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Council to consider suspending housing policy amid worsening homelessness crisis

Council to consider suspending housing policy amid worsening homelessness crisis

STV News24-04-2025
City of Edinburgh Council is preparing to suspend its housing policy amidst a growing housing crisis in the capital.
The unprecedented move would see all available council-owned housing stock redirected toward people experiencing homelessness.
It's part of Edinburgh's plan to get its worsening housing crisis under control.
Despite declaring a housing emergency in November 2023, the city is still continuing to breach Scottish Government housing requirements as it struggles to cope with temporary housing demands due to increases in levels of homelessness.
The latest figures from a housing, homeless, and fair work committee report show that the council has failed to accommodate people on 3,263 occasions in the past year – a 115% rise from 2023/24.
The average number of people rough sleeping per week has gone up as well. Between March 24, 2025 and March 30, 2025 it was 75 per week, up from 37 in March 2024.
The number of homeless households in Edinburgh have increased by 12% since last year as well.
As of March 31, there were 7,866 homeless households accounting for more than 14,200 individuals, including 3,980 children.
'The City of Edinburgh Council continues to face unprecedented and increasing levels of demand for housing,' Edinburgh's housing, homelessness and fair work convener Lezley Marion Cameron said.
Councillor Cameron said the committee will discuss the continuing 'funding and resource constraints, and legislative circumstances' at a special committee meeting on Friday.
'Despite the steps already taken including reintroduction of void homes and in homelessness prevention, ongoing and increasing pressures sadly mean that the council has been unable to provide suitable accommodation for all who have housing need,' she added.
In an effort to get the situation under control, the council wants to immediately suspend its council house letting policy until it is fully complying with the law again.
If approved, all of Edinburgh's available council-owned housing stock will be redirected toward people experiencing homelessness.
'We will move to a system of direct allocation of properties to homeless households in unsuitable accommodation,' a spokesperson for the council explained.
The suspension would stay in place until the council is no longer breaching housing legislation, and it would mean around 1,000 homeless households would be moved to suitable accommodation.
It would apply for all Edinburgh council tenants except for those with a disability, with 'gold priority' for housing, or for those awaiting discharge from hospital.
City of Edinburgh Council emphasised that there has been an 'ongoing increase' in homelessness levels in the capital since the Covid-19 pandemic, and homelessness has exceeded pre-pandemic levels.
There has been an increase in 'non preventable' homelessness, and the council said Houses in Multiple Occupancy (HMO) legislation has removed around 500 temporary accommodation spaces available to the council since last December.
'One of the consequences of that is the increase in breaches of the Housing Scotland Act 1987 by failing to accommodate those assessed or threatened with homelessness,' the council said.
'As the report stresses, the council must comply with the legislation governing the provision and quality of accommodation, and suspending the allocation policy will allow officers to focus on achieving compliance by allocating available properties appropriately to those in unsuitable accommodation.'
The policy suspension is most likely to affect people who are currently looking to move because their current home does not meet their needs, those who are looking to secure their first council tenancy and those who are homeless but not in unsuitable temporary accommodation.
'The impact on these households will be that they may have to remain in their current property for longer, or it will take longer for them to secure permanent housing,' a spokesperson for the council said.
The council said this will likely impact 'each household in a different way'.
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Action to tackle 'unacceptable' empty homes in Scotland announced

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Some distillers are changing their approach to the US, which remains the sector's biggest market by value. The value of Scotch shipped to the US was measured at £971 million in 2024. (Image: GlenAllachie) Billy Walker of GlenAllachie is upbeat about the industry's prospects in Vietnam 'The immediate term impact has been confusion and uncertainty over the tariffs leading to our distributors being very cautious,' said Ian Palmer, founder and chairman of InchDairnie Distillery in Fife. 'In the long term, there will be price increases for the US consumer leading to a loss of volume and that will be more evident at the 'value' end of the market. 'The more premium end will be better placed to ride out the storm. Our brands, our Scottish rye whisky, RyeLaw, and our recently launched peated malt, KinGlassie, are both at the premium end. At present we are managing both our costs and our price point, as well as preparing to be flexible. 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So from an importer's point of view, they are going to be confronted with a 5% [cost increase]. 'But on a general position, these tariffs are going to be more damaging than the previous ones, because the previous ones were only on single malt. These are on all Scotch whisky.' Asked if there was any hope of the US tariffs on UK goods being reduced, Mr Walker said the SWA, which represents the industry in government matters, was doing a 'terrific job with the appropriate political people in the UK to find a way to mitigate them, or to get them reduced or removed'. But he said: 'I don't think they are going to get them wholly removed… it would be really welcome if they disappeared completely, but I don't think that is likely in the short-term.' Despite the challenges on the immediate horizon across the Atlantic, distillers emphasised the importance of the US market to the industry's prospects in the long run. 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The UK-India trade deal, which followed years of negotiations between the two countries, halved tariffs on imports of whisky and gin to India from 150% to 75%. The tariffs will then be reduced to 40% by the 10th year of the agreement. 'The UK-India trade deal is genuinely transformational for the Scotch whisky industry,' said Mr Murray at Dunnet Bay Distillers. 'Reducing tariffs from 150% to 75% immediately, and to 40% by year ten, opens unprecedented opportunities in what's already the world's largest whisky market by volume. 'Industry experts estimate this could increase Scotch exports to India by £1 billion annually, while generating £3.4bn in additional tax revenue for the Indian government through increased sales. For new distilleries like Castletown Mill, this is particularly significant because the deal enables smaller and independent producers to access the Indian market for the first time. 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