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Tackling homelessness

  • Posted by Grant Shapps
  • 29 September 2008

'It is vital that this conference demonstrates our commitment to change; that we set out our plan for that change and that we offer real solutions,' argues Grant Shapps

'Our agenda: Changing the state of the homeless' says Conservative MP Grant Shapps

It's fantastic to be back in our second city for our Conference this year; it's a vibrant place with great potential and there was a real buzz around the conference centre from the beginning.

I've already been in Birmingham this year looking at regeneration and homelessness projects and it's clear how important it is that we demonstrate real vision in housing policy and offer true change for the future.

The first, and obvious, thing to address when discussing ways to improve housing policy is supply and demand. Our policy of giving power back to communities and local democracy and incentivising people to welcome homes into their area is fundamental to fulfilling housing need.

At the extreme end of that housing need is homelessness and rough sleeping. Seeing the effects of homelessness, overcrowding and unsuitable housing on families has been a harrowing part of my role as Shadow Housing Minister and I was incredibly proud to set up the Conservative Homelessness Foundation with David Cameron earlier this year.

The Foundation, which brings together major homeless organisations from across the country to develop policies on homelessness, demonstrates the Conservative Party's commitment to tackling the complex and complicated issues in this area. Yesterday, Crisis - an important part of the Homelessness Foundation - held an event at our conference asking whether Homelessness was a Conservative issue.

The answer could not have been more emphatic. I was joined on stage by Chris Bullivant, from the Centre for Social Justice which has been doing so much great work in this area and he spoke with incredible passion of his personal experiences in the field. There was no standing room and nobody could have had any doubt how serious we are about tackling homelessness.

I had to race from the Crisis event to take part in the special economic session dealing with many of the issues facing communities around the country. It's important to hear people's experiences at first hand, listening is the key to moving policy forward and although it was good to set out more detail of housing policy in my speech this morning, the value of a dialogue on stage cannot be over-estimated.

It is vital that this conference demonstrates our commitment to change; that we set out our plan for that change and that we offer real solutions to the very real problems affecting so many.

Grant Shapps is MP for Welwyn Hatfield and shadow housing minister

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4 comments from readers

Carl Jones
29 September 2008 at 19:38

Grant, I really don`t believe your alledged commitment to tackling homelessness. The present economic construct is an excellent place to start. The staggering criminality that we are witnessing here and especially Amerika. The criminal use of public money to prop up bust banks.

On the human level, the state has a full arsenal of weapons to use against the citizen (subject). Get ill, get over your head in debt, your business goes bust, lose your job, or lose your home and children through divorce and it stands to reason that a given number of people (often men) will end up on the streets. By the time they find themselves on the street, they often have serious mental health issues. I doubt you and for that matter, anyone in the political theater has the guts to dig out the causal roots of homelessness.

The market is always right, you can`t buck the market. As I tap this out I`m watching C4 News and they are crashing. I`ve said it for years, "the mortgage is the biggest scam on Earth"! Home ownership is falling, yet the NWO construct of the mortgage is a millstone around most peoples necks. The globalisation scam has seen a 20% drop in real terms incomes over the last 15/20 years, the public are upto their eyes in debt, huge numbers of people have lied about their real earnings and the banks turned a blind eye and of course, Tory and Labour governments have been nothing but puppets to our NWO rulers. Will the Tories allow its subjects to hand over their debts to the government?LOL

If the Conservatives were really concerned, really brave, they would promiss to build 1 million local authority homes every year for the next ten years.....not housing assocation homes (evil construct), not affordable homes, which really require a mortgage upto your neck based on two incomes. The rest of Europe has set a minimum size for homes, the UK has the smallest homes in Europe....we used to be know as a nation of shop keepers, now we are rabbits.LOL

We need to build 1 million local authority homes with rents set at no more than 20% of real average income. The government needs to help fathers who leave the family home through divorce and financial institutions must have a legal responsibilty to report those who are carrying serious debt....protection for them and their families. We need to stop men shooting wives and children, or simply ending up on the street and excluded from society, not that Britain has much society left to speak of.LOL

Vera
30 September 2008 at 02:31

Why not build a million new Xanadu's for the masses. It would be a miracle of rare device, council homes in caves of ice enclosing sunny spots of greenery. Sorry I just cannot take you seriously!

Pencils
30 September 2008 at 18:31

Quite right Vera. Let's just build another million Xanadus for foreign property speculators. There is no other way! If we don't let the poor die, we'll all die, because of globalisation...etc.

gnuneo
01 October 2008 at 04:22

"Our policy of giving power back to communities and local democracy and incentivising people to welcome homes into their area is fundamental to fulfilling housing need."

"We need to build 1 million local authority homes with rents set at no more than 20% of real average income. The government needs to help fathers who leave the family home through divorce and financial institutions must have a legal responsibilty to report those who are carrying serious debt....protection for them and their families. We need to stop men shooting wives and children, or simply ending up on the street and excluded from society, not that Britain has much society left to speak of."

"It is vital that this conference demonstrates our commitment to change; that we set out our plan for that change and that we offer real solutions to the very real problems affecting so many."

would the Tories accept such a "change" in program as Carl Jones laid out there? Why are Conservative councils already not lining up to build excellent quality subsidised housing? Why are Tory councillors not railing out in the media about how the Labour Govt is preventing them from doing this necessary "change" in policy?

do you think it might be that all the senior Tories have never had a moments poverty in their lives, have never been hungry because they couldn't afford food, have never sat and shivered all winter because their housing was substandard and they couldn't afford the heating?

because i suspect a few millions of normal Britons might think that way.

having said that, *you* seem like a motivated, decent and engaged bloke, whose heart might be in the right place. Hope you have luck with your initiatives, and that you continue to raise these issues in the public, even with another 6 years in opposition. ;)

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