Prince William’s latest trip to see how his Homewards programme is tackling homelessness took him to a charity harnessing the universal power of McDonald’s to make a difference.
The royal visited Spiral Skills based in Lambeth, South London – one of the project’s five locations – to see how they helped young people into work and out of homelessness.
Spiral Skills has moved into The Oasis Village, a multi-agency prevention hub in Lambeth’s Tulse Hill, but also heads out into the community. Young people, dubbed as ‘Changemakers’, with lived experience of homelessness, deliver street-level outreach to young people – in schools, local fast-food chains or estates.
That includes the Makin’ It programme, in partnership with BBC Children in Need and Lambeth Council’s contextual safeguarding team. The project sees Abdoul Ndambi meet up with young people using the fast-food restaurant as a safe space to understand what they’re going through to prevent homelessness.
Ben Kahn, the Spiral Skills co-founder and director of programmes, said: “It came about because chicken shops were calling Abdoul to break up fights for years and keep people safe. Putting a bit of organisational power behind it has been a good combo. This is about finding young people at risk of homelessness, exclusion from school with SEND, and really believing in their power and their potential and showing that when they’re channelled in the right way, that they can really thrive. But we need to bring the opportunity to them.”
In 2023-2024, young people (aged 16-24) represented nearly one in five (19%) of all those assessed as homeless, or at risk of homelessness, in Lambeth.