in many other UK cities, is dominated by a German market and a nimbus of tacky festive lights. Frankfurters the length of limbs; steins of overpriced lager; shoals of inebriated revellers — all can be enjoyed, this time of year, in England’s second city. Even the most Scrooge-hearted soul could, at a glance, call it a most convivial scene. The city centre after all, is a well-heeled place. Christmas visitors sweep in through the gleaming facades of New Street Station, with its upmarket shops and its mechanical bull centrepiece.
Yet in the chilly winter air outside, there’s also a desolate scene, one that wouldn’t be out of place in Dickens. After years of industrial decline, to say nothing of growth-squashing policies from Whitehall, the erstwhile home of Joe Chamberlain has become a stronghold of homelessness. You see them loitering by the station, weather-worn and battered, wandering alone or in small groups. Many sit in tired, ad-hoc conflabs. Some cadge fags or cash. Others share gossip, jokes, or a less-than-ideal bit of shelter. And just as the streets around New Street suffer here, so, all Birmingham does too.
Since 2019, there has been a 70% jump in homelessness across the city. The most vulnerable rough sleepers, those near New Street, are only the start. There are now over 10,000 homeless children in Birmingham — more than at any other time this century — with over 4,500 families in temporary accommodation. 2023 government stats show that the West Midlands has much higher homelessness rates than the East Midlands (Nottingham and Leicester) and the North West (Liverpool and Manchester). Barrie Hodge of St Basils, a local youth homelessness charity, says those seeking help from the have rocketed by 22%.
Ask the average worker, rushing to and fro from New Street, and most won’t give the homeless a second glance. This is not because we’re a callous lot — it’s because we’re used to this scene and many here, too, are struggling to make ends meet. Rent rises in this corner of England are among the fastest in the land, even as employment is down, and less than a quarter of us earn the London median wage of £44,370. Many here just don’t have the cash to help themselves, let alone pass on a fiver to some nameless stranger looking for a handout as they rush to get a train.
Visit Council House, the handsome Victorian headquarters of local government, and you’d probably hear a similar answer. Max Caller, called in by Whitehall after Birmingham’s effective bankruptcy, has been locally dubbed “Max the Axe” for his ruthless pruning of the city’s spending. The exact figure changes a lot, but hundreds of millions have to be found in cuts, or in council tax rises. Not that it’s surprising. Between financial mismanagement, a botched IT upgrade and an eye-watering equal pay settlement, Birmingham is a city on the edge. Beyond the £400 million headline, which has seen arts funding taken down to zero, and social care slashed. For its part, funding for the department that deals with homelessness has seen cuts of 28%.
You can see the paucity of authority care throughout the city. Beginning at New Street, it’s crept up the A-roads and down our arterial waterways. On canals you’ll find tents. Some are for sleeping; others for shooting up. On major ring roads, traffic lights are increasingly guarded by the most desperate. Suburban retail parks are much the same. For their part, some bus stops are also now homes. One homeless lad, at the Highgate interchange of Belgrave Middleway, had been there for so long that he’d even started tending to the weeds around the road’s intersection. Add to that the mass of people in temporary accommodation, hardly suitable for building stability or accessing consistency in care, and the problem is becoming more complex. “Society,” Hodge says, “is only as successful as the way it treats its most vulnerable.”
Given the desperate state of Birmingham’s accounts, it’s tempting to imagine that these problems could be solved with more cash. But with Rachel Reeves making much of Labour’s tough decision-making — she recently said all government departments need to find 5% in cuts — a wholesale abandonment of austerity seems unlikely. That’s even as the city currently spends about £2 million a month on temporary accommodation for the homeless.
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SubscribeA poor article in all honesty. Fails to mention the terrifying increase in illegal migration in Birmingham (and the UK in general). I work in social care and any adult with a child, no matter where they are from will be housed if they do not have accommodation. No waiting lists, placed same day in a hotel. No checks undertaken on whether they can finance themselves. Too intrusive apparently. The scams going on are enough to make your blood boil. Nothing works, priority given to those who have just arrived. Incompetence at an all time high. Council cannot collect bins on time but have enough money for a Commonwealth Games? The social contract is breaking down. Only so long people who work any pay taxes will accept ever increasing taxes for a diminishing rate of return
I’m a native Brummie, originally from Great Barr. Birmingham has for my lifetime always felt something like a semi failed state. It keeps trying to reinvent itself with grand projects but always falls short. The demographic segregation of this supposed example of multicultural success is incredibly stark too. I was glad to out of it.
The story was that the city council bankrupted itself with DEI equity compensation pay-outs. Now they can’t afford to pay anyone except unionised council workers.
Today it’s Birmingham, tomorrow, the UK.
An interesting impressionistic piece from someone obviously moved by the suffering of others.
But without a mention of Migration it cannot be taken seriously as a piece of analysis, surely?
The same situation persists and gets worse year on year in my home borough in London where the council housing waiting list is around 20,000, with at least a 10 year waiting list for a family home.
My young friends no longer even put their kids ‘on the list’. Just as many of them now pay over the odds to get their wives and kids seen by private healthcare which they can ill afford. The idea that public services ‘aren’t for the likes of us’ grows every year.
Yet the local papers and council are still ideologically committed to Open Borders.
Inviting in sojourners when you cannot even house your own people is not just incompetent, it is frankly immoral.
“if any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel.”
1.How many homeless people are British, how many are foreign?
2.Of the British contingent, how many are new citizens, how many were born British?
3.Of the Born-Here British, how many are drug addicts/alcoholics, how many have severe mental problems?
Those questions need to be answered in an article like this. Because:
1.Foreign people who are homeless should be deported to their homeland forthwith.
2.Foreigners who have been granted citizenship, should be stripped of this if they become homeless and then should join group 1
3.Drug addicts, drunks and mental people should be separated out of the homeless figures as they are never going to get any better and should be arrested for vagrancy if they are caught begging or sleeping rough (though we should ensure enough homeless shelters are available for them to sleep and eat in).
4.That way we would know who are the genuine homeless people worthy of re-housing.
When I was at university, we were told that African politics was basically a case of distinct tribal groups jostling for the right to allocate resources to themselves, at the expense of other groups. No thought was given to how those resources might be sustained or expanded.
The U.K. doesn’t feel too different these days.
I was surprised to hear half way through that “more cash” and “throwing money at the problem” wasn’t the solution but then the author didn’t suggest any non-government solutions. You can’t do down the “Big Society” if you are looking for societal change in the way we deal with homelessness.
The note on local government profligacy lasted less than a paragraph – criticising the solution rather than the cause. This has become a regular feature of Unherd’s Birmingham coverage and to the rest of the country sounds like whinging after the horse has bolted.
Are retail rents really rocketing? My impression (admitedly outside the West Midlands) was that retail was at rock bottom – near me there are 3-month free deals from owners desperate to get someone in.
I can’t read any more of this author. It’s always the same. Why does the expression “always the victims, never their fault” come to mind whenever I try to read this tedious blame storming ? Someone voted for the councillors and local politicians that created this mess. And kept doing so even as they saw it unfold.
I too am a Brummie – the street I grew up in in Perry Barr is now owned by 2nd generation migrants and houses new migrants. The Ramada hotel in Wylde Green where we used to go on posh occasions now houses illegal migrants. We had no car phone or washing machine in the 60s but full employment in the factories for our parents. The deliberate wrecking of our economy first to provide the Chinese miracle and a bonus to large global corporations then to satisfy the lurch to net zero was unforgivable
Good to see an article written that I can actually understand and relating to the area in which I live. What’s even better is the comments below! But here’s my input.
Why does no one mention parents, especially fathers? Have these people been homeless since birth? Shouldn’t we all have some form of identification which links us to our parents, so that the first approach is for them to take back thier offspring, no matter how old?
Then might we see that there is a root cause to this problem?
If a father (or mother) wants nothing to do with his offspring then I doubt forced contact would be of much benefit to the child. Foster children may dispute this but I think too many kids, Sara Sharif comes to mind, are left with feckless/abusive parents.
I went to Central Birmingham recently for a job interview in Colmore Row. I was shocked how much it had changed since the last time I was there.