Portsmouth council insists homeless people will continue to be housed during third lockdown
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At the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic last year government launched the Everyone In project - providing funding to local authorities to ensure all homeless people would be found safe accommodation to allow them to isolate.
In Portsmouth the council was awarded £1.5m to house rough sleepers temporarily in various hotels in the city.
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Hide AdNow the government has revealed it will not be renewing the Everyone In scheme during the third lockdown.
Portsmouth City Council has said all of its rough sleeping provision is funded and 'remains in place.'
As reported, around 200 rough sleepers in the city have been housed in former student accommodation - at the Registry in St Michaels Road in the city centre and the Old Library in Elm Grove in Southsea.
The council is in the process of buying the sites, along with Kingsway House in Elm Grove, to create more permanent accommodation.
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Hide AdThe council's housing boss, Councillor Darren Sanders, said: 'We are in a very different position compared to the first lockdown - we now have self-contained accommodation and some capacity to take more people in.
'We have been very clear that we will not be dragooning rough sleepers into places they do not want to go though.'
Following the initial £1.5m from government a further £4.6m was granted to Portsmouth to create a three-year plan for rough sleepers. An additional £682,000 was also awarded to create long-term substance abuse support.
But the end of the Everyone In scheme was cause for concern for the city's Labour group, which has written a letter to secretary of state MP Robert Jenrick.
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Hide AdCllr Cal Corkery, from the Labour party, believed more needed to be done.
'The simple fact is there are people out on the streets of Portsmouth right now who would have been able to access the temporary accommodation provided during the first lockdown but are now being told they are ineligible for the current provision,' he said.
'That is not good enough and more must be done to help them.'
A message from the Editor, Mark Waldron
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