Title

HOMELESSNESS

COVID exposed true extent of rough sleeping crisis, says PAC

MPs have raised serious questions about the Government’s homelessness strategy after the pandemic exposed the number of people sleeping rough was much higher than Whitehall estimates.

MPs have raised serious questions about the Government's homelessness strategy after the pandemic exposed the number of people sleeping rough was much higher than Whitehall estimates.

A new report from the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) found that the Government's Everyone In initiative helped around 37,430 people into accommodation by January 2021.

However, that number was nearly nine times the Government's last official estimate of people sleeping rough.

The PAC report said the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) still did not have a plan for achieving or maintaining its 2019 election commitment to end rough sleeping by May 2024.

Chair of the PAC, Meg Hillier, said: 'The Everyone In initiative has exposed the scale of the task the Ministry of Housing faces to meet the Government's commitment to end rough sleeping in three years.

‘Rough sleeping was a massive public health issue long before the pandemic and much larger than Government has previously publicly acknowledged.

'MHCLG now has a huge opportunity to capitalise on this success in the pandemic response, and begin to reverse its long record of failed and abandoned housing targets and policies.

The PAC report also questioned whether funding of local authorities was adequate to cope with the homelessness crisis.

Housing spokesperson for the Local Government Association, Cllr David Renard, said: ‘The funding provided by government to tackle rough sleeping has been vital, but if councils are to prevent homelessness from happening in the first place short-term reactive pots of funding need to be replaced by long-term funding issued through multi-year settlements to give councils the certainty they need to plan local services.'

A government spokesperson said: 'We reject the unfounded criticisms in this report - we have always been clear that the annual count represents the number of rough sleepers on a single night and this report misuses different data to provide an inaccurate picture.

'We're providing more than £700m this year and £750m next year to tackle homelessness and rough sleeping, and are working with partners to learn any lessons from the pandemic and update our ambitious plans to end rough sleeping for good.'

HOMELESSNESS

Future Forum Midlands: 'Conceptual chance' of meeting housing targets

By Ann McGauran | 12 September 2025

The Government’s new housing targets ‘are a better balance across the country’ with ‘a conceptual possibility’ they can be met, Birmingham City Council’s hou...

HOMELESSNESS

Fair Funding Review 2.0 and the road to reorganisation

By Tracy Bingham | 10 September 2025

Councils will have to grapple with risks, resilience and reform as they balance the fallout from fair funding with the challenge of reorganisation, writes Tr...

HOMELESSNESS

Rethinking long-term community investment

By Nick Kemp | 10 September 2025

As the UK Shared Prosperity Fund ends and the Growth Mission Fund and trailblazer neighbourhoods emerge, Nick Kemp explores how councils can embrace adaptive...

HOMELESSNESS

Councils prepare for battle over asylum accommodation at military sites

By Joe Lepper | 10 September 2025

Councils at the centre of Government plans to increase the use of former military barracks to house asylum seekers have raised concerns over the strategy.

Popular articles by William Eichler