It was late on a Thursday night and I was sat in a young residents’ forum meeting in our YMCA hostel. The somewhat dejected comment from Troy, who had lived with us for 12 months, struck home hard:
“I’ve done everything I need to, I’ve got a job, paid my rent, not got into any trouble – I am ready to move on from the YMCA but where can I possibly live in this area – this is my home and I can’t afford to be here.”
I am ready to move on from the YMCA, but where can I possibly afford to live in this area?
Troy had come to us after floating around from sofa to sofa, depending on the support of friends to be able to survive. Eventually his sofa options had run out and he found himself outside the train station, sleeping rough but hopeful.
Eventually he had been picked up by the street team and referred into YMCA. Quite quickly he had demonstrated his ability to take responsibility for himself, but the lack of being able to find anywhere affordable and suitable was proving impossible.
Troy is not unique across the London metropolitan area. Each night in YMCA St Paul’s Group we host around 1,100 people, most of them young, who have been trapped by Troy’s hidden homeless problem.
Find a job and they lose their benefits, lose their benefits and then they lose any slim hope they have of finding a place to live. They may end up sleeping rough but more often than not they live from sofa to sofa, their hope seeping away with each relocation.