An extra £9.6
million to help rough sleepers make a permanent move away from the
streets was announced today by Housing Minister Caroline
Flint.
The funding will support an additional 11 projects and
2 existing ones to improve and build new hostels and homelessness
services across the country, helping homeless people back into
independent living by giving them new skills and training.
The new services will enable residents to learn practical skills such as catering or decorating, through to establishing new social enterprises.
It brings the total investment under the Government's Places
of Change Programme to £80 million over the next three years which
will deliver 80 schemes, transforming hostels and homelessness
services.
Caroline Flint today visited the newly refurbished
St. Mungo's Endell Street Homeless hostel, which received
£3.24 m under the previous round of the programme, to hear from
residents how the centre has made a difference to their lives.
Caroline Flint said
"It is fantastic to see what can be achieved with the right people, the right vision and the right support. Endell Street is a wonderful example of how a hostel has been transformed to help homeless people back into independent living through skills and training. We want to do more to help rough sleepers make a permanent move away from the streets and this investment will help to ensure the support is there."
The Hostels Capital Improvement Programme has already proved
successful in tackling homelessness and providing value for money,
with transformed hostels and homelessness services showing a 30
per cent increase in clients moving on successfully into training,
education, employment, or independent living as a result of new
services available.
Homelessness Minister Iain Wright added:
"These hostels are already doing brilliant work with some of the most vulnerable people in our communities and this extra funding will enable them to help rebuild the lives of many more.
"This scheme is about more than just making the move from the street to a settled home, it's about giving people the opportunity to train, to find a job, and to take control of their future. These projects do just that, giving people the chance to escape homelessness, not just for the night or a week, but permanently. "
Notes to editors
The Places of Change Programme (PCP) is a 3 year programme which will run from 2008 to 2011. It builds on the success of the 2005-08 Hostels Capital Improvement Programme (HCIP). PCP aims to continue to improve the services available to rough sleepers so they can make the transition from the street to a settled home; to increase the number of people moving on from their hostel or homelessness service in a positive way; and to increase the number moving into education and employment.
List of additional Places of Change Programme Projects
1) Newcastle - Matt Talbot Hostel (North East) The last remaining shared-room accommodation in Newcastle. It is in a dire state of repair but its location offers great opportunities for linking in with the community.
2) Stop Gap - Tynedale (North East)
Refurbishment of a short
stay assessment centre for single rough sleepers. This is the
only provision of its kind in Northumberland.
3) Bath - Bath Churches Housing Association (South West)
An
underground dormitory for 35 people in Bath, beds 2 feet apart and
some on the floor with an overflow into a church hall which shares
space with a children's nursery. We will build in its place
an assessment centre with single room accommodation, a social
enterprise and a day centre
4) Torbay - Resettlement Project -
Shekinah Mission (South West) -
The grant will be used to rebuild the current daycentre and 'Community Payback' workshop to create a much larger, fit for purpose engagement, assessment and social enterprise centre. It is also proposed to build 6 training flats on the site.
5) Mole Valley (Leatherhead) - Night hostel (South
East)
There are dormitories of 4/5 to a room and cramped staff
areas in a house in bad repair. We will build an assessment
centre with short stay single room accommodation.
6) The Gap - Oxford (South East)
The Gap is a day-service for
homeless, vulnerable and socially marginalised people in Oxford
City Centre. The PCP will enable the creation of a training
kitchen for residents, an enhanced medical service as well as
refurbishment of parts of the centre.
7) Nottingham - Bentinck Rd (East Mids)
Training &
employment centre built between a young person's and an older
homeless person's hostel, catering for both. Framework are an
excellent provider who have brought match funding from the Housing
Corporation and their own resources for the whole development.
Nottingham has not previously benefited from either HCIP or PCP.
8) Birmingham/ Manchester - Training for Life (West
Mids)
'Training for Life' a social Enterprise
organisation will start up schools to train social entrepreneurs
amongst homeless people themselves in Manchester and Birmingham
9) Blackpool - Street Life daycentre (North West)
The
excellent Street Life Night shelter has lost it's building
for daytime engagement, advice and activities. This means that the
hostel now only offers a bed which is contrary to the PCP aims.
We will purchase a town centre site that is available and equip to
provide skills for young people.
10) Graham House - London
Vital Central London resource which
is the destination for old entrenched street drinkers. It's
institutional, tired and needs upgrading.
11) Seymour Place - London
The front line hostel, or
"rolling shelter", for rough sleeping in Westminster is
institutional with no space for engagement activities. The
proposal is for a "Challenge Anneka" style initiative
which will involve service users in refurbishing the interior.
Existing projects
12) Arlington House (Novas Scarman) - Camden
Arlington House is often referred to as "the largest hostel in Europe" and following extensive remodelling the hostel will provide 130 high quality accommodation units for homeless people.
The scheme will also provide resources that aim to engage homeless people with employment, training and creative opportunities.
13) Mountbatten Centre (The Salvation Army) - Southampton
The Mountbatten Centre is currently a 62 bed-space hostel for single homeless men which is being refurbished to provide 46 en-suite rooms, support & training facilities in a modern supported housing scheme for homeless people. The completed project will aim to tackle the root causes of homelessness to ensure that its clients are resettled effectively.
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