Almost four years ago, I spent several dank hours sitting on a grubby slab of pavement in the summer rain of Blackpool listening to a homeless man recounting his journey from respectable affluence to gut-wrenching poverty. His name was Gary. Every night he bedded down in one of several foul-smelling doorways just off Blackpool’s famous Golden Mile. As if to complete the gloomy mise en scène, he shared this particular doorway with a weather-beaten man whose frame filled his clothes like twigs in a sack.
What struck me was not so much the squalor of his situation: we’re all familiar with the pornography of street life — the dirt and the poverty. What was extraordinary, though, was the suddenness with which Gary had fallen through society’s floorboards. One minute he had a reasonably decent job, a relationship and a flat; the next, everything had unravelled like a poorly knitted scarf. By the time I met Gary he was eking out his existence in a rank doorway, unseen by the thousands who trod the pavements each day.
Yet Gary’s experience was not an unusual one. Before Covid, the situation for working renters in Britain was precarious: almost half of them were just a single pay cheque away from homelessness. If you were lucky, you could ‘couch surf’ at the house of friends and relatives or, if you weren’t on friendly terms with any good samaritans, then the streets beckoned. As wages stagnated, and the cost of renting increased, so too did the numbers of men and women bedding down in shop and restaurant doorways; rough sleeping in England rose for seven consecutive years up to 2017.
The most up to date figures show that from April to June 2019, 68,170 households were either homeless or threatened with homelessness — an increase of 11% on the previous year. This doesn’t take account of the so-called hidden homeless: those couch surfers, squatters and those who bed down each night in filthy and overcrowded doss houses.
Homelessness now blights every large British town or city — and the public have tolerated it by and large. Or, at least, they have turned out to polling stations to vote for politicians who have tolerated it: David Cameron and George Osborne, for example. But their version of modern, caring conservatism seemed to view poverty through a decidedly Victorian lens. Responsibility was placed on the individual — “and having located the responsibility, society goes contentedly on about its own affairs”, as Jack London wrote in The People of the Abyss, his journalistic sojourn among the homeless in turn-of-the-century London. And since 2016, all politicians of all stripes have been preoccupied almost entirely with Brexit.
But crises are funny things. As Covid-19 reached Britain, it started to dawn on politicians that the homeless were no longer a mere inconvenience to be edged past on the rush to the office, but potential super-spreaders of a highly infectious disease. So, on March 26, the Government issued its ‘Everybody In’ directive. Local authorities were instructed to provide immediate accommodation for anyone who was sleeping rough. Councils were handed a total of £3.2m to place them in hotels and B&Bs. Homelessness was abolished at the stroke of a pen.
To be fair to Boris Johnson, he had just announced new money to tackle homelessness before Covid arrived. In a break with its austere predecessors, the Government, in December, set up a £63 million grant scheme to help the homeless in England into accommodation.
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SubscribeFirstly 60% of homeless in London are foreign nationals, so if we helped them get home to where they can get support from friends and family, that solves 60% of the issue. Secondly, we have had mass immigration running at 700,000 a year for two decades of mostly low-skilled labour, which was been great for every sector of society, except the poorest, who have seen depressed wages and high housing costs. Once we limit mass immigration, wages will go up and housing costs go down, stopping people getting homeless in the first place. Thirdly there will always be some who actually want to live on the streets by choice & no amount of do-gooders effect will get them off.
1) The figures you’re quoting relate to rough sleeping specifically (as noted by Richard Pinch). 2) The largest group (nearly half) of rough sleepers in London are UK nationals (data source: London’s Poverty Profile: https://www.trustforlondon…. I am not seeking to win any points here – there’s this narrative that it’s all about foreigners which has been used to justify the Government doing very little, and as a result the numbers sleeping rough of all nationalities have more than doubled since 2010.
If UK nationals account for less than half of London rough sleepers, it follows that more than half are foreign nationals. This is consistent with Jamie Gerry’s statistic. Your second point appears to be self-contradictory, unless a nuance is escaping me.
It does not help the argument in this article that it confuses rough sleeping with homelessness. The latter is a legal definition and most people who are homeless are not sleeping rough (which is not to say that being legally homeless is anything other than awful). For Oct-Dec 2019, about 65,000 households were legally homeless, of which about a quarter were in temporary rented accommodation, about a quarter living with family and friends, and about 3% sleeping rough.
Why not simply hang everyone caught dealing drugs irrespective of how often or how small an amount. Once that profession dries up (about a day after the first tranche of public hangings) we might get a start to see a clearer picture of what’s what on the streets.
Precisely. Our current policy on the so called “War on Drugs” is an utter fiasco. A pathetic cocktail of punishment and indulgence, that not only rewards the Drug Barons, but ludicrously also rewards the numerous Enforcers.
The irresistible elixir of bloated Public Sector pay and pensions, means no one is prepared to do more that spout meaningless platitudes and sanctimonious drivel.
We must either implement total liberalisation or begin to execute on an industrial scale. It is the duty of the State to protect its citizens even if that means killing a few of them, as Aristotle may/might have said.
Rarely in life do things ‘unravel’ by themselves. While sympathising with Gary’s plight, there is surely some event or concatenation of events that triggered his descent & that it isn’t mentioned indicates less an interest in the truth than in politicising a situation that is not, inherently, political.
I think the only place you don’t see street dwellers is where there are laws against being homeless that are actually enforced. We need homes for the homeless, new laws, and active enforcement. Quite a revolution in thinking.
it was interesting to note the opinions of West Indian immigrants towards white Englishmen in the BBC documentary ‘The Colony’ made in 1964 but aired again recently. A few of the participants had noted after many years in England how Englishmen are “all for themselves” and put their own interests first. Others mentioned how Englishmen had no love in them for others. As a white, working-class, middle-aged Englishmen I have to say I concur with these views. There is a very slight prospect of English people suddenly taking an empathetic view of the homeless or rough-sleepers other than to clear the streets of ersatz living quarters. We are by and large a nation of selfish materialistic individualists.
The workman ought to be worth of his hire. This is going to be difficult in any reasonably free economy. It’s impossible in a world of globalization and mass labor migration. Pretty those things should be addressed along with dealing with the mentally ill and the substance-addled.