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HOUSING SHORTAGE
The number of asylum seekers coming into
Derby has been blamed for a mounting housing crisis in
the city. Conservative Philip Hickson, deputy leader of
the council, made the claim after obtaining figures which
show too many homeless people are chasing too few homes.
The number of people registered homeless has rocketed in
the past year whilst the number of homes has plummeted.
There are currently 517 people registered homeless in the
city but only 38 council houses available.
In contrast, figures for April last year show there were
187 people needing housing who then had a choice of 181
homes. Councillor Hickson, who is responsible for
housing, said the influx of asylum seekers over the last
few years has been to blame. When asylum seekers are
given refugee status, they are considered citizens and
the council has a duty to house them. And Mr Hickson
believes the situation is only going to get worse.
He said, "The amount of refugees is putting a huge
strain on the housing, GP and education systems. In Derby
there are more people than available resources. There is
a problem and there is no immediate solution and it is
only going to get worse. It is pretty grim all round.
Once their asylum application is approved they become
resident in the city and the council has a duty to house
them. The only solution would be to build hundreds of
houses, but that's not going to happen as we've not been
budgeted for building and we don't have the land in the
city."
It was in the late 1990s that asylum seekers started
flocking to Derby in the aftermath of the Kosovo war.
Latest figures from the city council suggest that there
are about 1,800 asylum seekers in Derby. Lib Dem Maurice
Burgess, leader of the city council, said, "As soon
as the asylum seeker is given permission to stay in the
local authority area, it's our responsibility to house
them, but we only have a limited number of properties.
This is a problem that's been swept under the carpet by
the previous Labour council. We'll have to look to
central Government to come forward with finance to start
providing more housing."
Richard Jones, chief executive of the Padley Group, which
works with the most deprived members of the community,
says he expects more homeless people on the streets if
the situation is not resolved. He said, "Derby is
the 12th largest recipient in the UK of asylum
applicants, but we're not the 12th largest city. The
amount of people becoming homeless in Derby has
mushroomed and we'll continue to see more and more people
on the streets." There are 1,600 vacant or disused
buildings in Derby, but these are not being used to house
people registered homeless because they are currently
deemed uninhabitable.
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