Homelessness in 2012 London, still here, still shocking; Tola A. Ositelu interviews Mike Nicholas, communications manager for homeless charity Thames Reach.
.
Homelessness in 2012 London, still here, still shocking; Tola A. Ositelu interviews Mike Nicholas, communications manager for homeless charity Thames Reach
Thames Reach runs a scheme called ‘London Street Rescue’ which operates across more than 20 London boroughs.
Each night, staff and volunteers work in shifts looking for rough sleepers. Rather than focus merely on the immediate needs of a bed for the night, London Street Rescue aims to get to the core of the person’s needs and get them off the streets for good.
The issue of homelessness is notoriously contentious, eliciting ample compassion in some and recrimination in others. Nicholas and the team understandably prefer to take a non-judgmental approach to their work.
He insists:
“I wouldn’t want to stigmatise the homeless.”
However, in his nearly ten years with the organisation, Nicholas has noticed certain recurring causes of privation. Mental health problems and substance abuse are two of the most prominent. The average death of intravenous drug users living on the streets is a depressingly young 31, according to one reputable GP.
Nicholas is especially concerned about the widespread availability of very strong and very cheap alcoholic drinks:
“Super strength lager and ciders are now responsible for killing more homeless people than crack cocaine and heroin.”
Various homelessness organisations are calling on the government to increase taxation on these products.
• MSPs back plans to tackle Scotland’s alcohol timebomb – but Labour abstain 15 Mar 2012
• Out in the cold on Christmas day: The growing homelessness crisis 22 Dec 2011
• Labour launches concerted effort to tackle Scotland’s alcohol “time bomb” 13 Sep 2010
• Is a minimum alcohol price now more likely? 18 Jan 2010
• Calling time on cheap booze 7 Dec 2009
Nicholas believes people’s drinking habits are often determined by price:
“We’re not anti-alcohol per se, but we don’t think cider and beer should be between seven and a half and nine per cent of strength and so cheap. I think [these drinks] are aimed at people with alcohol problems.
“A single can of Tennent’s Super or Carlsberg Super (non re-sealable can) exceeds the recommended daily intake of alcohol.”
It’s not all bad news, however.
Successive governments have taken some measures to address this issue through legislation. Towards the end of their last administration Labour were preparing to introduce a minimum price-per-unit on alcoholic drinks, while last month the coalition outlined plans for a minimum price for alcohol in England and Wales, following the Scottish Parliament’s vote in favour of minimum pricing.
Says Nicholas:
“The policy caught all drinkers; the pint in the pub. It caused an outcry and they [Labour] lost support for it. What they should have done is tackle the super strength white ciders specifically.”
In the recent budget, the government increased the price of super strength lagers by 25 pence, a good start, says Nicholas, but there’s still a long way to go:
“We’d call on the drinks industry itself to behave more responsibly too. We also have concerns that increasingly unregulated wholesale companies are flooding the market and promoting these drinks very aggressively to local corner shops.
“Who’s monitoring these wholesalers?”
Yet there are signs the tireless campaigning of Thames Reach and other homelessness charities is having an impact even on the drinks industry.
Nicholas gives an example of a recent small but significant victory:
“Following a visit to one of our homelessness hostels Heineken took their super strength ciders off the market. It was great to see. We wish other drinks manufacturers would follow suit.”
Another demographic often affected by rough sleeping are those of uncertain immigration status. Over the past decade the expansion of the European Union has seen an increase in rough sleepers originating from central and eastern Europe. Amongst the many success stories there are a minority who do not manage to find steady employment.
If they have not worked enough to make sufficient National Insurance contributions they have no recourse to funds. With few prospects for them in the UK but no means of returning home, some individuals fall through the cracks. Many of them, again, resort to using substances in order to cope.
Thames Reach’s ‘London Reconnection Project’ is geared towards assisting migrants stuck in limbo – Nicholas estimates it has so far helped 1500 such cases return to their country of origin:
“They can go back to their homeland with dignity, hope and the chance to turn their lives around, to their families and loved ones or to the services which could provide them with support.”
Are they ever reluctant to go back?
Nicholas is pragmatic:
“If you can’t get benefits or shelter options are limited.”
It is evident when speaking to Nicholas that he is keen to dispel a few media-fuelled misconceptions while he is at it:
“A lot of commentators have tried to link the spending cuts in with rough sleepers’ numbers but what we see on the ground doesn’t correspond with that.”
Mike doesn’t rule out the possibility of a connection, but feels it is too soon to say.
The number of those sleeping rough in the capital rose 8% from 2009/10 to 2010/11.
Looking ahead, though, the London Delivery Board (LDB) – set up under the aegis of Mayor Boris Johnson in 2009, the result of several different agencies, including various homelessness charities and the police, joining forces to alleviate homelessness in London – looks to have begun to bear fruit.
Nicholas explains the outcome thus far has been impressive:
“Since April 1st 2011, 70 per cent of all rough sleepers have not spent a second night out. In London there have been extra resources made available by the LDB to tackle the issue. How long people have been on the street is what matters.
“There’s a different type of support for long term rough sleepers than those who have just arrived.”
Nicholas also describes as an ‘urban myth’ the perpetuated image of some of the unemployed middle class suddenly finding themselves turfed out onto the streets.
He finds this narrative particularly misguided:
“I think editors will drive stories which would tie in with their readers’ fears. We’ll hear about middle class homelessness but it’s not what we’re seeing on the ground.
“When we talk to our outreach workers it’s usually people from the same troubled backgrounds. The idea that you are one pay cheque away from homelessness is not very accurate or helpful. Those we’re seeing wouldn’t have had a mortgage.
“If people distort who is really vulnerable to rough sleeping then the funding goes to the wrong place.”
He continues:
“People want to talk about youth homelessness as a big issue too but previous governments have tackled that with legislation. In the last year only five under 18s were found to have been sleeping rough.”
The work of Thames Reach has thus far soldiered on relatively untroubled by the recession thanks in no small part to an increase of funding from the GLA, though Nicholas does admit that these austere times affect the charity sector in other ways:
“It’s more competitive and challenging in terms of hanging onto funding as there are lots of organisations bidding for it. I don’t want to say there’s been no impact at all.”
Nonetheless Nicholas prefers to concentrate on the silver-lining:
“More than a quarter of [Thames Reach] staff has experienced homelessness… People can escape it. It should only be a temporary blip in their lives.”
53 Responses to “Tackling homelessness in London”
Why do ministers refuse to invest in a housing boost that would be great for the economy? | Left Foot Forward
[…] Tackling homelessness in London 8 Apr 2012 Such approaches are a false economy since they have to be underpinned by the housing […]
Blestlyrical
With all due respect Newsbot I think you are missing the point. Individuals like Nicholas are a lot more exposed to the main causes of rough sleeping than the armchair critic. As much as one can’t deny a housing crisis in the capital, the point Mike was making is that rough sleepers often end up that way because of substance abuse and not the other way around.
Guest
How uninformed this article is!
“A lot of commentators have tried to link the spending cuts in with rough sleepers’ numbers but what we see on the ground doesn’t correspond with that.”
Here’s a case study link:
I live in a 4th floor flat without a lift and with a long-term disability. I have part time access to water due to low water pressure, a leaking roof, – no one’s fixing anything, adaptations have been refused in my property because apparently it is not “feasible” for the Council to do them on the 4th floor without a lift, and my operations done last year are failing because of my circumstances. My PIP application is not being assessed now for 7 months. I live in 16 degrees temperature as I can’t afford to heat my flat, and my ESA is not being reviewed either. I haven’t had a bath or a hairwash for 10 months now because I can’t access the stupid unadapted equipment. I eat bread and sugar to survive as I can’t get food into my flat. Affordable supermarkets like Tescos and Sainsburys don’t deliver to my forth floor flat because there is no lift. Yet there is nowhere I can get help from.
On the other side of things I am being offered jobs which I can’t take because I have difficulties using public transport (I have a long term deteriorating spinal illness). The Council expressed that if I can’t use public transport then I can’t work.
I was informed that Medical applicants need to wait 10+ years to be rehoused, and that’s the future I have to look forward to. This is while healthy people are getting housed into properties suitable for disabled applicants within as little as one month!
One of the things that was suggested to me by a friend is to move into a central London park once the weather picks up, because I can access food from the park, I can access public showers at a gym near by and I can access employment. I know I can get a job, so if I work close to the park then I can crash there and work – and stay cleaner than what is possible in my “home”, and save up money for equipment adaptations and repairs/improvements. The only thing that’s holding me back is that I need to use adapted furniture in relation to my disability and other mobility/disability issues. If I could overcome mobility issues, then there’d be no question about it, I’d be in the park already (and I don’t drink alcohol).
I honestly believe people have serious problems which forces them to be on the street, and the problems are simply overlooked. Mental health might be secondary and in consequences to their hardship. Same goes for the use of alcohol. People live on the streets to SURVIVE.