Culture

 

British Queen celebrates

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has thanked Londoners for their generosity in supporting his winter rough sleeping fundraising efforts as the campaign total approaches £100,000. 

This year, the Mayor’s Winter Fundraising Campaign is once again raising funds for four charities working with young homeless Londoners: Depaul, akt, Centrepoint and New Horizon Youth Centre. More than £88,000 has been donated since the campaign launched at the start of December. Londoners can donate via TAP London contactless donation points in shops, cafes and cinemas, online at taplondon.org/donate and via QR codes on posters and electronic billboards across London.

 

Since the first lockdown in March 2020, 11 per cent of all rough sleepers have been under the age of 25, with a 48 per cent increase seen in the period July to September 2020 (according to the GLA/St Mungo’s CHAIN quarterly report) compared to the same period in 2019. The number of young women rough sleeping doubled over the same period and the number of young homeless people who identify as LGBTQ+ remains disproportionately high. 

 

Temperatures will once again drop below 0°C in London tonight, meaning the Mayor will activate the capital’s Severe Weather Emergency Protocols (SWEP) for the fourth time this year to protect homeless people.

  

The activation of SWEP compels councils across London (alongside homelessness charities) to open emergency accommodation for people who are sleeping rough during weather conditions that could pose a threat to life. 

 

This winter the Mayor has also invested £800,000 in new homeless accommodation at a hotel in east London. Whilst London’s boroughs will be providing over 500 SWEP beds this winter, the new hotel will act as overflow accommodation, offering a further 66 rooms for rough sleepers across London. A further boost to pan-London capacity is expected in the next month to take the total number of SWEP places to more than 600 for the first time.   

  

The Mayor will spend a record £1.25m on SWEP services alone this winter as well as working with the charity Housing Justice to provide grants to COVID safe winter shelters to assist them with long term solutions to those who access these crucial services. All London councils have also committed to implementing the Mayor’s ‘In for Good’ principle, meaning that once someone has accessed SWEP accommodation, they are accommodated until a support plan is in place to end their rough sleeping - regardless of whether the temperature has risen above freezing. 

 

Since 2016, working closely with local authorities and the Government, the Mayor’s rough sleeping services have helped over 12,000 rough sleepers, with the number of people sleeping on the street falling by 26 percent. Government data shows that in the last year alone, the number of rough sleepers in London has fallen by 37 percent. 

 

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan said: “I would once again like to thank Londoners for their extraordinary generosity when it comes to supporting our youth homelessness charities. I know many people are finding their finances squeezed at the moment so to have already raised nearly £100,000 is an outstanding achievement.

 

“Safe, secure accommodation should be the basic right of every Londoner. That’s why, across the capital, tonight and every night we will do everything we can to avoid anyone being forced to sleep rough in these freezing conditions.