logo
Student blocks leased by Home Office to house migrants empty for year

Student blocks leased by Home Office to house migrants empty for year

Telegraph8 hours ago

Student blocks leased by the Home Office to house nearly 700 asylum seekers have stood empty for a year at a cost of millions of pounds to taxpayers.
The blocks were built in 2019 for Huddersfield University students and feature 'spacious' studio bedrooms, dining rooms, kitchens and a gym, but have never been used.
They were leased for an estimated £7 million in spring 2024 by the Tory government to provide a cheaper alternative to hotels for asylum seekers. However, they are still empty with no final decision on when migrants might be moved in.
Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, has pledged to axe the use of hotels for asylum seekers by the end of the Parliament in four years' time.
At the end of March 2025 there were more than 32,000 asylum seekers in hotels, costing up to £6 million a day, out of a total government bill for asylum accommodation and support of £3.6 billion for the current year.
It is understood negotiations are under way between Home Office and local council officials to place asylum seekers in the blocks but a source familiar with the talks said a decision on moving them in was 'months away'.
It is part of attempts by Labour to use alternative 'mid-sized' sites including empty tower blocks, former student accommodation or vacant college buildings as an alternative to hotels.
The new strategic partnerships would see accommodation either be owned by councils and leased to the Government for asylum use or secured by the Government and leased to local authorities.
A Home Office spokesman said: 'Decisions on the future use of accommodation sites will be made in due course in consultation with local authorities and other stakeholders.
'This [Huddersfield] lease agreement was agreed before the election and change of government. No asylum seekers will be moved into the site until it is ready for occupancy, including meeting legal and building regulations.'
The Huddersfield student blocks were one of four large sites identified for asylum seekers by the last government. They included the Bibby barge in Portland and former RAF bases at Scampton in Lincolnshire and Wethersfield in Essex.
Labour shut down the Bibby and handed Scampton back to the local council, which now plans to turn the former Dambusters' squadron base into a national heritage site and aviation hub. Wethersfield is still being used to house hundreds of asylum seekers.
The Home Office earmarked £358 million to use the Huddersfield blocks until 2034, according to the National Audit Office, which had access to internal data. This included running costs of £24.7 million a year and £7.1 million for 'site acquisition, lease and set up' in 2024/25. The Home Office said these were estimates and the actual cost was lower.
After the blocks were built in 2019, they were issued with a prohibition notice following the Grenfell Tower fire as their cladding and internal fire protection works were judged unsafe.
Remedial work costing almost £12 million – including refurbishing the studio bedrooms – was carried out in 2023 ready for student accommodation that September until the Home Office secured the site for asylum seekers.
The Home Office denied at the time that students had been kicked out.
'Students who had enquired about the accommodation prior to Home Office involvement were informed by the housing company that they would need to seek alternative options,' it said.
The Home Office interest came amid a growing backlash against asylum hotels. The numbers of migrants in hotels hit a high of 56,042 in September 2023 at a cost of £8 million a day. The Tories suggested then that migrants could move into the site in autumn 2024 but then lost the election. Labour has been reviewing asylum sites since inheriting the four 'big' sites from the Tories.
A Home Office spokesman said: 'We inherited an asylum system under exceptional pressure and are urgently taking action to restore order and reduce costs, having already made asylum savings of half a billion.
'We are making strong strides to deliver a more sustainable and cost-effective asylum accommodation system. This includes ending the use of hotels, testing new locally led models and working closely with local authorities and other departments to ensure a fairer, more efficient approach that supports both individuals and communities.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

No concessions on benefits reform, Starmer tells rebels
No concessions on benefits reform, Starmer tells rebels

Times

time23 minutes ago

  • Times

No concessions on benefits reform, Starmer tells rebels

Sir Keir Starmer has warned Labour rebels there will be no concessions on cuts to disability benefits as he vows to press ahead with reforming a welfare system he says is 'not working for taxpayers'. The prime minister said he has 'got to get the reforms through' as ministers prepare to publish legislation this week that is likely to prompt Starmer's biggest backbench rebellion yet. While ministers insist they are confident of avoiding defeat, there is nervousness in government after 170 Labour MPs raised concerns about reforms which will make it harder to claim personal independent payments (PIP), the main disability benefit. But Starmer insisted that even critics agreed that 'we've got to reform the welfare system', saying: 'The principles remain the same: those who can work should work; those who need support into work should have that support into work, which I don't think they are getting at the moment; those who are never going to be able to work should be properly supported and protected, and that includes not being reassessed and reassessed.' Speaking on his way to the G7 summit in Canada, Starmer said: 'We need reform and we will be getting on with that reform when the bill comes.' About 800,000 people will lose thousands of pounds a year under the reforms and MPs are alarmed by official estimates that a quarter of a million people will be pushed into poverty as a result. • Thanks to the PIP benefit I could work. So why remove it? Last week ministers offered rebels a £500 million 'olive branch', promising that those who lost PIP would have 13 weeks before their payments stopped, and that the same three-month transition period would also apply to 150,000 people who stand to lose a carer's allowance linked to a cancelled PIP claim. Ministers say this is longer than any other transition payment and will mean that no one loses out before 2027. They say there can be no change to the main thrust of the reforms, which will make it harder to qualify for help with everyday tasks such as washing and dressing. They are alarmed by the soaring cost of sickness benefits, which have risen by £20 billion since the pandemic and which will rise by another £18 billion by the end of the parliament. This is despite reforms that will save £5 billion. Asked if there would be any softening of the bill before a vote expected at the end of the month, Starmer said: 'We've got to get the reforms through. I've been clear about that from start to finish — the system is not working. It's not working for those that need support. It's not working for taxpayers. Everybody agrees it needs reform. We've got to reform it and that's what we intend to do with the bill.' • A quarter of Britons now disabled Leading rebels have dismissed last week's attempts at reassurance, saying they want a fuller impact assessment and an immediate review of PIP criteria. A wider review promised by ministers is not expected to be completed until after tougher rules come into effect in November 2026. Neil Duncan-Jordan, a leading backbench critic of the bill, agreed with ministers last week that the extra transition periods were 'not a concession', and confirmed he would vote against it. He said MPs should recognise the cuts 'will make disabled people poorer. No amount of warm words mask the reality — cuts don't create jobs, they create austerity'. Brian Leishman, another backbench leftwinger, attacked the reforms as 'a complete insult to disabled people and against everything a Labour government should ever do to people that need help'. Ministers believe that less hardline critics will be persuaded to fall into line by evidence that the government is listening to concerns. A suggestion by Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader, that her party would vote against the bill is also seen as helpful by party managers who say Labour MPs will not want to walk through lobbies alongside Conservative MPs. An extension of free school meals to all pupils on universal credit has also helped as ministers have pointed out that this will lift 100,000 children out of poverty, twice the number pushed into poverty by welfare cuts.

PM to raise small boats with Macron at G7, as migrants continue to evade French police
PM to raise small boats with Macron at G7, as migrants continue to evade French police

ITV News

time41 minutes ago

  • ITV News

PM to raise small boats with Macron at G7, as migrants continue to evade French police

Sir Keir Starmer says he will speak to his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron and other European leaders at the G7 summit on stepping up efforts to stop small boat crossings across the English Channel. In a briefing with journalists before arriving in Canada for the meeting of the world's most advanced economies, the prime minister was asked if French authorities are doing enough to stop small boats. It comes after more than 900 people made the perilous crossing on Friday alone, taking the provisional annual total to 16,183. Despite existing security arrangements between the UK and France, ITV News reported last month on how French police are continuing to be outpaced by people smugglers. "Look, one of the things we've worked hard at is improving the relations with the French in relation to the work we both need to do to stop these boat crossings, which I'm determined we will absolutely bear down on," Starmer said. "Nobody should be making that journey. As a result of that we are seeing a much greater cooperation in northern France." However, the PM said he wanted to see "more cooperation" in northern France, adding: "It's an issue that I have raised and will raise again with President Macron. "It's one of the issues I'll be discussing - not just with Macron, actually, but discussing it with [Italy's] Giorgia Meloni, [Germany's] Friedrich Merz, and others. Asked if time had been set aside at the G7 for specific meetings on this issue, or if talks would only take part on the fringes, a spokesperson for the PM that immigration would be a discussion topic among leaders. They added that Starmer has "always been clear" this is an issue that "requires international partnerships and solutions to make a difference". The current provisional annual total of small boat Channel crossings, standing at 16,183 as of Saturday, is understood to be 42% higher than the same point last year and 79% up on the same date in 2023. Friday was not even the highest daily total so far this year, with 1,195 people arriving on Britain's shores on May 31. The UK is currently funding equipment for French police to stop these migrants, but, as ITV News observed in Dunkirk last month, many have been able to exploit stretches of beaches with no visible police presence. A Home Office spokesperson said: 'We all want to end dangerous small boat crossings, which threaten lives and undermine our border security.'The people-smuggling gangs do not care if the vulnerable people they exploit live or die as long as they pay, and we will stop at nothing to dismantle their business models and bring them to justice.'That is why this government has put together a serious plan to take down these networks at every stage, and why we are investing up to an additional £280 million per year by 2028-29 in the Border Security Command.'Through international intelligence-sharing under our Border Security Command, enhanced enforcement operations in northern France and tougher legislation in the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, we are strengthening international partnerships and boosting our ability to identify, disrupt and dismantle criminal gangs whilst strengthening the security of our borders.'

Keir Starmer: I'll face down rebels on benefit cuts
Keir Starmer: I'll face down rebels on benefit cuts

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Keir Starmer: I'll face down rebels on benefit cuts

Sir Keir Starmer has faced down Labour rebels on his welfare cuts package, insisting the reforms must be pushed through. The Prime Minister said the welfare system was not 'working for taxpayers' and gave no indication he was prepared to offer new concessions to angry backbenchers. A package of £5 billion in annual savings from the disability and sickness benefits bill was unveiled earlier this year, including cuts to the personal independence payment (PIP). Legislation unveiling the specifics of the changes is expected to be published this week before a crunch vote at some point before Parliament breaks for summer recess next month. More than 150 Labour MPs have signed a private letter indicating opposition to the welfare cuts, in what has become the biggest rebellion of Sir Keir's premiership to date. Downing Street advisers have identified the vote on the measures as the most politically challenging issue facing the Government in the coming weeks. The Prime Minister was asked, during a trip to Canada for the G7 summit, whether he was confident the disability benefit cuts would pass Parliament. Sir Keir replied: 'We've got to reform the welfare system. Everybody agrees with that proposition. So we've got to do that basic reform. It doesn't work for those that need support and help into work and it doesn't work for the taxpayer. 'So it's got to be reformed. The principles remain the same, those who can work should work. Those who need support in to work should have that support in to work which I don't think they are getting at the moment. 'Those who are never going to be able to work should be properly supported and protected. And that includes not being reassessed and reassessed. So they are the principles, we need to do reform and we will be getting on with that reform when the Bill comes.' The Prime Minister also offered up little chance on late changes to the package when asked if more concessions were to be expected. Sir Keir said: 'Well we have got to get the reforms through and I have been clear about that from start to finish. The system is not working, it's not working for those that need support, it's not working for taxpayers. Everybody agrees it needs reform, we have got to reform it and that is what we intend to do.' The Treasury will be loath to lose the £5 billion savings from the package, which were announced to help Rachel Reeves, the Chancellor, restore her fiscal headroom in the spring statement in March. Critics on the Right insisted the reforms did not go far enough, given the sickness benefit bill is expected to continue ballooning by billions of pounds in the years ahead. But the reforms have ignited a fierce backlash from on the Left, with Labour backbenchers putting their names to a private letter to the Chief Whip voicing private opposition. The letter reportedly has signatures of more than 150 Labour MPs. Whether all of those potential rebels end up voting against the measures remains to be seen. The ability of Number 10 and Number 11 to hold the line has been challenged by the decision to reverse winter fuel payment cuts, an about-turn which cost £1.25 billion.

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