Good news as BHT-led partnership is given the go-ahead to bid for £9.2 million Big Lottery funding

We have had some very good news this week which is attracting some media interest.  A consortium, being led by BHT, is in the running for funding from the Big Lottery of up to £10 million over 8 years.  The initiative is designed to improve services for men and women with complex needs (a combination of mental ill health, homelessness, offending behaviour and substance misuse problems) in Brighton, Eastbourne and Hastings. Between now and September, a full bid and business plan needs to be prepared.  A decision will then be made by the Big Lottery and the new services will begin from April 2014.

The purpose of this funding is to bring about lasting change in how services work with people with multiple and complex needs; this funding is a vehicle to help bring about that change. The legacy of the 8 year programme will be that systems and services in all 3 geographical areas will better meet the needs of this group.

At this stage we have been awarded funding to develop the bid on behalf of our partnership which includes partners in local government and in the third / charity sectors.  Should the partnership be successful, it won’t just be BHT staff (contrary to what the Argus reported this morning) who will provide services.

My colleagues, Nikki Homewood and Jo Berry, are leading on this initiative for BHT. Nikki said: “As the lead partner for the Brighton and Hove, Eastbourne and Hastings area, BHT is thrilled to receive funding to develop our partnership bid to ensure better service provision for people with the most complex needs.

“Using the wealth of knowledge and expertise within our local Core Group, comprising seven voluntary sector organisations and five statutory partners including commissioners, along with the 60+ organisations in our Partnership Group, we will develop a programme that will truly bring about change for the clients the programme work with, and local communities.

“Our vision is to bring about long-term systemic change by putting service users at the heart of services, fully understanding what they need in order to move forward with their lives: thorough monitoring and evaluation will result in well-evidenced findings, which will then be used to influence future commissioning.”

BHT’s partners in this initiative, and who are represented on the local Core Group, include: Brighton and Hove City Council, Brighton Women’s Centre, CRI, East Sussex County Council, Eastbourne Borough Council, Hastings Borough Council, Homeless Link, Sanctuary Supported Living, Southdown Housing Association, Sussex Oakleaf, Sussex Probation Service

We need to put an end to rough sleeping once and for all

A 21-year-old homeless woman was killed on Saturday night when a large spruce tree fell on the tent she was living in. Police said that three other people were injured by the tree which was brought down in the severe weather that lashed parts of the country at the weekend.

Last Thursday night, in terrible weather, colleagues from BHT, CRI, local authorities and the police did the annual headcount of rough sleepers in Brighton, Eastbourne and Hastings.  In Brighton the new official figure was 43, up six from the previous year.    There is a general consensus that the actual number is probably nearer 60.

Why is it in this day and age, in one of the richest countries in the world, do we still have people living on the streets?

There is some brilliant work going on by many agencies, and CRI’s No Second Night Out initiative is the latest in a long line of services that help people make that transition from street homelessness into accommodation.  The worker in this particular initiative has, over the last three months, engaged with 31 individuals , 30 of whom she has got into accommodation.

As we approach Christmas, members of the public are extremely generous to organisations such as BHT.  In fact, we rely on this generosity to sustain us throughout the year.  People are more inclined to donate at this time because it is the Season of Goodwill and because of the appalling weather that we are now experiencing.

Even though we are having gales blow down trees and flooding across the country, this is not regarded in government circles as “severe weather” and homeless people remain on the streets. Successive governments have had a policy that emergency provision only comes into being if the forecast has temperatures falling to below freezing for three consecutive nights.  Two nights of freezing weather, no emergency shelters.  Gales and flooding, similarly, no emergency shelter.

It is time that the government rethinks its policy for emergency shelters at times of severe weather.  Last Saturday’s tragedy could have been avoided.

Actually, a lot more is needed. We need to put an end to rough sleeping once and for all.

 

The Big Interview (Argus 10th November 2012)

On Saturday, November 10th, the Brighton Argus carried an interview with me.  The focus was housing in Brighton. Unfortunately, the Big Interview (as the weekly item is called) is not posted online.  So here is the text of the interview:

What are the main housing challenges faced by Brighton and Hove?

Simply, there’s a shortage of supply to meet the ever-increasing demand for housing.  The rising cost of the housing that is available is making it increasingly difficult for people to meet their housing costs. The increasing demand for homes in the City is partly due to the increasing number of single person households, and partly due to more people are moving here.

Brighton has a low wage economy.  Those jobs that are available, often in the service and retail sectors, are subject to enormous competition.  It is not uncommon that graduates from our two universities end up in non-graduate jobs in order to remain in the City.

While people joke that this has led to us having the most qualified baristas in the country, the harsh reality is that this trend excludes less qualified, local staff out of the jobs market. Low wages, coupled with high housing costs, is not a healthy mix if we want to live in a City at ease with itself.

Do we face any pressures that other areas don’t?

Brighton and Hove is sea- and land-locked.  There are relatively few sites on which to build new homes.  It has a thriving economy and is an attractive place to live and work.  The challenge for the City is its ability to accommodate the businesses that will provide jobs, and the homes for people to live in.

I really hope that we get the balance right between jobs and homes.  I would hate to see Brighton become a dormitory town, with most residents commuting to jobs elsewhere.  If I wanted to live in a town like that I would move to Worthing!

I would support the building of housing between Falmer and Woodingdean, but that is unlikely to be agreed.  So if we can’t go south and cannot encroach on the National Park, the only way, as Yazz sang in the 1980’s, is up!  We need a debate on the number of high rise developments that the City needs.

Unfortunately, the debate on tall buildings has been skewed by the controversies surrounding the ‘Roaring Forties’ tower in the Marina and the King Alfred proposals.

Where we have a real advantage over other areas is the range and effectiveness of support services.  Where elsewhere in the country such services are being decimated, in Brighton and Hove, with all party support, most have been protected, and homelessness has been prevented.

What part do you and Brighton Housing Trust play in addressing these issues?

One of the most important things we do is to prevent homelessness.  Last year, because of our work, mainly through our Advice Centre in Queen’s Road, we helped 4,116 households from becoming homeless.

Unfortunately, because of changes to the Legal Aid system, from next April, we will be able to help fewer people unless we can attract funding from new sources.  The visible consequence will be more people living on the streets.

In addition to preventing homelessness, we do a lot of work addressing those issues that may have led people to homelessness. We help people to prepare for housing – what it takes to be a good tenant, how to work with, not against, landlords, and how to increase the housing opportunities available to people.

We provide relatively few homes but the work we do in preventing homelessness and finding practical solutions for people in housing need means that BHT’s contribution to resolving issues relating to housing demand is far greater than our modest size.

What would you most want to see happen to tackle these challenges? Can local or national Government help?

In Brighton and Hove, local government could help by agreeing to build 750 homes at Toads Hole Valley.  Perhaps more homes should be considered on this site, a thousand or fifteen hundred, but I doubt there would be support for that.

The government should invest in truly affordable social housing.  The campaign group, Homes for Britain, says that every £1 spent on housing puts £3 into the economy.  And for every £1 spent on construction, government gets 56p back in reduced welfare payments.

Over the lifetime of this government, £35 billion will be spent of housing benefit, yet just £4.5 billion is being spent on building.  It is economic madness.

The right to buy doesn’t help.  Over the last 25 years housing has moved from being affordable and available to meet local demand, to being available only at unaffordable rents.  I heard the other day about a former council house, once with a rent of £120 per week, now being let out privately for £750 per week.

Are more people coming to you in crisis now than in the past and is that down to the recession or other factors? i.e. are economic circumstances driving people onto the streets?

Over the last two years we have seen a sharp increase in the number of people sleeping on the streets in Brighton.  That appears to have steadied over the last year partly due to excellent work being undertaken by Brighton and Hove City Council, CRI, Sussex Central YMCA, BHT and others.

I am amazed at the resourcefulness and sacrifices people make in order to keep themselves and their families in one piece.  We regularly come across single people, holding down jobs, but living in cars because they can’t afford housing.  Parents, usually women, are going without food, to ensure that their children have what they need or to heat their homes.

The latest increases in fuel charges might well push some households over the edge, and there is plenty more bad news yet to come.

So do you foresee the situation getting worse in the immediate future? What is your worst fear? What is your best hope?

The introduction of Universal Credit from next year, changes to the Social Fund and further restrictions on housing benefit, will likely result in more people getting into difficulty.

The plan with Universal Credit is to merge into one payment most of the benefits received by a household.  Universal Credit will be paid monthly, leading to new challenges for households to stretch the cash throughout a longer period.  It will also incorporate housing benefit payments.  This could lead to an increase in rent arrears resulting in losses for landlords and an increase in evictions.

The Department of Works and Pensions expects 80% of claims to be made online.  At BHT we have carried out our own research and have found that 71% of our clients appear to have the means and support to make claims online.  But when you take away the facilities and support BHT provides, that number falls to just 19%, similar to the assessment the DWP itself has made.

My biggest fear is that more people will fall foul of the new welfare regime and will lose their benefit entitlement, sometimes for prolonged periods.  This will result in three H’s: hardship, hypothermia and hunger.

The challenge for charities like BHT is how we can find a twenty first century solution to poverty.  Food banks are already doing a roaring trade. I fear we will soon see the opening of food kitchens.  A depressing note on which to finish.

‘A crisis in our midst’ – my response to the article in today’s Argus

The Argus today has a major article on rough sleeping and suggests a lack of provision in  Brighton and Hove. It was unfortunate that the article made no reference to much of the excellent work being carried out in the City. This is the text of the letter I have sent to the Argus in response to the article:

“I was disappointed at your coverage of the challenges we are facing in Brighton and Hove this winter due to the increase in homelessness (‘A crisis in our midst’ 26 October 2012).

“The report failed to mention any of the work undertaken by several homelessness charities, including Brighton Housing Trust. Each winter, in partnership with Brighton and Hove City Council and other charities, including CRI, we operate a severe weather shelter. Last year we opened two such shelters to cater for the growing need, and this year we will be able to cater for 45 people each night with other provision in the City for a further 15 rough sleepers.

“It is also grossly unfair to accuse the City Council of hiding the scale of the problem, as you do on your front page. In Brighton and Hove we are fortunate to have a very enlightened Council. Under the current and previous administrations funding for services for homeless men and women has been protected. This approach enjoys all party support. While up and down the country services for homeless people have been cut to the bone, in our City funding has been protected.

“The number of people sleeping rough increased significantly a year or so ago, but the number has become more stable thanks to the work of CRI’s Rough Sleepers Team and BHT’s First Base Day Centre who find accommodation and relocate people to areas with better opportunities for housing.

“The joint work between BHT and CRI through the No Second Night Out initiative has prevented a significant number of people brand new to rough sleeping from remaining on the street.

“Elsewhere, people look to Brighton and Hove as a centre of best practice. On the day your article was published, my colleague, John Holmstrom, was speaking at a conference in London on how the national rise in homelessness and rough sleeping is being successfully combatted in Brighton, Eastbourne and Hastings.

“The Argus is right to highlight the issue but it is disappointing when the good work being done locally is, at best, ignored, and at worse, negated.”

Drug and Alcohol Conference 5th July 2012

The Drugs & Alcohol Today exhibition co-hosted with the 16th Annual Sussex DAAT Drug & Alcohol conference

Thursday 5th July 2012               Holiday Inn, Brighton

The event features a full programme of CPD accredited seminars and the exhibition of local, regional and national organisations and projects.

Only £30 to attend, with free places available to people currently using drug and/or alcohol services, unwaged, full-time students and volunteers.

How to register to attend

Exhibitors include

  • ADFAM
  • Pavilion bookshop
  • Brighton & Hove Drug & Alcohol Action Team
  • Frontier Medical Group
  • Action for Change
  • Blithe Computer Systems
  • Phoenix Futures
  • Kenward Trust
  • Open University
  • Trust the Process Counselling
  • Illy Systems

Seminars include

  • Drugs strategy update: the current landscape
  • Unpicking the alcohol recovery agenda: how can local authorities combine responsibilities and resources to maximum benefit?
  • The long view: what does the future look like for the sector without a national champion?
  • Managing substance misuse during pregnancy
  • What does recovery mean for families?
  • Prevention, alcohol, and young people
  • Transitions for young people
  • Case Study: Delivering an effective early intervention model for drugs & alcohol – Nottingham DrugAware Programme
  • Resilience
  • Recovery Pathway
  • Case Study: The Frequent Flyers Project
  • Case Study: The hostel-based Clinical Nurse Pilot
  • Peer mentoring, SMART and volunteering
  • Drug & alcohol consultations in A&E
  • Workforce support & development
  • Case study: Operation Street
  • Joint commissioning for substance misuse
  • The role of GPs in recovery

Speakers include

  • Martin Barnes, Chief Executive, DrugScope
  • Eric Appleby, Chief Executive, Alcohol Concern
  • Carole Sharma, Chief Executive, Federation of Drug & Alcohol Professionals
  • Richard Pike, South East Recovery Community Coordinator, CRI
  • Joss Smith, Director of Policy and Regional Development, ADFAM
  • Andy Winter, Chief Executive, Brighton Housing Trust
  • Mark Gilman, National Strategic Recovery Lead, National Treatment Agency
  • Sergeant Richard Siggs, Sussex Police
  • Nicola Singleton, Director of Policy Research, UKDPC
  • Tom Scanlon, Director of Public Health, NHS Brighton & Hove

Rough sleeping in Brighton and Hove is a human tragedy for each person without a home

Each year a count is undertaken of the number of people sleeping rough in Brighton and Hove. The results of the most recent count were released yesterday. The number has increased from 14 last year to 37 this year.

For many years there has been a debate about the accuracy of such counts. It can be, at best, a snapshot on a particular day and includes just those who the ‘counter’s have found. I would suspect that the number is somewhere between that number and 50.

So what is happening on our streets? Well, first, there is better joint working between organisations than at any point in my 26 years at BHT. Staff at Brighton and Hove City Council, CRI and BHT, amongst others, should be applauded for what they are doing to tackle this issue. Without this work the numbers would be much higher.

The numbers are probably higher than the 37 counted, but not that much higher. In a recent 2 week period at our Rough Sleepers sessions at First Base, we saw 19 men and women who had no previous experience of sleeping rough. We were able to help many of them and in some cases helped them to relocate back to areas from which they had come, believing there would be more opportunities for housing and jobs along the south coast.

Council leader Bill Randall (who has over 40 years experience as a journalist and housing campaigner before he became a councillor) has said, “Up until recently we have been very successful in helping people to access accommodation in the private rented sector. But with rents increasing sharply this option is becoming unaffordable for many people on low incomes, and the forthcoming changes to housing benefit are likely to make things worse rather than better in this respect.

“What I find it really galling in this context is the number of empty properties around the city. Our empty property team does a fantastic job, but it’s often an uphill battle because their hands are tied by legislation that is weighted too heavily in favour of property owners.”

I think he is absolutely right in his analysis. But I would add another factor which, if correct and when combined with the shortage of homes and the impact of housing benefit changes, could create a ‘perfect storm’ that would see a massive increase in people sleeping on the streets of Brighton and Hove. That is the impact of the Olympic Games and rumours that homeless people will be given travel passes to anywhere in the country, including the south coast, to get them off the streets of the capital.

If the figure goes above 100, possibly well above 100, it will not be the fault of the local authority nor those of us who work day in, day out, to help people off the streets. And it is important that fingers are not pointed at the City Council in this respect. Almost alone in the country, Brighton and Hove City Council (in a decision supported by councillors of all parties) protected the Supporting People programme which works with the most vulnerable men and women in the City, including those who we are helping off the street.

37 people on the street is too many. One would be too many. However, I am confident that everything is being done to help entrenched rough sleepers off the street, and those new to rough sleeping don’t have to face a second night out.

I close with another quote from Bill Randall, “Homelessness is a human tragedy that affects the most vulnerable in our society”. It is a human tragedy for each and every person who sleeps on our streets and I fear that the numbers will increase significantly over the next year.

Championing abstinence is what is needed to tackle the drugs problem in Brighton and Hove

Brighton and Hove has the unenviable record of having the highest rate of drug-related deaths in the country.  The problem of drugs is being addressed at two events being held in the City during September.  I was recently invited to speak at the first event, a ‘Round Table’ discussion organised by the MP for Brighton Pavilion, Caroline Lucas.  I will also be speaking at the second event, open to the public, which is being organised by the MP for Hove, Mike Weatherley.  Details of this event can be found here.

Here is the text of my contribution to the Round Table discussion:

BHT’s treatment programmes and the benefits of an abstinence based approach

BHT services support chaotic drug users, many with a history of street homelessness, through harm minimisation interventions (such as the needle exchange operating at the Phase 1 Project), and we champion abstinence through our Detox Support Project and our residential rehab, the Recovery Project.

However, nothing we do, none of the services we offer, provides the answer we are seeking today. But each is a means to an end – and that end is normal living free from drug dependency.

If clients move from chaotic use to using a needle exchange, that’s great but we have to ask “what next?” If they stabilise their drug use by going on a maintenance script.  We again must ask “what next?” If they detox, at BHT we ask what next?  If they go into residential rehab, we continue to ask “what next?”

I believe all interventions have a place in the recovery process.  However, we must constantly ask what is best for our clients. And we must actively help clients move through to the next stage of recovery. 

If any service does not move its clients through to the next stage at the earliest possible opportunity, not months and years into an intervention but within days and weeks, that service is selling its clients short.

I fear that there has been, for over two decades, a government-led lack of ambition on behalf of drug users. It has resulted in far too few clients moving from dependency into abstinence, and too many people have been left with one foot still in drug-using culture.

In Brighton andHove, the promotion of abstinence has been largely ignored.  Other than CRI’s St Thomas Fund and BHT’s Addiction Services, no funded service has abstinence as its primary focus.

This has resulted, inevitably, in a year on year increase in the number of addicts, either using street drugs or those on maintenance scripts (and they are probably topping up on street drugs).

Why are we failing to get beyond harm minimisation, through abstinence and into stable housing, education, training and employment?  I can think of three possible reasons:

Skills: Are our workers as skilled as they should be?  Do we need to review our training so that they can become more effective in helping clients achieve abstinence?

Attitude: Too many in the drugs field find too many reasons why an abstinence approach is not right for a particular client or as they will say, the client is not ready.  There used to be a programme locally called the Abstinent Programme but meaning abstinence from street drugs. There is a lack of ambition.

Policy: Medicated treatment as an outcome has been the policy of successive governments and also at a local commissioning level.  We now have a perfect opportunity to change that.  The Coalition Government’s strategy is for a ‘treatment revolution’ and that abstinence should be championed.  I welcome this wholeheartedly, although I have doubts about the approach it is taking to payment by results.

What are the consequences of us not championing an abstinence approach in all services:

  • Ever-increasing numbers of drug users
  • Ongoing social dysfunction
  • More and more children needing to be looked after by the local authority at huge cost
  • Increased domestic violence
  • An inevitable increase in drug-related deaths
  • An increase in crime
  • Increase demands on health services
  • Damage to the reputation of the City and consequentially its economic health.

A further consequence of not changing is that in ten years time we, or our successors, will be sitting in a room like this asking what can be done about the drug problem in the City and the unacceptably high drug-related death rate.

So, we should start by acknowledging that clients want abstinence.  Locally, just 9% leave drug services drug free, compared to a national average of 14%.

BHT originally adopted an abstinence approach directly in response to demands from clients. Over the years this message from clients has become stronger, and those who make it into our service offer the criticism that they were either not made aware of our service, or abstinence was never presented as an option.  In fact, it is not uncommon for clients to say they were actively discouraged from seeking abstinence.

A monitoring questionnaire used to ask clients what they wanted to achieve when approaching a drug service.  In year 1 the answer, in 83% of cases, was abstinence.  The question was discontinued.

Unless we collectively overcome this lack of ambition for our clients, unless we seek the best outcome for them (and at the earliest opportunity), and until we stop justifying drug use as a “life style choice”, we will continue to fail our clients and our City.

Finally, a question: What would you want for your son or your daughter if they had an addiction? Ongoing maintenance or a clear move towards a drug-free life?  We should also want the best for our clients.

Christmas: A period of great happiness, companionship and sharing … and of loneliness, loss and sadness

I asked a colleague the other day about his plans for Christmas. He said his own and his partner’s parents, his brother and several other friends and relatives would be descending on his home for several days of festivities, good food and great companionship.

The idea of a dozen or more people in my own home is my personal Nightmare at Christmas! I am no Scrooge, and “bah humbug” is not part of my lexicon, but I prefer a quiet, relaxing time. There are people who I love who I would have liked to have seen at Christmas but for various reasons, including distance, were present only in thought.

For many, however, Christmas is a lonely time and increasingly harsh winters makes it particularly difficult. I would ask you to consider for a moment those people living without shelter. How do they survive with temperatures well below freezing for days on end? In spite of the very effective efforts by local authorities to end rough sleeping, there remain a small number of men and women who still sleep out in the coastal towns in the south-east.

In Brighton and Hove we are very fortunate to have relatively few people on the streets, a testimony to the work that has been led by Brighton and Hove City Council. But when temperatures fall well below freezing, a range of organisations including Brighton Housing Trust, the City Council, CRI, and the Salvation Army, come together to provide emergency shelter for those who might otherwise die as a result of the cold.

The Cold Weather Shelter traditionally opens around Christmas or early in the New Year, but this year it opened in late November. And while the shelter has in previous years remained open for 7 to 10 days, this year it has already been open for almost 3 weeks. I am always hugely impressed by the dedication and selflessness of staff from BHT and other organisations who offer to work throughout the night to provide shelter which is safe, warm and dry.

Christmas Day presents its own particular challenges, not normally related to the weather. For most, as with my colleague and his dozen or so relatives, Christmas is about family and it is about children. But for many of the clients who live in BHT properties, Christmas can be a reminder, not of what they have, but what they have lost. For some, Christmas is not a reminder of happy times but of times of neglect, deprivation and violence. It is known that incidents of domestic violence increases at Christmas. One can understand why the pain of Christmas Past is anaethnatised by alcohol and drugs.

For others, Christmas Present is a time to reflect on what might have been had their lives not been derailed through mental ill-health, addiction, family breakdown, violence and homelessness. Many years ago I worked at St Dunstan’s, the home for blind ex-servicemen. Extra effort was made to make Christmas the happiest possible time. Similar efforts continue today in all support services, many of which will remain open throughout the Christmas period.

BHT itself had almost 100 members of staff and volunteers working on Christmas Day, and many more over the holiday period. Each one tried to make Christmas that little bit more special for our clients.

We are all familiar with the expression ‘a dog is for life, not just for Christmas’ and we all understand the message that animal charities are trying to make. It is one thing to be excited by a cute puppy on Christmas morning, but the responsibility of dog ownership is a year-round and expensive undertaking. I sometimes feel that homelessness has become a ‘Christmas issue’ when the harsh reality is that it exists year-round.

While many reflect about homelessness over Christmas, I would ask you to think about homelessness on another day of the year, perhaps 23rd June. “Why 23rd June?” you may ask. There’s actually nothing special about that date other than it is another day in the year when people will be homeless or lonely. The work of charities like BHT, CRI, Sussex Central YMCA, Brighton YMCA, to name just a few, continues throughout the year.

That is just one reason why we are grateful to the Argus Christmas Appeal for its support to our clients, from January to December.  You can support the BHT Christmas Appeal by sending a donation to BHT, 144 London Road, Brighton BN1 4PH or go online at by clicking this link.

(This is the text of an article that appeared in the Brighton Argus on 30th December 2010)

Saying no to beggars and saying no to sleep-outs

The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, has provoked a debate after he was photographed giving money to a beggar in Leicester Square. The chief executive of the London homelessness charity, Thames Reach, Jeremy Swain, someone who I admire greatly, commented: “I would advise Boris to give money straight to his local drug dealer and cut out the middle wo/man”. Jeremy also Tweeted: “People will never understand homelessness if every campaign is based on rough sleeping image. Please no more sponsored sleep outs”.

I agree with Jeremy on both counts. In the late 1990s I did research into drug-related deaths in Brighton and Hove and, all too often, the homeless people who had died (and they accounted for a disproportionate one third of all such deaths) had generated enough cash for their final and fatal fix through begging. Of course the causes of begging can be more complex, but as a rule I don’t give to those begging.

I also agree that homelessness is far more complex than rough sleeping. Some tremendous work has been carried out in Brighton and Hove by the City Council and by the third sector organisations such as CRI, Central Sussex YMCA and BHT. Sleep-outs tend to provide too narrow a focus. It is unfortunate when high profile people like Prince William do sleep-out’s as he did last December because the issue and solutions are not simple. We need to have proper discussions about them rather than see more sleep-outs which I regard as an outdated and inappropriate gesture.

Private sector landlords provide a solution to housing problems in Brighton and Hove

A campaign was launched yesterday to “evict rogue landlords” from the private rented sector.  I have serious doubts about such a campaign since it re-enforces the impression that private landlords by their very nature allow their tenants to live in squalid, dangerous conditions.

The vast majority of private landlords are either individuals who rent out one or two properties or they are professional landlords whose primary interest is the provision of well-maintained accommodation to tenants who will pay their rent, respect the property, and not cause difficulties for their neighbours or the landlord. 

Most tenants, for their part, want accommodation that is affordable, in an acceptable state of repair, repairs carried out when needed, and for the rest of the time to be left alone by their landlord.  Fundamentally, the interests of tenants and landlords are one and the same.

Of course there are some landlords whose standards may not be what we would want, in the same way that the conduct of some tenants may fall below acceptable standards.  I would find a campaign that publicly presents tenants in a negative light in the same way as any campaign that leaves the impression that private landlords are “rogues”.

Most people who we work with at BHT are in housing need due to the lack of affordable housing.  Some may have other issues, but they are well-catered for in specialist services provided by BHT and our partner organisations such as CRI, Central Sussex YMCA, Southdown Housing and others.

In Brighton and Hove 25% of all accommodation is in the private rented sector.  Just 13% is social housing.  If I was a private landlord (and I was for a short while when I rented out the first home I owned) I would be mightily aggrieved to be tarnished by association by a campaign on rogue landlords.