Source · Select Committees · Public Accounts Committee

Recommendation 3

3

The size of the rough sleeping population and those at risk of rough sleeping is...

Conclusion
The size of the rough sleeping population and those at risk of rough sleeping is far higher than the snapshot the Department is relying on, exposing the inadequacy of its current approach to data collection and reporting. One consequence of 6 COVID-19: housing people sleeping rough Everyone In has been that for the first time the Department has publicly acknowledged the scale of the rough sleeping population over the course of a year. The number of people assisted under Everyone In from the end of March 2020 to the end of January 2021 (37,430) is nearly nine times the number in its official snapshot of the number of people sleeping rough on one night in autumn 2019 (4,266), its last such measure before the pandemic. This illustrates that there is a churn of people moving onto and off the streets during the year, something which cannot be captured by a single snapshot. In spite of the Everyone In initiative (and other measures, such as a ban on evictions in the private rental sector), this churn continued during 2020, with Data collected by the Department from local authorities apparently showing numbers of people on the streets growing again over the summer, although the number recorded in the official snapshot taken in autumn 2020 was 2,688, a reduction of 37% on the 2019 figure. In February 2021 the Department began publishing monthly rolling estimates of rough sleeping numbers, which should belatedly improve Parliament’s capacity to monitor the Department’s performance. The Department’s most recent snapshot shows that rough sleeping has fallen 43% with 2,688 people estimated to be sleeping rough on a single night in autumn 2020, compared to 4,677 in 2018. The Department must continually scrutinise and improve its own data collection system to make sure it is up to date in monitoring the rough sleeping population. Recommendation: To support proper accountability, the Department must ensure it continues to publish its monthly data on numbers of people sleeping roug
Government Response Acknowledged
HM Government Acknowledged
3.1 The government disagrees with the Committee’s recommendation. 3.2 The department has so far published five snapshots of the data (as at May, September, November, December 2020 and January 2021). 3.3 This is a relatively new data source which must continue to be carefully considered and analysed. The department’s focus remains on the response to the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuring that our data is used to help inform policy decisions. 3.4 The department will update the Committee on its progress towards ending rough sleeping regularly.