logo
Swindon Borough Council gets funding to help rough sleepers

Swindon Borough Council gets funding to help rough sleepers

BBC News25-01-2025

More money has been granted to a council to get rough sleepers off the streets.The money for Swindon Borough Council, allocated from the government's Rough Sleeping Winter Pressures Funding, comes to £96,793.The money was supposed to help increase the use of emergency winter accommodation, officials said. Janine Howarth, cabinet member for housing of the Labour-led authority, said: "We won't turn Britain around overnight, but, through new support to Swindon like this, change has begun."
She added: "We are tackling the housing crisis, building more homes and, through this huge boost to emergency funding, we are ensuring that as many as possible of those on the streets have somewhere to go; a warm bed to sleep in at night and somewhere to feel safe."There has been a sharp rise in rough sleeping in recent years, with almost 360,000 households nationally approaching their council for help with homelessness over the last year, according to the Labour Party.Temporary winter housing provision used to be offered at the Haven on Queen's Road, operated by Swindon Night Shelter and funded by Swindon Borough Council.That has since been converted to more permanent accommodation, with temporary bad weather emergency provision as well.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Reform has landed in Scotland
Reform has landed in Scotland

Telegraph

time3 days ago

  • Telegraph

Reform has landed in Scotland

Yet again a Scottish by-election has kicked the political establishment in the shins. Yes, in Scotland, after 18 years in power, the SNP is currently the political establishment and its defeat at the hands of Labour with a 602 vote majority – and Reform UK close behind in third place by just 869 – votes demonstrates the disruptors are making an impact. Labour's unexpected and narrow victory makes it clear the SNP is likely to struggle to form a Government when the full Holyrood election is held next May. That election will be held under a proportional voting system which, were Reform UK to poll anything like the 26.1 per cent achieved in Hamilton by its candidate Ross Lambie, could give the party a healthy group of MSPs in the mid-twenties and possibly make them king-makers. For the Conservatives, the evening was bad but not quite as embarrassing as they privately feared. Polling only 1621 votes, Tory sighs of relief were audible from Gretna to John O'Groats once they realised their vote share was 6 per cent, saving a lost deposit had it fallen to below 5 per cent. Still, it remains impossible to say if the Conservatives have yet bottomed out. Tory candidates face being squeezed across Scotland from all ends by the other pro-UK parties so long as regaining trust with voters remains the Conservatives' biggest challenge. Despite the best efforts of Scottish Conservative leader Russell Findlay providing more focussed stewardship, the Conservatives still risk falling below their worst ever Holyrood vote in 2011 when Annabel Goldie's campaign achieved only 12.4 per cent. The SNP leadership will need to look hard at their strategy of building up Reform as a 'far right' bogeyman and talking-up the prospect of a two-horse race between the SNP and Reform. The First Minster, John Swinney, had suggested the only way to stop Reform was for Labour voters to get behind the SNP; he begged them from the pages of a Labour-supporting tabloid to come over to the nationalists. Instead of reducing Labour's support by this tactical ploy, he received a stinging political slap in the face as his pleas only served to give Reform credibility as a serious challenger while Labour activists flooded the constituency on the last day to get their vote out. What is also clear from the by-election is that making out Nigel Farage as a vote loser in Scotland does not hold water. The same used to be said about Margaret Thatcher and Boris Johnson, but the truth is there has always been a Scottish market for big personalities that parties of the Left have sought to demonise. Photos of the Clacton MP were all over the Reform UK's publicity materials, and he was regularly promoted via social media – and did the unthinkable of visiting the constituency during the campaign. Yes, he's a marmite figure, but he's been a marmite figure for much of his political life in most of England too, and now has the best ratings of all the party leaders. After the initial realisation during polling day that they simply did not have the shoe leather on the ground to push for second place, Reform UK's supporters quickly realised they had actually achieved an amazing result. Their candidate, Ross Lambie, had polled 7,088 – which next to Labour's 8,599 and the SNP's 7,957 resulted in a highly creditable three-way fight. Coming from only 7.8 per cent in the Hamilton and Clyde Valley Westminster constituency boundary at last year's general election to achieve 26.1 per cent this time round is a very strong showing. Reform UK has landed in Scotland.

Swindon town centre works continue with Fleet Street closure
Swindon town centre works continue with Fleet Street closure

BBC News

time3 days ago

  • BBC News

Swindon town centre works continue with Fleet Street closure

A road is set to close as work to transform to create a town centre "bus boulevard" edges closer to £33m revamp of Fleming Way in Swindon, which began in 2022, is set to be finished in the the next stage of the project, Fleet Street will close to all traffic on 9 June, with the work, which includes strengthening the existing road surface, set to take up to four Borough Council said its project team is working with local businesses to minimise the impact of the closure, which will include scheduled deliveries for local shops. The transformation of Fleming Way, which will connect the bus and train station to the town centre, includes a new toilet block, a bus hub, pedestrian routes and cycle than 180 trees and 23,000 shrubs and bushes have also been planted as part of the scheme.

Starmer will be breathing a sigh of relief to clinch shock victory over SNP and Reform UK
Starmer will be breathing a sigh of relief to clinch shock victory over SNP and Reform UK

Sky News

time3 days ago

  • Sky News

Starmer will be breathing a sigh of relief to clinch shock victory over SNP and Reform UK

Anything other than a win for Labour would have been a humiliation in this contest. It wasn't any old local by-election - this was a contest where Labour knew it could act as a mini barometer of Sir Keir Starmer's recent U-turn on winter fuel payments and become a test of how popular the politics of Nigel Farage are in Scotland. Labour are power hungry and have, for a long time, set their sights on forming the next Scottish government. The prime minister will this morning be breathing a sigh of relief to clinch this shock victory over the SNP and Reform UK. This contest on the outskirts of Glasgow came at a time where Labour had been firefighting and grappling with polling suggesting they had blown their chances of ousting the SNP from power in Edinburgh after almost 20 years. The SNP had a spring in their step during this campaign after a chaotic couple of years. First Minister and SNP leader John Swinney had apparently stemmed the bleeding after the infamous police fraud investigation, endless fallout over gender identity reforms, and last year's general election where they were almost wiped out. This result leaves them no further forward than 12 months ago with questions over the party's strategy. Reform UK is very much in the Scottish picture now, finishing a few hundred votes behind the nationalists. This is a party led by a man who barely registered any support north of the border for many years. A remarkable transformation. The surge in support has spooked many because they know fine well Nigel Farage is only just getting started. One poll had Reform UK forming the next official opposition at Holyrood. After tonight, that might be a tall order but Mr Farage is shaking things up at the expense of the Conservatives.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store