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Are The Homeless Too Comfortable?
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https:/ /welfar eweekly .com/ne w-tory- housing -chief- says-ro ugh-sle epers-a re-too- comfort able-on -the-st reets/
https:/ /www.hu ffingto npost.c o.uk/en try/new -housin g-minis ter-kit -maltho use-ope rated-c allous- policy- to-make -life-m ore-unc omforta ble-for -rough- sleeper s_uk_5b 43895fe 4b07aea 7542aa1 a?gucco unter=1
Kit Malthouse, the new housing minister, believes that "life was too comfortable on the street" and is proud of his record as a Westminster council leader making life "more uncomfortable" for the homeless in the hope (allegedly) of encouraging them into shelters.
Malthouse also supported an initiative between Westminster council and the police, in which some 30 rough sleepers were arrested in one night.
He gave this answer as a response to a question about whether he had supported "hosing homeless people out of doorways", as some of his former colleagues had suggested.
Do you think life is too comfortable for the homeless?
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Kit Malthouse, the new housing minister, believes that "life was too comfortable on the street" and is proud of his record as a Westminster council leader making life "more uncomfortable" for the homeless in the hope (allegedly) of encouraging them into shelters.
Malthouse also supported an initiative between Westminster council and the police, in which some 30 rough sleepers were arrested in one night.
He gave this answer as a response to a question about whether he had supported "hosing homeless people out of doorways", as some of his former colleagues had suggested.
Do you think life is too comfortable for the homeless?
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I remember talking to a long time rough sleeper a few years ago. He said he'd rather die on the streets than go into the local shelter...run by a very well known national Christian organization. We have clients who to you or I may seem to have obvious mental health issues. But, they are deemed to be fine as they do not fit perfectly into the official designation of what mental illness is. Therefore they do not/ can not get the help they need. They spend their lives jumping through hoops...getting no where. Then they die in their comfortable doorways.
As for encouraging them into shelters...there are not enough beds even if all homeless WANTED to go into shelters. Let's see them fund more...and not just in London.
As for encouraging them into shelters...there are not enough beds even if all homeless WANTED to go into shelters. Let's see them fund more...and not just in London.
It's probably worth mentioning that there are very few homeless shelters in Westminster. Plenty of advice lines and day centres, but very few beds available at night.
So when Mr. Malthouse was "making life more difficult" for these people in order to "encourage them into shelters" - what he means is he was using the authorities to shunt them out of his borough and into another one where he didn't have to deal with them.
So when Mr. Malthouse was "making life more difficult" for these people in order to "encourage them into shelters" - what he means is he was using the authorities to shunt them out of his borough and into another one where he didn't have to deal with them.
Pasta - When I first started work there was a homeless woman who would wander round the car-park leaving scraps of paper under our windscreens. They were full of scribbled symbols and random words. She slept in the nearby public convenience and whilst slightly scary was actually completely harmless.
My dad was a police officer in the town and I was chatting to him about her one day; he'd had quite a lot to do with her 'professionally'. He also told me that her proudest possession was a certificate (of some sort) declaring that she was completely sane......it was certainly more than I have ever had. :o)
My dad was a police officer in the town and I was chatting to him about her one day; he'd had quite a lot to do with her 'professionally'. He also told me that her proudest possession was a certificate (of some sort) declaring that she was completely sane......it was certainly more than I have ever had. :o)
A lot of homeless shelters are not very nice places...the inhabitants get worse not better. Those who try to "behave" are often threatened by others...it's not a safe haven by any means.
More foreward thinking councils want to create environments that are more like proper housing...where each individual has their own room...where they feel safe. Hostels are not safe for many. It's wrong to say choosing homelessness indicates mental instability.
More foreward thinking councils want to create environments that are more like proper housing...where each individual has their own room...where they feel safe. Hostels are not safe for many. It's wrong to say choosing homelessness indicates mental instability.
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