For 131,000 children this Christmas, they will not wake up to a pile of presents under the tree – they will wake up in hostels, B&Bs and other temporary accommodation.
Estimates from homelessness charity Shelter found that 3,000 more children are homeless this Christmas – rising by three per cent since last year – and the number has increased by 59 per cent in the last five years.
Of these, 9,500 will spend their Christmas in a hostel or B&B, often with one family in a single room, sharing bathrooms and kitchens with other residents.
Angel found it tough to deal with the rats and mice while living in a hostel. It's no place for a child.
If we act now, we can change tomorrow for thousands of families facing homelessness. #donatetodaychangetomorrow https://t.co/lUmZMbRUIt pic.twitter.com/WtAOE6ZqdF
— Shelter (@Shelter) December 5, 2018
The greatest increases have been seen in the East and North West of England where child homelessness levels have shot up by more than 170 per cent in the same time period while London is up 49 per cent to 87,310 people.
In the worst-affected local authority, Westminster, one in 11 children in the borough is homeless. In Kensington and Chelsea, which has the highest house prices in the country and was also rocked by the Grenfell Disaster last year, one in 12 children don’t have a home.