Source · Select Committees · Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee
Sixth Report - Protecting the homeless and the private rented sector: MHCLG’s response to Covid-19
Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee
HC 1329
Published 31 March 2021
Recommendations
2
We recommend the Government immediately issues clear guidance to local authorities stating that they can...
Recommendation
We recommend the Government immediately issues clear guidance to local authorities stating that they can and should use their legal powers under the Local Government Act 1972 and NHS Act 2006 to find accommodation for those otherwise ineligible for support …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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3
We recommend that the Government creates a cross-Government task force to resolve the conflict between...
Recommendation
We recommend that the Government creates a cross-Government task force to resolve the conflict between the commitment to end rough sleeping and the current policy on the no recourse to public funds condition. This will require collecting data on the …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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4
We call on the Government to publish an exit plan for the private rented sector...
Recommendation
We call on the Government to publish an exit plan for the private rented sector from national and local restrictions. Now the Government has published its roadmap for how to exit national restrictions, hopefully for the final time, it should …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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6
We call on the Government to deliver a specific financial package—we prefer discretionary housing payments—to...
Recommendation
We call on the Government to deliver a specific financial package—we prefer discretionary housing payments—to support tenants to repay rent arrears caused by covid-19, in consultation with the Local Government Association and appropriate bodies representing renters and landlords. We received …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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8
We do not accept the Government’s reasoning for why it cannot produce figures on the...
Recommendation
We do not accept the Government’s reasoning for why it cannot produce figures on the number of people subject to the no recourse to public funds condition. The cost and administrative burden of doing so are not sufficient arguments, given …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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11
Para 38
We call on the Government to return to the spirit of the early pandemic and...
Recommendation
We call on the Government to return to the spirit of the early pandemic and re- commit to Everyone In. This requires providing legal clarity for local authorities. We recommend the Government immediately issues clear guidance to local authorities stating …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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13
Para 46
We recommend that the Government creates a cross-Government task force to resolve the conflict between...
Recommendation
We recommend that the Government creates a cross-Government task force to resolve the conflict between the commitment to end rough sleeping and the current policy on the no recourse to public funds condition. This will require collecting data on the …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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14
Para 47
No formal review of the Government’s manifesto commitment to end rough sleeping has yet happened,...
Recommendation
No formal review of the Government’s manifesto commitment to end rough sleeping has yet happened, due to the pandemic. We recommend the Government appoints a successor to Baroness Casey within the coming months to lead the review. This important work …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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16
Para 55
There has been a lack of recent focus from the Government on wider homelessness, including...
Recommendation
There has been a lack of recent focus from the Government on wider homelessness, including those suffering in cramped, poor quality temporary accommodation for long periods of time during the pandemic. The Government must ensure its increased homelessness funding does …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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17
The Government will fail in its homelessness objectives if it continues to oversee the delivery...
Recommendation
The Government will fail in its homelessness objectives if it continues to oversee the delivery of just a few thousand social rent homes a year. The ongoing shortage of social housing is a clear, long-term obstacle to finding suitable accommodation …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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19
Para 66
We call on the Government to publish a proper exit plan for the private rented...
Recommendation
We call on the Government to publish a proper exit plan for the private rented sector from national and local restrictions. The Government has tinkered regularly with the eviction framework, usually at the very last minute. Now the Government has …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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22
Para 86
We call on the Government to deliver a specific financial package to support tenants to...
Recommendation
We call on the Government to deliver a specific financial package to support tenants to repay rent arrears caused by covid-19, having considered the examples in Scotland and Wales as well as many other international examples. This should be one …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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23
The Government should review its decision to freeze Local Housing Allowance rates by maintaining the...
Recommendation
The Government should review its decision to freeze Local Housing Allowance rates by maintaining the 30th percentile in cash terms only, and instead keep rates indexed at the 30th percentile long-term. This will help households across England to afford their …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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25
Para 98
The Government must introduce the Renters’ Reform Bill urgently.
Recommendation
The Government must introduce the Renters’ Reform Bill urgently. The Government does not want to introduce the Renters’ Reform Bill until the pandemic has finished, but this is at odds with the approach the Government has taken with NHS reforms. …
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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26
We reiterate our offer to conduct pre-legislative scrutiny of the Renters’ Reform Bill, should the...
Recommendation
We reiterate our offer to conduct pre-legislative scrutiny of the Renters’ Reform Bill, should the Government choose to publish the Bill in draft. (Paragraph 99) 40 Protecting the homeless and the private rented sector: MHCLG’s response to Covid-19
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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Conclusions (11)
1
Conclusion
We recognise the enormous success of the early stages of the Everyone In programme, made possible through cross-sector collaboration, substantial funding, and joint working towards a clear goal.
5
Conclusion
The Government will eventually have to come up with a policy response, because it cannot keep extending the evictions ban forever more.
7
Conclusion
We recognise the enormous success of the early stages of the Everyone In programme, made possible through cross-sector collaboration, substantial funding and joint working towards a clear goal.
9
Conclusion
Para 29
There are substantial differences between a well-established severe weather emergency protocol, which provides short-term accommodation, often in night shelters or other communal spaces, and providing long-term accommodation in self-contained en-suite units with significant wraparound support. While there can be some similarities—especially the principle of ‘In for Good’—this is undermined by …
10
Conclusion
Para 37
Everyone In by definition has finished. The Government believes Everyone In continues to exist, but by its own admission it is no longer helping everyone. The principle of Everyone In was that everyone, no matter what their normal eligibility for homelessness assistance, would be provided with accommodation to self-isolate by …
12
Conclusion
No recourse to public funds has been an obstacle to reducing rough sleeping for a long time: the pandemic has just shone a spotlight on its impact. If the Government is serious about meeting its manifesto commitment to end rough sleeping by 2024, it must reform the no recourse to …
15
Conclusion
We ask the Government to update us on whether it has achieved its target of delivering 3,300 housing units by March 2021 through its Next Steps Accommodation Programme.
18
Conclusion
Para 65
The Government is in danger of breaking its pledge that no one should lose their home as a result of the pandemic. We have seen no satisfactory evidence for why the Government changed the definition of substantial rent arrears to permit tenants who have built up arrears only during the …
20
Conclusion
Para 71
We are concerned by the lack of robust data available to the Government on the value of rent arrears and how it equates to months of arrears, and by the impact this lack of data may have on policy-making.
21
Conclusion
Para 85
The Government appears to lack a clear strategy to deal with rising rent arrears. We are very concerned that the Government is waiting until there is a clear crisis emerging before intervening, rather than heading off a growing rent arrears crisis by taking proactive action to protect people in this …
24
Conclusion
Para 95
We also call on the Government to temporarily boost funding to discretionary housing payments to meet the needs of the tens of thousands of households who are receiving no extra income from welfare increases due to the benefit cap. This will further protect households from falling into rent arrears because …