Asylum seekers take over 16,000 homes amid housing crisis

Asylum seekers take over 16,000 homes amid housing crisis

9:11 AM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago 10

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The Home Office has rented 16,000 properties for asylum seekers, leaving local families and young workers struggling to find affordable homes, the Daily Telegraph reveals.

The properties, sourced from the private and social housing sectors, accommodate more than 58,000 asylum seekers across England, Wales and Scotland.

This is twice the number of asylum seekers in ‘dispersed accommodation’ 10 years ago.

The Home Office is increasing its use of rented properties to fulfil Rishi Sunak’s promise to cut down on the use of hotels, which have cost up to £8 million a day.

Last year, there were about 50,000 asylum seekers in 400 taxpayer-funded hotels and by the end of last month, 50 asylum hotels had closed, with another 50 expected to shut by the spring.

Asylum seekers in rented properties

Housing asylum seekers in rented properties can cost as low as £30 a day, while hotels can cost up to £150 a day.

However, experts warn that the scheme is depriving local families and young workers of cheaper rented homes.

A Home Office insider told the Telegraph: “The department’s strong preference is for dispersal accommodation because it is so much cheaper and much more discreet than hotels. That’s not to say it’s not unpopular.

“Some of the contractors are taking properties in pretty normal streets.

“You can buy yourself a £300,000 house and suddenly find your next-door neighbour is a house full of asylum seekers. MPs are starting to report problems as a result of this.

“It has also been very heavily clustered in places where property is cheap – Hull, Bradford and Teesside. It is potentially damaging to these places because it creates ghettos which are terrible for integration.”

30,000 properties may be required to stop using hotels

The Telegraph says that up to 30,000 properties may be required to stop using hotels unless the Government can significantly reduce the 100,000 backlog of asylum seekers awaiting a decision on their status.

The insider explained: “There is a shift away from hotels to putting people into housing which on one level is not a bad idea but on another level, on the scale it is being done, is going to have quite a significant impact in areas where it is being done at scale.

“That’s 16,000 properties that would normally be available to families looking for somewhere to rent and live, and often to get themselves off the local housing register.”

At the end of 2021-22, there were 1.2 million people on council house waiting lists, up from 1.19 million in 2020-21.

Paid £4 billion over 10 years

The contractors behind the scheme – Serco, Clearsprings and Mears – have been paid £4 billion over 10 years to provide accommodation to asylum seekers.

More than 25,000 asylum seekers have arrived in Britain via small boats since Rishi Sunak became Prime Minister.

Serco advertises the benefits to landlords as five-year leases with “rent paid in full, on time, every month, with no arrears”, as well as full repair and maintenance, except for structural defects.

Utilities and council tax bills are also covered under the contracts, which offer “full Houses of Multiple Occupation and property management” and no letting or management costs.

With more than a third of UK landlords facing rental arrears a year, one housing expert close to the project said the deals were highly attractive. “If you’re a landlord, wouldn’t you take a five-year contract where they’re going to pay all the rent regardless,” they said.

‘Reduce the unacceptable use of hotels’

A Home Office spokesman told the Telegraph: “We continue to work across government and with local authorities to identify a range of accommodation options to reduce the unacceptable use of hotels which cost £8 million a day. The government remains committed to engaging with local authorities and key stakeholders as part of this process.”

The spokesman refused to comment on the figures but said: “We are working to procure sufficient dispersal accommodation to meet our statutory obligation.”

Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council, said: “The Government’s gross mismanagement of the asylum system has led to immense human misery, with people left in limbo for years on end in a huge backlog of cases resulting in billions being wasted on hotels and other accommodation.

“It would not be like this if the Government focused on operating a fair, efficient and effective system instead of the Rwanda plan that will only lead to more cost and chaos.”


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Comments

NewYorkie

12:23 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

This is a problem with no solution in sight. They say the answer is to clear the backlog, but then where will they live?

The amount of rental accommodation is already falling dramatically due to the persistent attacks on landlords.

JeggNegg

12:51 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

This is a difficult problem that is getting harder to solve, in my opinion .
The numbers of ALL GROUPS of homeless seems to be increasing, the estimated additional homes/houses required I understand has not been achieved by tens of thousands for many years!
If that is correct then it’s time for the responsibility of sorting this mess out to be taken away from politicians and given to a new forward thinking group who have housing people and tenants at heart and can think in a different way not for political votes, and achieve the objective. It needs to identify the problems and find a solution. Where the finance comes from is important but let’s identify what needs to be done, and where these homes can be built, because the current formula has failed and the numbers of people who require homes/safe shelter is getting bigger every day……….

Grumpy Doug

13:02 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

Reply to the comment left by JeggNegg at 14/02/2024 - 12:51"If that is correct then it’s time for the responsibility of sorting this mess out to be taken away from politicians and given to a new forward thinking group who have housing people and tenants at heart"
I know, let's call it the Private Rental Sector (PRS). Let's treat them like any other business and allow them to offset all their business costs as valid expenses. Let them house all their millions of fellow citizens by ensuring they don't have mountains of red tape, regulations and daft licensing schemes to get in the way.
There you go, fixed that for you!

Bernard Mealing

13:15 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

There we have it. £30 a day X 7 days a week X 52. You can buy quite a nice property in Hull for under £100k. and Serco get will get. HOW MUCH !!!! £32k per year.
So now we know where to invest. Serco up North.
Just waiting for them to come to Bristol they can have my Portfolio
at a good price ....

Grumpy Doug

13:17 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Bernard Mealing at 14/02/2024 - 13:15
Careful what you wish for !!
https://www.property118.com/serco-contract-was-a-train-wreck/

Reluctant Landlord

14:18 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Grumpy Doug at 14/02/2024 - 13:17
to be fair if you did the maths...buy a cheap property, do it up yourself, let to Serco get the rent covered for 5 years...

Even if the place is trashed at the end (and not put back as Serco 'guarantee'), you could either just sell and pay no CGT (if no paper profit made). If put back to ok standard relet via the council for temp accommodation purposes (non HMO). There is going to be zero new properties being built so existing accommodation will be sought after.

You could find you house the same people you did under the Serco contract...after all when these contracts come to an end, where are these people going to live anyway? At best they will go on the council temp housing list....

Old Mrs Landlord

15:53 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Bernard Mealing at 14/02/2024 - 13:15
It's better than that Bernard. The £30 per day is per asylum seeker and they are housed in HMOs so their utilities and food etc. are all paid for by us taxpayers. If they are housed six per HMO that's £180 per day x 365 (366 this year).Almost makes me wish I had an HMO or two or, better still, bought shares in Serco!

JeggNegg

16:02 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

There we go positive thinking to solve the problem.
Doug you be CEO/ MD of a new property company.
Follow it through. If there’s that much profit
Under cut servo and get contract from Govt.

Do you think the company will be allowed to accept / sell shares to pension funds?
That might be a cash flow source.
Who knows what expertise there is out there to help resolve this serious housing problem!

Reluctant Landlord

16:26 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Old Mrs Landlord at 14/02/2024 - 15:53
there's still time - properties in Hull up at auction on a regular basis...
Amazes me whey Serco don't buy the properties themselves en masse...lets face it the 5 year contract is going to be extended forever more at this rate.....

Cider Drinker

20:38 PM, 14th February 2024, About 3 months ago

We need to stop the problem at source.thats tge 12 miles limit.

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