Society's Child
The number of families housed in bed and breakfasts has soared by more than 300 percent over the past five years, according to government data.
Campaigners blame high rents and welfare cuts for forcing 100,000 children to live in hostels and other temporary accommodation.
In the first quarter of this year alone, 13,520 households were made homeless across England - an 8-percent increase on the same period in 2014.
Official data published on Wednesday by the Department for Communities and Local Government revealed England's housing crisis is having a disastrous impact on households.
Over the past five years, the number of families living in "other private sector accommodation" - which can include single-room annexes and even caravans - has risen 267 percent to 15,460.
Minorities constitute more than half of those forced into temporary accommodation, with 55 percent coming from black, minority and ethnic (BME) communities.
Some 44 percent of families affected include single mothers, while 24 percent are couples with dependent children.
Nearly a third of people were found to have lost their homes when their short hold tenancy ran out.
Housing charity Shelter said families, who are placed in bed and breakfasts by local councils after losing their home, experience accommodation which is unsuitable for their needs.
Parents and children often live in a single room, sharing kitchens and bathrooms with other tenants. The bed and breakfasts could be miles from their jobs, schools and support networks.
Local councils are forced to place vulnerable families in such accommodation after decades of sparse investment in Britain's council housing.
The Conservative policy of "right to buy" - first introduced under Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1980 - enabled tenants in council houses to buy their properties. The policy has since led to a social housing shortage in many areas.
Charities also blame high rents and welfare caps for the crisis.
Crisis Chief Executive Jon Sparkes said: "Clearly something is going badly wrong with our private rented sector.
"More and more households are struggling to pay their rent in an increasingly insecure market, while cuts to housing benefit have left the safety net in tatters. For anyone finding themselves in difficulty, the prospects are decidedly bleak.
"England is sleepwalking into a homelessness crisis, and we've yet to hear what our new government intends to do about it," he added.
Sparkes called on the government to find "radical solutions" to confront the shortage of affordable homes and fix the "broken" private rental sector.
"At the same time, we must have a safety net that genuinely protects tenants struggling to make ends meet," he said.
Henry Gregg of the National Housing Federation described the figures as a "shameful reminder of Britain's housing crisis."
The assistant director of communications and campaigns said: "Successive governments have failed to build enough homes for decades, and this is the result. Housing associations want to build the homes these people and this country need.
"The government must back this ambition by bringing forward land and providing proper investment to help end the housing crisis."
A spokesman for the Department for Communities and Local Government said the government is taking action to ensure all homeless people have access to the help they need to get back on their feet.
"Since 2010, we have increased spending to prevent homelessness, making over £500 million available to local authorities and the voluntary sector to support the most vulnerable in society and put strong protections in place to guard people against the threat of homelessness.
"This is to ensure there is no return to the days 10 years ago, when homelessness in England was nearly double what it is today," he added.
Comment: This is criminal considering the fact that the fortunes of Britain's mega rich have more than doubled during the past 10 years. Those at the bottom of the economic rung suffer needlessly while the wealthy continue to line their pockets with no concern for the consequences. However, their reign is likely temporary, as extreme income inequality is one of the primary factors that has generally preceded the precipitous fall of civilizations.
- Austerity measures?: UK's super-rich aren't starving, ain't jobless nor homeless and double wealth over past decade!
- Homelessness in London soars by 79% since 2010 - report
- Families heading towards homelessness: UK rental property evictions hit record high
Reader Comments
Accepted "Must" became the "motive" ... and wishes are yet only its masks and self-deceit.
The capitalism plays the ultimate bets, because it knows the fear is strong horse to bet onto.
Just how many empty buildings, offices and such like, are there in our worlds cities, that could be retro-fitted into small simple apartments.
The structures there, there's water and power connections. One office = one apartment. Use the larger meeting rooms for communal spaces, dining areas etc.
Or would the cost be so prohibitive that they'd rather have people dying on the streets during bad weather.






"All for ourselves, and nothing for other people, seems, in every age of the world, to have been the vile maxim of the masters of mankind." - Adam Smith
As subjects to the Queen all UK citizens must either comply with (the elite) as such has higher authority and divinely mandated jurisprudence over said victims (whoops!) we meant citizens.
Thus the inequitable realm of mother England shall continue to provide subjects who must never seek to challenge (the elites) direction.
"Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite." - John Kenneth Galbraith
What do (the elite) offer? Everything has a price. Good little UK citizens must be good little consumers, sitting in their square little boxes, staring at even smaller little boxes full of bright colors and clear instructions to be good little consumers.
If you're not privileged enough to have access to your own little warm comfortable box then (the elite) give even less - a damn - about you!
The Nazis called the homeless "empty eaters" and this term has subsequently been reinforced by similar thinking people such as Zbigniew Brzezinski and Henry Kissinger.
The genius of rich capitalists is that they have discovered ways (mind programming) with which to capture profit in all directions of human interaction. Even while we sleep their systems are scooping data that we willingly entered into their "free" programs while "awake", creating profit for them as we sleep!
What chance do people have of becoming free from this corrupt system? When we willingly dance to the tune of the masters our slavery becomes complicit as we do it to ourselves. No one twisted our arms. That is the true genius of greed.
"Capitalism is against the things we say we believe in - democracy, freedom of choice, fairness. It's not about any of those things now. It's about protecting the wealthy and legalizing greed." - Michael Moore