Outreach teams tackling rough sleeping on London’s buses and a new street doctor service are just part of a raft of new measures helping to end rough sleeping on the capital’s streets.
Over three-quarters of London’s most entrenched rough sleepers have been helped off the streets since the Mayor of London Boris Johnson set up the London Delivery Board a year ago to tackle the problem.
An Annual Progress Report published February 15th reveals the Board has successfully:
* helped three quarters of London’s 205 most entrenched rough sleepers off the streets
* created a new outreach service to tackle rough sleeping on London’s buses
* established a street doctor service, starting in March, to work with vulnerable long term rough sleepers still living on the streets
* re-launched the Pan-London Reconnection Protocol to help rough sleepers reconnect with their home areas
* developed a targeted program to prevent vulnerable rough sleepers returning to the streets from hostel or other accommodation
* agreed a system with London’s boroughs to help rough sleepers accessing services across several boroughs
* promoted volunteering opportunities for those wanting to end rough sleeping.
The Mayor of London Boris Johnson said:
“These major achievements clearly show that by working together with the boroughs and voluntary organizations, we can end rough sleeping in London by 2012. This will by no means be an easy task but it is hugely encouraging to see the great enthusiasm, imagination and sheer determination all those involved have brought to this challenge.”
Jeremy Swain, Thames Reach Chief Executive said: “The Delivery Board has been absolutely crucial in the drive to end rough sleeping in London. In its first year it has unflinchingly concentrated on the most needy rough sleepers. The result is that men and women who have been sleeping rough in appalling conditions for far too long are now off the streets, in settled accommodation and thriving. It was brave to start with the most marginalized group. Now we must push on and help others to transform their lives and leave the street behind for good.
Jenny Edwards, Chief Executive of Homeless Link, the national umbrella organization for frontline homelessness agencies, said, “We congratulate the Mayor’s London Delivery Board on its leadership and focus on ending rough sleeping. It has already made some major advances. We welcome its ambition to make a difference to the lives of people who have been sleeping out for longest and its early focus on finding the right approach for 205 people. The partnership with CLG, local authorities, health and voluntary agencies has shown real results for the most vulnerable and, after 9 months, just 67 remain on the streets.
“We know there is still much to be done if to end rough sleeping by 2012. We will build on success, finding ways off the streets for long term rough sleepers. We can also work together to ensure that we prevent new people ending up becoming entrenched rough sleepers with all the dangers, ill health and wasted potential that would result.”
Cllr Philippa Roe, Westminster Council’s cabinet member for housing, said: “We are pleased with the progress that this joined up approach has had to help rough sleepers in the capital.
We know there is more work to be done and that in the current economic it won’t be easy but we will continue to work hard to further reduce rough sleeping as much as we can and focus our resources on those who are hardest to reach. We will also continue to focus on preventing those who are new to the streets from becoming entrenched rough sleepers.”
Leslie Morphy, Chief Executive of Crisis, said: “At Crisis we are very pleased with the work achieved by the Delivery Board so far, in particular in helping many of the most entrenched people off of the streets and the way it has brought the boroughs and voluntary sector together with the GLA and bodies such as NHS London. We do, however, have much further to go, and we will be working closely with our partners to ensure the Mayor’s target to end rough sleeping by 2012 is achieved and that all rough sleepers get the accommodation, support, education and employment opportunities they need to leave homelessness behind for good.”
Charles Fraser, Chief Executive of St Mungo’s, said: “The London Delivery Board has created a vital sense of momentum towards the challenge of ending rough sleeping. But there’s no room for complacency. Much remains to be done to support those who’ve slipped through society’s safety nets, in particular those in poor mental and physical health and those needing specialist support to move back intro training and employment.”
The London Delivery Board brings together for the first time key stakeholders who are all committed to ending rough sleeping the capital. The board has workstreams focusing on skills and employment, health, migrant rough sleeping, voluntary sector issues, policing and borough issues.
Source: London.gov
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