Asylum hotel closures may shift cost to local council tax payerson October 25, 2023 at 7:53 am

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

The Local Government Association warn government plans to end asylum hotels may “shunt” £8m cost to local taxpayers.

Migrants crossing the English ChannelImage source, Getty Images

Local authorities may have to house migrants in the very same hotels the government has announced it will no longer use, councillors have warned.

The government plans to end contracts with 50 hotels housing asylum seekers by the end of the year.

Official figures show hiring these hotels cost the taxpayer £8m a day.

The Local Government Association (LGA) say this cost may pass to councils, who are required to house refugees in need.

Shaun Davies, chairman of the LGA, said councils were legally obliged to find somewhere to stay for the large numbers of refugees representing as homeless after leaving hotel accommodation when their asylum application was processed.

“We’ve got a housing shortage, we’ve got a huge demand on temporary accommodation, and we’ve got councils in financial strain,” Mr Davies, who is also a Labour councillor, said.

Mr Davies questioned where local governments were supposed to house refugees once they became councils’ responsibilities.

While hotels were not a “long-term solution” for housing refugees, Mr Davies said the question had to be, “If not those hotels, then where?”

“That’s the irony in this situation, that one part of the system might boast that they’re doing relatively well but actually, that’s shunting the issue and the cost to local taxpayers,” he said.

Ending contracts

About 400 hotels are being used to house record numbers of asylum seekers, the BBC understands.

The use of hotels has increased exponentially as the number of people claiming asylum in the UK has increased, reaching a near 20-year high of 74,751 last year, according to Home Office data.

Immigration Minister Robert Jenrick said agreements with France and Albania along with stricter penalties for those connected to illegal migration had helped reduce the numbers arriving in small boats, enabling the government to start ending the use of asylum hotels.

He added the government would continue to house people on the Bibby Stockholm barge in Portland. The vessel, which has a capacity of 500, is currently holding 50 people.

line

How many asylum seekers are living in hotels and where are they based?

  • At the end of June 2023 there were 50,546 asylum seekers living in hotels in the UK
  • This is a 10% increase compared with the end of 2022, when there were 45,775 people living in hotels
  • In March 2023, government sources told the BBC there were 395 hotels being used for this purpose
  • The majority of them – 363 – were in England, 20 in Northern Ireland, 10 in Scotland and two in Wales
  • Between April 2022 and March 2023, the government spent about £2.3bn on hotel accommodation
line

During his House of Commons statement, Mr Jenrick tried to reassure local authorities that the government would “limit the impact on local communities”.

But Mr Davies said he was frustrated that the government had not seen the LGA as “a key stakeholder or consultee” in the build-up to yesterday’s announcement.

He called on the government to publish the list of the 50 hotels that would be wound down and provide further funding for councils struggling to cope with the pressure.

Mr Davies said: “The deep irony is that it might be the same hotels that the government are looking to close down for their purposes, are the very same hotels that local authorities will have to stand up and fund for temporary accommodation.”

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

Asylum seekers being granted refugee status, Afghan refugees coming to the UK from third countries and Ukrainian refugees who were previously paired with hosts could all be turning to their local authorities for help, Mr Davies said.

“There’s also a huge amount of demand in the system from people who live in local communities because of the cost-of-living crisis, but also because of changes within the private sector itself,” he said.

“So, councils are seeing huge demands, the highest levels of demand on temporary accommodation since records began at a time when council finances are stretched.”

News Daily banner

Sign up for our morning newsletter and get BBC News in your inbox.

News Daily banner
- Advertisement -

Discover

Sponsor

Latest

Jens Scheuer: Brighton’s motivator prepares to make Women’s Super League historyon January 11, 2023 at 6:34 am

Jens Scheuer took his first steps in management at a village club - now he is plotting Brighton's resurgence in the Women's Super League.Jens...

Stand News: Police arrest six from Hong Kong independent news outleton December 29, 2021 at 2:17 am

The six staff members were arrested on charges of "conspiracy to publish a seditious publication".Image source, Getty ImagesHong Kong police have arrested six people...

Rugby World Cup: Holly Aitchison joins Emily Scarratt in England centres for finalon November 9, 2022 at 9:30 pm

Holly Aitchison and Emily Scarratt will form England's centre partnership for the first time at this World Cup in Saturday's final against hosts and...

Can Online Safety Bill tackle social media abuse of MPs?on October 19, 2021 at 11:32 pm

After Sir David Amess' death, we look at the detail of the Online Safety Bill and what measures it offers.

Iwobi hits injury-time winner for 10-man Everton against Newcastleon March 17, 2022 at 10:17 pm

Alex Iwobi's stoppage-time goal earns Everton a massive victory as they hold on to beat Newcastle despite being reduced to 10 men.