The number of Londoners living in temporary accommodation is ten times higher than the national average, according to a new study.
Research from the City Parochial Foundation and the New Policy Institute found almost 2 per cent of all households in London are in temporary accommodation. Of these, 40 per cent had spent more than two years in such circumstances.
North London tended to have higher rates of temporary accommodation than the south of the capital. The boroughs with the highest rates were Newham and Haringey, where 6 per cent of all households were in temporary accommodation.
Even the boroughs with the lowest rates for London were still above average for the rest of England. In Richmond and Merton, 0.5 per cent of households were temporary, compared with 0.4 per cent in Manchester.
The report also discovered almost 25 per cent of households in London were classed as overcrowded. In some boroughs, including Camden, Westminster, Kensington and Chelsea and Tower Hamlets, this figure was closer to 30 per cent.
Bharat Mehta, chief executive of the City Parochial Foundation, said: ‘We need the government, London’s mayor, our local councils and the wider public and voluntary sectors to work together to give London the future it deserves.’
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
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