“Fantastic results” for New Start’s Childcare Services following Ofsted inspection!

New Start is pleased to announce that following a recent Ofsted inspection all their Residential Childcare Services continue to remain ‘Good’ in all areas with “outstanding” features.

The Ofsted inspection framework focuses on the most important aspects of New Start’s work. Inspectors make judgments about the effectiveness of the department’s leadership and management. They also make a judgment about the departments overall effectiveness.

Ofsted uses a four-point scale to make qualitative judgments during inspections. Detailed descriptions are provided for each grade to ensure that inspectors make consistent judgments. These grade/judgments encourage companies like New Start to strive for further improvements.

New Start boss, Neil Baynes, said: “In the early years, we provided services for just a small number of vulnerable adults, but now, in our 18th year of work in the social care sector, we have grown into a well-established and successful organisation.”

New Start employ a committed workforce of nearly 100 members of staff, who provide a broad range of residential and social care services designed to meet the diverse needs of over 300 vulnerable men, women, children and young people across Merseyside.

The continued growth of New Start has been the direct result of their commitment to continually reinvest their revenue wisely into the development of activities and services that directly relate to the organisation’s aspirations. This ethos has enabled them to expand the diversity of the services we offer and have a positive impact on the communities they serve.

Neil added: “The New Start Childcare team always maintain the highest levels of standards and safety in order to provide the young people with the best service. This has been exemplified by the fantastic results they achieved in the most recent inspection.”

“All the developments we have undertaken are motivated by New Start’s mission statement that is socially focused, and we are committed to ensuring these values will continue to be at the heart of our work going forward.”

Great news, Neil, and congratulations to everyone at New Start. Well done!

A Quarter Of Young Homeless End Up On The Street Because Of Their Sexuality

The Albert Kennedy Trust, an LGBT youth homelessness charity, says the numbers of young LGBT people seeking its help with homelessness was up by a fifth, from 622 in 2012/13 to 750 in 2015/16. In the majority of cases, they had been forced to leave their family homes following rejection by their parents or abuse from other family members.

The charity estimates that 4,800 young LGBT people – a figure it says equates to up to 24% of the youth homelessness – are now homeless or living in hostile environments.

“Homeless LGBT young people,” the trust stated, “are one of the most disenfranchised and marginalised groups within the UK.”

The trust’s chief executive, Tim Sigsworth, told The Independent: “LGBT people in this country have seen the benefit of many positive changes to legislation in recent years, and to some it might appear that the big battles have been won. They haven’t been.”

“At The Albert Kennedy Trust we are seeing increasing numbers of young LGBT people who are homeless or living in hostile conditions. In most cases young people have been driven out of their family homes because of parental rejection, abuse from within the family, and aggression or violence. We’re seeing a particular increase in the numbers of young people identifying as trans.”

Stonewall Housing is a specialist housing advice and support service to the LGBT community. Stonewall Housing’s advice team manager, Michael Nastari, agreed: “We have seen a dramatic increase in young people coming to us for help. The majority of people contacting us feel their sexual orientation or gender identity is the reason.”

“It can be that they are victims of antisocial behaviour where they live. It can be violence against them at home. Young people being excluded by their families is still a big issue. The LGBT community has had recent wins but we are now seeing a backlash against that from people who aren’t happy with it.”

“We can legislate but actually changing attitudes takes a long time,” concluded Mr. Nastari.

When Is A Coat Not A Coat? When It’s A Sleeping Bag!

Now here’s a great idea – a coat that converts into a sleeping bag that could make a night on the streets a little less horrendous.

The coat is the brainchild of an American charity, The Empowerment Plan (TEP), a not-for-profit organisation based in Detroit, Michigan. Not only that – the company also helps homeless people with employment and housing support by hiring people from local homeless shelters. So, as well as giving their employees a stable income, TEP helps them to find secure housing and regain their independence.

A spokesperson for TEP said: “Since founding in 2012, we have provided employment to 30 people, assisted all our employees in permanently moving out of the shelter, distributed over 15,000 coats to homeless individuals across 39 US states and seven Canadian provinces, and impacted 75 children now growing up in stable incomes.”

According to a report in The Metro, the coat itself is water-resistant, durable, and fitted with special insulation materials donated by General Motors, which helps to make it warm and keep it dry during the cold, wet, winter months. But the real genius idea is that, when it’s not being worn, the coat can be rolled out into a sleeping bag and, when not in use for either purpose, it folds down into an over-the-shoulder bag.

The coats cost around $100 (around £80) each to make. These are then distributed to other homeless organisations at no cost to them. Although they mainly send their coats to US and Canadian organisations they do have plans to expand globally.

Brilliant!

Bosco In The Public Vote For Tesco Bags Of Help Funding

Bosco House has been chosen as one of three projects to go forward this month to the public vote in the Tesco/Groundwork ‘Bags of Help’ fund.

The fund was set up by Tesco earlier this year following the 5p charge that was imposed on plastic shopping bags. But instead of just pocketing the cash, Tesco decided to put all those 5p’s to good use and help out local community groups. Bosco submitted an application last month for garden equipment and have been chosen, alongside two other local projects, to enter the customer vote.

Tesco has teamed up with Groundwork to launch its Bags of Help initiative across England and Wales. The scheme sees three community groups and projects in each of around 200 Tesco regions awarded grants of £5,000, £2,000 and £1,000 – all raised from the 5p bag charge. Bags of Help offers community groups and projects across the UK a share of revenue generated from the 5p charge levied on single-use carrier bags. Tesco customers will now vote in store from the 1st to the 31st of December on who should receive the £5,000, £2,000 and £1,000 awards.

To vote, you will need to make a purchase within store of any value. You will receive one token per transaction (but with a bit of charm and persuasion at the checkout you can get more!) and it’s not necessary to purchase a carrier bag in order to receive a token. Near the store exit you will see a stand where you can deposit the tokens for the project of your choice. The project with the most tokens/votes gets £5,000; second gets £2,000; and third gets £1,000.

The participating Tesco stores are:

  • Old Swan
  • Deysbrook Barracks
  • Longmoor Lane, Liverpool (Express)
  • Litherland
  • Crosby Road (Express)
  • Queens Drive, Liverpool (Express)
  • Old Roan (Express)
  • Walton, Liverpool (Metro)
  • Coronation Road, Crosby (Express)
  • Princes Road, Liverpool (Express)
  • Mill Lane, Liverpool (Express)
  • Fazakerley Longmoor Lane (Express)
  • Thornton (Express)

To find out more, go to Bags of Help website www.tesco.com/bagsofhelp

Bosco garden volunteer, Linda Van Nooijen said: “This is a great idea. Even if we come third we’ll get a grand – and that will pay for a poly-tunnel where we can grow all kinds, like tomatoes, melons, chillies, you name it!”

The voting is open until 31st of December, so get down to your local Tesco, get a fistful of tokens, and vote for Bosco! Merry Xmas!!

Everton FC To Raise Money To Help Prevent Homelessness

Everton’s Under 23 Manager David Unsworth and his squad have launched a fundraising campaign to support young people on the brink of homelessness.

The campaign, ‘Home is Where the Heart Is’, will see them work throughout the season to reach a target of £230,000 to fund and develop a supported living initiative for young people in Liverpool, delivered by Everton in the Community. The funds raised will be used to purchase, and operate, a house close to Goodison Park that will offer 16-23-year-olds who have fallen on hard times, or have perhaps fallen out of the care system, a place to stay in Liverpool.

As well as offering the young adults somewhere to stay, the Club’s official charity will play a large part in their development by providing them with access to key services including health and
wellbeing support and assistance with education employment and training. They will also be encouraged to contribute to the local community through the National Citizenship Scheme and other progammes of volunteering.

“Modern day footballers are in an incredibly privileged position and are supported by their club with everything including dietary and fitness support and psychological matters,” Unsworth told the Liverpool Echo.

“‘Home is Where the Heart Is’ will us see offer that same level of support to the most needy across Liverpool and draw upon all areas of expertise within Everton in the Community to ensure that those young people accessing the facility will be given tangible life skills to set them on the right path in life.”

“That is why we are doing this – because we want to stop this. We want to give all those people on the streets of Liverpool a helping hand and get them off the streets and somewhere safe where they can get back on their feet again. Everybody should have a roof over their head and we are going to give our all to this campaign to ensure that we can help as many young people as possible.”

‘Home is Where the Heart Is’ will see Unsworth, his backroom staff and his full cohort of players host a variety of events and activities throughout the season to reach the fundraising target of £230,000.

There are plenty of ways for you to get involved and support their fundraising efforts. For more information, go to www.justgiving.com/fundraising/EvertonU23s>&gt or contact the charity on 0151 530 5253.

The Dogs Trust Spreads Xmas Joy

For the past twenty years every holiday season the charity Dogs Trust brings some festive cheer for homeless dogs through its Hope Project, and this Xmas will be no exception. They will be distributing hampers of coats, blankets, collars, leads, treats and toys, to dogs and their owners.

The Dogs Trust set up the Hope Project in 1995 to provide support for rough sleepers who were also dog owners. They also offer free and subsidised veterinary treatment to dogs whose owners are homeless or living in temporary accommodation.

Clare Kivlehan, Dogs Trust Hope Project manager, said: “Everyone knows that the bond between a dog and its owner is a strong one but for homeless people their dog can often be their only friend.”

“Christmas can be an especially difficult and lonely time for people in housing crisis so we’re delighted to be able to distribute these hampers to help make Christmas happier for them and their dogs and it is amazing that this year we will be able to reach over 1200 dogs.”

“With 82% of homeless people saying that their dog is their best friend, we are proud to have provided our Christmas parcel service, as well as essential and life-saving veterinary care, to thousands of dogs over the years.”

Over the past 20 years, the Hope Project has grown from one solitary veterinary clinic in London to a nationwide scheme offering help and support to homeless people and their dogs in 107 towns and cities across the UK.

Here are some of the things they have achieved over the past 20 years:

  • They support almost 600 dogs a year, which has changed the lives of thousands of dogs over the past 20 years
  • They work with 257 homelessness organisations and 136 veterinary practices to deliver this essential service
  • With the help of participating veterinary practices, they now fund more than 1700 treatments each year
  • The Hope Project has grown from one veterinary clinic in London to 107 schemes running in towns and cities across the UK
  • Our Christmas parcel service delivers essential supplies as well as festive cheer to more than 1200 dogs each December

As well as distributing Christmas hampers and offering free and subsidised veterinary treatments, the Hope Project encourages homelessness hostels and day centres to accept clients with dogs and helps them put in place practical guidelines.

As Winter Bites, Tragedy Strikes

no-second-night-outThree homeless people have died in the last 10 days – two men died in a fire while trying to keep warm at a derelict building in Manchester and last Tuesday a 30-year-old man froze to death in a Birmingham car park.

The annual count of rough sleepers, carried out by 44 English authorities and estimated by the other 282, finished last week. Sources at three cities told the Observer their figures, which are yet to be officially released, were double last year’s number.

But homeless charities say the counts only pick up the most visible – those sleeping in shop doorways, for example – and miss the majority hidden in derelict buildings or other makeshift shelters. Official government figures for the 2015 count were 3,569 people sleeping rough in England on a single night, more than double (up 102%) from 2010. But outreach workers in London dispute these figures. They reported seeing 8,000 people on the streets of the capital alone last year.

Howard Sinclair, chief executive of homelessness charity St Mungo’s, says the true figure is 10 times that. “Rough sleeping is increasing year-on-year – and so are the needs of those people, the complex issues, the range of problems,” he says. “The degree of need is much, much higher than it was even three years ago.”

“With all of this the numbers can only worsen, the housing crisis is not just about house prices and the shortage of social housing, but problems with private landlords. That’s the area we’re really seeing a rise in, people ending up on the streets after tenancy breakdowns.”

“What you see is that strata of people who really have nothing – no money, no front door key, no friend or family. That number is growing. And you can’t just pin it all on local authorities, the health service is failing people too – 90% of rough sleepers are discharged from hospitals back on to the streets.”

But Liverpool Mayor, Joe Anderson, told the BBC: “There is still a misconception that those who are sleeping rough are doing so because there is nowhere for them to go. We fund 750 beds a night in Liverpool but not everybody is accepting the offer of help despite the No Second Night Out gaining tremendous support from the public. We have to accept that some rough sleepers are refusing help and with a harsh winter ahead we need to find new ways to solve that problem.”

The Whitechapel Centre is coordinating the outreach response to rough sleeping in Liverpool as part of the No Second Night Out campaign. So if you have seen someone sleeping rough or are worried about someone who may be sleeping on the street tonight, give the Whitechapel Centre a call on 0300 123 2041(low cost).

Shock Figures Reveal A Quarter Of A Million People Are Homeless

Research conducted by the homeless charity Shelter reveals that more than a quarter of a million people are homeless in England.

According to the BBC, researchers used data from four sets of official 2016 statistics to compile what it describes as a “conservative” total. The figures show homelessness hotspots outside London, with high rates in Birmingham, Brighton and Luton.

For the very first time, official statistics from four different forms of recorded homelessness were used to estimate the total number of homeless. These were:

  • National government statistics on rough sleepers
  • Statistics on those in temporary accommodation
  • The number of people housed in hostels
  • The number of people waiting to be housed by social services department (obtained through Freedom of Information requests)

Shelter says the figure of 254,514 is a “robust lower-end estimate” because it has been adjusted down to account for any possible overlap and no estimates have been added in where information was not available.

Campbell Robb, chief executive of Shelter, said: “Shelter’s founding shone a light on hidden homelessness in the 1960s slums. Hundreds of thousands of people will face the trauma of waking up homeless this Christmas,” he said.

“Decades in the making, this is the tragic result of a nation struggling under the weight of sky-high rents, a lack of affordable homes and cuts to welfare support.” He also went on to warn that the housing crisis was “tightening its grip” on the UK.

The government, however, refutes the figures and says it is investing more than £500m on homelessness. The Department for Communities and Local Government said homelessness was down on 2003 figures and added: “However, we know that one person without a home is one too many.

“That is why the government is investing over £500m during the course of this parliament to tackle homelessness. This includes protecting £315m for local authority homelessness prevention funding and £149m for central government funding.”

Scotland To Build The First Homeless Village

A Scottish social enterprise company, Social Bite, has announced plans to expand its work with the homeless by building a village for homeless people in Granton, Edinburgh.

The plan is to construct ten purpose-built houses and create a model to end the cycle of homelessness. In partnership with EDI Group and City of Edinburgh Council, Social Bite plans to produce an innovative, low cost, supervised, safe living environment for up to 20 homeless people for around 12 months each.

Social Bite will work with the council and other homelessness charities to identify suitable residents for the Social Bite Village. The site will be open to people who are currently living in mostly unsupported temporary accommodation, shelters, and B&Bs.

Josh Littlejohn, the founder of Social Bite, said: “The Social Bite Village plan hopes to create a full circle solution to the issue of homelessness – from housing to support to employment. In doing so we hope to alter the course of some of Scotland’s most vulnerable people for the better – swapping a destiny of poverty and exclusion for one of compassionate support and inclusion.”

The energy-efficient, eco-friendly, sustainable houses will contain two bedrooms (some single bedroom options will be available), a shared WC with shower, a lounge area and a small food preparation area. Construction costs for each house is expected to be approximately £30,000.

Commenting on the announcement, Cllr Gavin Barrie, Chair, EDI Group, said: “As part of our commitment as a responsible developer, EDI actively explore temporary worthwhile uses for our land prior to development. The proposals put forward by Social Bite will have a meaningful and positive impact on those using the Social Bite Village.”

Local MSP, Ben Macpherson, said: “Social Bite makes a big difference every day and the Social Bite Village initiative will expand on that success. I am delighted that it will be based in Granton, making a positive impact locally and providing comprehensive support for around 20 of the city’s most vulnerable citizens.”

Controversial Anti-homeless Slope Removed

A slope that was put on to the steps of a Liverpool building to deter rough sleepers has been partially removed. It is thought the slope was partially destroyed on Sunday evening – but it is not yet known who is responsible for causing the damage.

The owners of the former Bank of England building in Castle Street had installed the slope to stop homeless people sleeping in the doorway. This is the same building that was occupied last year by squatters who wanted it to be used as a homeless shelter.

The steps had been used by rough sleepers throughout the year, but the slope made it impossible for anyone to sit, stand or lie down on them. This is known as ‘hostile architecture’, where constructions are designed to keep people or animals from resting on them. For example, anti-homeless spikes in doorways to prevent rough sleeping, bars in the centre of benches to stop people from lying down on them, and spikes at the top of fences to stop pigeons from landing on them.

One local man who had slept on the step ‘for months’ said: “It’s just poor isn’t it, really. What harm are you doing sleeping on a step?” Another rough sleeper added: “We take everything away with us – it’s left clean and that. You know, we’re on the streets and that… to do this is just…”

Other local people said they wouldn’t mind the slope, as long as homeless people could sleep in the empty Bank of England building if they needed to. On Sunday evening, a group of volunteers – who described themselves as humanitarian activists – gathered at the steps to hand out warm food and clothing to the rough sleepers affected by the slope.

One volunteer told the Liverpool Echo: “We think the slope was absolutely disgusting. It’s inhumane – but we’ve no idea who has done this. We turned up to take donations – we don’t take money but we take food, clothes and stuff and part of it has gone. We don’t want people to think this had anything to do with us.”

After seeing the news about the slope, the group – who wished to remain anonymous for fear of being linked to the removal – decided to gather at the Bank of England as a place to hand out food and clothing.

The Whitechapel Centre is coordinating the Liverpool outreach response to rough sleeping as part of the ‘No Second Night Out’ campaign. If you know someone who could use their help, call them on 0300 123 2041.