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Forty-seven organisations sign open letter to Angela Rayner and ministers with fresh calls to tackle the systemic inequalities faced by homeless women

29 August 2024

A coalition of leading homelessness, housing, violence against women and girls, and health organisations and local authorities have delivered an open letter to Angela Rayner and ministers with three calls to action that would reform the way that women’s rough sleeping and homelessness is recognised and responded to. The letter is supported by 47 organisations, networks and local authorities across England.

The calls to action are based on years of research by Single Homeless Project and Solace using a gender-informed approach to counting women sleeping rough. The latest census results from 815 women across 41 local authorities tell us how, when and where women sleep rough, what they experience and need.

The body of evidence estimates there may be up to nine times as many women rough sleeping across England than the Government’s annual Rough Sleeping Snapshot suggests. It also reveals that women’s needs are not being met, largely due to current Government policies and practices which are based predominantly on the experiences of men.

In response, the coalition calls for the Government to change the way that women’s rough sleeping is recognised, counted and responded to:

  1. Make the Government’s response to homelessness and rough sleeping gender-informed: Current rough sleeping definitions, strategies and practices are based predominantly on the experiences of men. The Government should use the findings from the census to ensure its policy, strategies and guidance are gender-informed and provide an equitable response to all those who are rough sleeping, including supporting change to verification practices. All government data collected on homelessness and rough sleeping should be subject to an equalities impact assessment to ensure that methods are inclusive of women and marginalised groups.
  2. Resource and lead the women’s rough sleeping census: The Government should lead the women’s rough sleeping census, supporting every local authority in England to conduct it annually. This can be achieved through the resourcing of a dedicated lead to oversee the rollout of the census, and the support and assistance of the Government’s rough sleeping advisors.
  3. Ensure women have access to safe and suitable accommodation, including through national funding pots and guidance for local commissioners on women’s pathways: The Government should use the findings and experience of the Women’s Rough Sleeping Census and specialist services to develop cross-sector pathways of support that are effective and safe for women, including specialist and women’s services, and services for migrant women. This should be accompanied by guidance on improving the safety of temporary accommodation for women, the expansion of priority need for survivors of wider forms of violence against women and girls (VAWG), and the lifting of the no recourse to public funds condition for migrant women experiencing VAWG.

This September, the third Women’s Rough Sleeping Census (2024) will take place in over 50 local authorities across England.

This census is gender-informed in its design and creates a more comprehensive and accurate understanding than the existing Government approach.

The Census is a gender-informed initiative driven by Solace Women’s Aid, Single Homeless Project, Change Grow Live, London Councils and the Greater London Authority.  The census has been supported by local authorities and organisations including; London boroughs, Greater Manchester Combined Authority, Herefordshire Council, Coventry City Council, Basis Yorkshire, Bournemouth Christchurch and Poole Council, Gloucestershire Housing Partnership, CGL Cambridge and Nottinghamshire County Council.

To read the 2023 census report in full, visit solacewomensaid.org

The 47 organisations that supported the letter include:

Advance Charity

Agenda Alliance

Birmingham and Solihull Women’s Aid

Bolton Council

Change Grow Live

Changing Lives

Cllr Patricia Callaghan, Cabinet Member for Safer Communities and Deputy Leader, Camden

Cllr Richard Roberts, Leader of Hertfordshire County Council

Cripplegate Foundation

Crisis

DAHA

DAHA National Group

Dr Binta Sultan, Consultant Physician in Inclusion Health

Glass Door Homeless Charity

Groundswell

Hibiscus

Islington Council

It Takes a City (Cambridge)

Kairos Women Working Together

Karma Nirvana

Leeds City Council

Look Ahead

Mama Suze

Marylebone Project

New Horizons Youth Centre

One25

Oxfordshire Homeless Movement

Pathway

Providence Row

Resolve

Social Interest Group

Southall Black Sisters

Spear

Spring Housing Association

St Martin’s Charity

St Mungo’s

Standing Together

Street Storage

The Connection at St Martin’s

The Nelson Trust

West Northamptonshire Council

Women and Girls Network

Women for Refugee Women

Your Place

About Solace:    

SOLACE is a leading specialist charity in the UK supporting women and children experiencing domestic abuse and sexual violence. Whatever form violence comes in, from rape to trafficking to relationships based on psychological or financial control, we work to end it. We know that escaping the effects of violence can be the hardest thing to ever do. That’s why the lifesaving support that Solace provides to 20,000 women, children, and young people each year is so important.   

www.solacewomensaid.org      

Solace Women’s Aid is a charity registered in England and Wales. Charity number 1082450 Company number 03376716       

About Single Homeless Project

  • Single Homeless Project is a London-wide charity. Our vision is a society where everyone has a place to call home and the chance to live a fulfilling life.
  • Single Homeless Project began in 1975 when a group of six homeless men in London teamed up to create change. They wanted to see an end to rough sleeping and a city where everyone has a place to call home and the chance to live a fulfilling life. Today, we are the largest homeless charity dedicated to helping Londoners in crisis.
  • Every year, our expert teams help over 10,000 Londoners to leave homelessness behind, to be seen, to be heard, and find a place to call home.
  • Single Homeless Project prevents Londoners from becoming homeless, helps people in crisis off the streets, provides safe places to live and offers the support needed to heal, prepare for the future, become independent and find a place to call home.
  • www.shp.org.uk

About Change Grow Live

Change Grow Live is a national health and social care organisation and the UK’s largest drug and alcohol misuse treatment provider. Working from 250+ hubs across the nation, Change Grow Live supports thousands of people each day who are facing challenges around drugs, alcohol, housing, justice, health and wellbeing. Our services are free, fully confidential and non-judgemental and our doors are always open to anyone wishing to discuss their challenges and goals.

www.changegrowlive.org/

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