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Labour won't reduce homelessness until they understand how it links to immigration

A reduced move-on period for refugees and barriers to undocumented people being unable to regularise their immigration status means that homelessness will remain a prevalent social issue in the UK, writes Refugee and Migrant Forum of Essex and London’s Louisa Thomas

homeless tents

Since October 2024, RAMFEL has submitted 191 immigration applications under its rough sleeping project, and 154 of these – 80% – have been successful. Image: Milan Cobanov / Pexels

World Homeless Day, marked annually on 10 October, is an opportunity to reflect on efforts to alleviate homelessness and propose policy and funding changes that are needed to end homelessness for good. Despite observing this day earlier this week, the needs of the homeless population continue to go largely unmet, with government policy actually exacerbating the problem.

For example, the government’s recent reduction of the move-on period for newly recognised refugees, giving them just 28 days to find alternative accommodation, will only add to the rising homeless figures and the relentless strain on local homeless services. This decision is a painful example of the government’s lack of understanding of the routes into homelessness and the direct impact homelessness has on already overstretched local services.

The government acknowledges that people experiencing homelessness are some of the most vulnerable members of British society. This is starkly demonstrated in health statistics: the average life expectancy of a man experiencing homelessness is 45 years and for a woman it is just 43. A staggering number of the homeless population suffer with long-term health issues, including mental health. Due to barriers in accessing healthcare, over half of the homeless population with mental health conditions self-medicate. In addition to enduring homelessness, two-thirds of the homeless population experience more than one health issue, which in itself makes it more challenging for them to receive the specialist support needed. This principle, known as severe multiple disadvantage, highlights how the current systems fail those most vulnerable and why specialist, targeted support must be properly funded to end homelessness.

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Data from the Combined Homelessness and Information Network shows that 53% of rough sleepers seen in 2024-25 fiscal year are not British. Consequently, a significant proportion of the rough sleeping population are unlikely to even have the right to work, rent, or access mainstream support – all vital steps for rebuilding stability. In other words, they face yet another barrier to ending their homelessness: regularising their immigration status.

Homelessness often presents a serious obstacle to resolving a person’s immigration issue – a barrier that often is insurmountable without good legal representation. Within Refugee and Migrant Forum Of Essex and London’s (RAMFEL) rough sleeping projects, the most common immigration applications we submit are based on a person’s private life length of residence in the UK or under the EU Settlement Scheme. Both require considerable evidence of the person’s continuous residence in the UK. However, long periods of homelessness, coupled with the “hostile environment” preventing undocumented people from accessing most state services, makes it difficult to provide so-called “official evidence” to meet the government’s strict evidentiary rules. The government, therefore, on one hand denies undocumented people access to state services, but then insists they prove they have engaged with state services in order to regularise their immigration status.

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
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Despite recognising the extreme vulnerability of homeless individuals, the government fails to consider how homelessness impacts immigration cases, including the need to rely on informal evidence of residence. Without proper acknowledgement of this, undocumented people are unable to regularise their immigration status and homelessness will remain a prevalent social issue in the UK.

Since October 2024, we’ve submitted 191 immigration applications under our rough sleeping project, and 154 of these – 80% – have been successful, ultimately helping people move out of homelessness and start rebuilding their lives. This demonstrates that many in the current homeless population could regularise their immigration status with the right legal advice and support, in turn breaking the cycle of homelessness. Due to the complexity, inflexibility and punitive nature of the immigration rules though, as well as the additional challenges homeless people face, expert legal advice is essential even when the requirements for regularisation are clearly met.

While the government’s recent £1 billion investment to “break the cycle of spiralling homelessness” and the homelessness strategy is a welcome start, targeted action is needed to address the individual and structural factors driving homelessness. There are sector-wide concerns about how government data collection methods limit the information gathered – resulting in funding being directed to services that fail to meet the needs of the homeless population, particularly women. There is also a critical need to recognise the intersection between draconian and inflexible immigration rules and homelessness. Bad data and bad policies drive rather than tackle homelessness. The former secretary of state for housing, Angela Rayner, observed that “too many people have been failed by the system time and again”. Without listening to experts in the sector, implementing comprehensive data collection methods and scrapping cruel and counter-productive immigration laws, the systems will continue to fail those most in need.

On the week of World Homeless Day, RAMFEL is calling for real change. Too many people – especially migrants – are being pushed into homelessness by policies that ignore their needs. It’s time for the government to act with compassion, not punishment, and work towards lasting solutions.

Louisa Thomas is rough sleeping casework manager at Refugee and Migrant Forum of Essex and London (RAMFEL).

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