Nearly one in five private renting parents are more now more concerned that their family will become homeless following the financial fallout of the Covid-19 crisis, according to Shelter.
The housing charity’s new poll, carried out by YouGov, revealed that parents living in privately rented homes are almost twice as likely to be worried about ending up on the streets or in temporary accommodation than those living in secure social homes. The charity say that figures demonstrate just how precarious private renting can be and shows the stark difference that access to a stable social home can have.
There is still time to build a better future that benefits everyone and not just a lucky few
That is way the charity was one of the first members of our Ride Out Recession Alliance – the campaign The Big Issue launched earlier this month to prevent homelessness and protect jobs.
Both organisations are calling for a boost in the chronic lack of social housing that has been a driver of the housing crisis that has plagued the UK throughout successive governments. The shortage leaves struggling families with little option but to opt for the insecurity of private renting, where a third of parents (926,000 adults) feel more negative about their long-term housing situation.
And Shelter warn that even efforts to make ends meet could do little to prevent homelessness. The poll found 49,000 people have had to turn to foodbanks during lockdown while 429,000 have cut back on food and 550,000 have taken on debt to pay rent.
So far, the government has offered a stamp duty cut as a lifeline to make social homes more affordable but that will make no difference as 73 per cent of renting families have no savings at all according to government figures.