Ministers Urged To Provide More Money To Tackle Homelessness
Ministers have been urged to provide more money for affordable housing after official figures revealed homelessness is still on the rise. A parliamentary answer by Stewart Maxwell, the communities minister, showed the number of people registering as homeless stood at 36,625 in 2005-6, nearly 2,000 up on the year before.
The figures also revealed huge disparities across the country, with some local authorities seeing large surges in homelessness over the last decade. This was despite the passage of the Homelessness Act in 2003 by the previous Labour-Liberal Democrat Executive, which stated that everyone in Scotland should have decent, secure accommodation by 2012.
Kenny Gibson, the SNP backbencher whose question led to the publication of the figures, said that despite the legislation, not enough progress was being made.
In their election manifesto, the SNP said that one in four new houses should be reserved for affordable housing. The party also vowed to provide first-time buyers with a £2000 grant to help them get on the property ladder.
Mr Gibson said current planning regulations should also be reviewed to ensure enough land is made available to meet the growing demand for new housing developments.
The official figures provide a council-by-council breakdown of homelessness rates since 1996-97 and show how the problem has improved in some areas and got much worse in others.
In Glasgow, for example, homelessness peaked at 11,038 in 2002-3 but was down to 8634 by 2005-6 – the lowest figure in 10 years. Dundee City Council has also seen its homelessness figures fall from 630 a decade ago to 342.
In stark contrast, North Lanarkshire’s figures have more than doubled from 1030 to 2881 since 1996-97, while Highland’s have almost quadrupled from 370 to 1352 over the same period.