Wigan children forced to live in temporary accommodation

Dozens of children were living in temporary accommodation in Wigan during the last national lockdown, figures show.
Children ‘are paying the price for a failure to build enough social housing’Children ‘are paying the price for a failure to build enough social housing’
Children ‘are paying the price for a failure to build enough social housing’

Last winter, the Government instructed people to stay in their homes in an effort to curb the spread of Covid-19, but at least 40 families with children were without a permanent place to live when lockdown lifting began in spring.

Experts are now calling for more social housing to be built in a bid to prevent youngsters spending their early years in “grossly insecure” and poor quality accommodation.

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Data from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government shows that there were 76 children among the families in Wigan staying in temporary accommodation on March 31.

The figures include three families with children staying in hostel or refuge style accommodation and 16 in bed and breakfast facilities.

Local authorities should only place families in bed and breakfast facilities as a last resort and then only for a maximum of six weeks, but six households in Wigan had lived in B&B accommodation for longer.

An MHCLG spokeswoman said the number of children in temporary accommodation had fallen 6.5 per cent between March 2020 and March this year, with the Government “determined to reduce this further”.

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But stark figures show that four in every 1,000 households in England were in temporary accommodation in March (one in every 1,000 in Wigan) and almost 120,000 children had no permanent home.

Darren Rodwell of the Local Government Association, which represents councils, described the figures as tragic, adding: “Having a safe, secure, permanent home is the bedrock of any child getting the very best start in life.

“This is a sad reflection of the lack of housing in this country and demonstrates the urgent need to build more social homes.

“This won’t happen overnight, but it is vital that councils, working with government, are given the powers to get building homes again at a scale that drastically reduces homelessness, as we look to build back the nation following the pandemic.”

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Polly Neate, chief executive of housing charity Shelter, said thousands of children were paying the price over a failure to build enough social housing in the UK.

She said: “Without a home, children are spending their vital early years trapped in grossly insecure and often poor-quality temporary accommodation.

“We know from our own services and research that living in one room in a homeless B&B or hostel, with precious little space to sleep, eat or play, can seriously harm a child’s wellbeing and development.”

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