Dutto
Landlord.
I attended a local Council Meeting last night and asked what my Local Council was doing about the people who were homeless in our area. I asked the question after the local Salvation Army refuge manager had told me that we had up to 5o people in our small town who were homeless.
The response from the members at the meeting was both disturbing and hopeful.
The person asked to answer my question was a local Police Representative who assured me that in most cases sleeping rough was a "life choice" and that most of the people sleeping rough were refusing to accept the help of the local services. He proudly announced that he had arrested one of these people just a few days earlier.
I found his response disturbing because A) He seemed to think that all people who were homeless slept rough. and B) They chose to sleep rough for their own reasons. I was disturbed because I had never thought that homelessness was seen as a criminal offence in modern times.
One of the Councillors then pointed out that homelessness did not always mean that the person was sleeping out on the street, He brought up the situation of "sofa surfing" where homeless people had to live with family and friends and sleep on their sofas to avoid sleeping on the streets. He also pointed out that in our small town the waiting list for council accommodation is standing at 5,000 people.
I found his response to be quite hopeful and recognised that, for many people, the situation of being homeless was very far from being a "life choice".
Today I did a bit more research and discovered that the Vagrancy Act 1824, from which the Policeman's powers of arrest was originally taken, was enacted by George IV's parliament after the end of the Napoleonic Wars. The ending of the war had resulted in thousands of men being demobilised from the Army and the Navy with no jobs and no homes to go to. To give an illustration of these times, in the same year, the offences of Forgery, Horse Stealing and Sheep Stealing were all offences that warranted the Death Sentence.
I honestly thought that we had moved on from those times but apparently the law is still as stated in 1894 by the French novelist Anatole France when he noted:
"The Law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges."
I couldn't have said it better myself, so 'Is homelessness a 'Life Choice' in today's UK society?
The response from the members at the meeting was both disturbing and hopeful.
The person asked to answer my question was a local Police Representative who assured me that in most cases sleeping rough was a "life choice" and that most of the people sleeping rough were refusing to accept the help of the local services. He proudly announced that he had arrested one of these people just a few days earlier.
I found his response disturbing because A) He seemed to think that all people who were homeless slept rough. and B) They chose to sleep rough for their own reasons. I was disturbed because I had never thought that homelessness was seen as a criminal offence in modern times.
One of the Councillors then pointed out that homelessness did not always mean that the person was sleeping out on the street, He brought up the situation of "sofa surfing" where homeless people had to live with family and friends and sleep on their sofas to avoid sleeping on the streets. He also pointed out that in our small town the waiting list for council accommodation is standing at 5,000 people.
I found his response to be quite hopeful and recognised that, for many people, the situation of being homeless was very far from being a "life choice".
Today I did a bit more research and discovered that the Vagrancy Act 1824, from which the Policeman's powers of arrest was originally taken, was enacted by George IV's parliament after the end of the Napoleonic Wars. The ending of the war had resulted in thousands of men being demobilised from the Army and the Navy with no jobs and no homes to go to. To give an illustration of these times, in the same year, the offences of Forgery, Horse Stealing and Sheep Stealing were all offences that warranted the Death Sentence.
I honestly thought that we had moved on from those times but apparently the law is still as stated in 1894 by the French novelist Anatole France when he noted:
"The Law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges."
I couldn't have said it better myself, so 'Is homelessness a 'Life Choice' in today's UK society?