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Insert your logo here. Securing resettlement for single homeless people in London’s private rented sector. Adam Stephenson (2011). Contents. Introduction Methodology Findings Conclusions. Introduction. Carried out in Summer of 2011
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Insert your logo here Securing resettlement for single homeless people in London’s private rented sector Adam Stephenson (2011)
Contents • Introduction • Methodology • Findings • Conclusions
Introduction • Carried out in Summer of 2011 • Aimed to explore the challenges facing PRS access schemes in London; and how schemes adapted to these challenges • Context: • Government policy • Rising demand and rising rents • Changes to Local Housing Allowance
Government policy • Successive governments have promoted PRS as source of accommodation for single homeless people in UK • S.73 of 1988 Housing Act funded voluntary sector to develop access and resettlement services • e.g. landlord registers and hostel based advisors • New Labour promoted PRS access as source of accommodation for: • Hostel move-on • Single homeless with low or no support needs • Approx 30 schemes in London in 2007
Government policy • Coalition government (CLG, 2010a:40) • “We are keen to support the voluntary sector and local authorities to help single homeless people access accommodation in the private rented sector” • Crisis PRS Access Development Programme • Committed £10million over 3years • Created12 new schemes in London
Rising demand • Demand is increasing across all tenures • Between 2008 and 2033 (CLG, 2010b): • No. of households to increase by 5.8million (27%) • 33% of increase in London and South East • One person households to increase by 159,000 annually • Demand in PRS • Between 1939 and 1991, PRS shrank from over 50% to 9% • Over last 20 years, trend has reversed: • Increased from 9% to 12% • No. of households increased from 1.7m to 2.6m (52%) (DCLG live table 801)
Changes to LHA • Housing Benefit introduced in 1988. • In 2000, the House of Commons Committee on Social Security reported: • “It is now by far the most important financial instrument of Government housing policy… …HB substantially exceeds all other forms of housing grants, subsidies and tax reliefs” • LHA introduced in 2008 to encourage tenants to ‘shop around’; therefore, improving standards in PRS
Changes to LHA • Between 1999/10 and 2009/10, HB bill increased from £11billion to £20billion • Estimated to rise to £25billion by 2015/16 (DWP, 2011) • Distribution disproportionally concentrated in London • London accounts for 26% of spend, but only 17% of claimants (Hamnett, 2011) • Many of changes specifically focused on London • 2 claimants each receiving £147,000/year
Changes to LHA • Summary of measures affecting single homeless:
Methodology • Consisted of 2 components: • questionnaire • quantitative data about schemes • in-depth semi-structured interviews • qualitative data about perspective of practitioners • Participation • 6 practitioners from 4 organisations
Findings • Organisation, sector, scheme & location
Findings • Type of scheme
Findings • Services for clients
Findings • Services for landlords
Findings • Access to scheme
Findings • Professional perspectives – landlords • Number of willing landlords declining • Existing landlords are not increasing supply – but new landlords are • Landlords are requesting larger incentives • Schemes adapt by: • Increased focus on maintaining existing relationships • Introducing stricter referral criteria • Better ‘marketing’ – press releases & landlord forums • Increasing ‘incentives’ • Using own funds rather than Crisis Loans for rent in advance
Findings • Professional perspectives – quality • Standard of accommodation reducing • e.g. ‘hard to let’; ‘damp’ & ‘dinghy’ • shared converted into self contained • unfurnished • Poor quality not thought to have major impact on ‘resettlement’ • Schemes adapt by: • greater filtering – increasing costs • managing expectations – PRS not council • ‘coercion’ – threat of eviction
Findings • Professional perspectives – location • Difficult to procure accommodation in Inner London • trend established with LHA • Often unable to provide move-on accommodation locally • including in neighbouring boroughs • Number of affordable boroughs decreasing • Some schemes routinely procure accommodation outside on London • All aware of clients refusing accommodation due to locations • including some areas deemed to be too posh
Findings • Professional perspectives – location • Half responded that locality had an effect on ‘resettlement’ • distance between accommodation and ‘home’ area • difficulty of arranging ‘support’ in other boroughs • Location not thought to have major impact on employment, education or training • clients do move after finding work due to travel times and costs • Schemes overcoming this by: • greater filtering – increasing costs • managing expectations – PRS not council • ‘coercion’ – threat of eviction
Findings • Professional perspectives – location • Schemes adapt by: • procuring in dispersed localities - increasing costs • focusing on areas where they developed knowledge of local market • refusing accommodation in areas where clients have refused • managing expectations • ‘coercion’ – threat of eviction; one offer policy • greater dispersion has greater impact on Scheme 4 • full management, including maintenance and support • costs passed to landlords making Scheme less competitative
Findings • Professional perspectives – single homeless people • Most responded that resettlement in PRS had increased • Resettlement in PRS mostly positive for single homeless people • PRS tenancies can encourage greater independence than more secure social tenancies
Findings • Professional perspectives – single accommodation rate • Under 35s excluded – only one scheme accepted under 25s prior to changes • SAR substantially below market rents • confusion over how LAs will interpret exemptions • Adaptations being considered: • LA – converting decommissioned hostels to HMOs • Exploring procurement of HMOs, but • poor response from licensed HMO landlords • creation of HMOs economically unviable • concerns regarding support arrangements
Conclusions • Schemes offer a variety of incentives to procure housing, but additional services are similar • ‘self help’ limited – greater choice = greater satisfaction (Lipton, 2000) • location/identity essential to resettlement (Leal, 2005) • Schemes chasing smaller pool of properties • driving ‘incentive inflation’ • Linear model dominant • for those with low support needs
Conclusions • Procurement becoming more difficult, but schemes are adapting • dispersed, poorer quality - at greater expense • sustainable? • pressure to ‘move-on’ • ‘payments by results’ • forging successful relationships with participating landlord • restricting access to only those with low or no support needs • Potential of ‘housing first’ not being realised
References • CLG (2010a) Local decisions: a fairer future for social housing, London, DCLG • CLG (2010b) Housing and Planning Statistics 2012, London, DCLG • Hamnett (2011) Moving the poor out of central London, Environment and Planning, 42, 2809-2819 • Leal, M (2005) Resettling Homeless People: Theory and Practice, Dorset, Russell House • Lipton (2000) in Johnsen & Teixeira (2010) Staircases, Elevators and Cycles of Change, London, Crisis