18/09/2012

Radical Wales Article 18/9/12

http://www.radicalwales.org/2012/09/solidarity-with-homeless-in-cardiff.html


There were already signs a month before the start of the Olympics in Cardiff that the police presence in and around Central Square and the railway station had been stepped up. Soon it became clear that the intention was to crack down heavily on street drinkers, beggars and rough sleepers before the Games started, a campaign of social cleansing to improve the image of the city for Olympic visitors. This only seemed to be confirmed by the indecent haste, just days before the first event, that the homeless were moved from their temporary hostel accommodation at the edge of the city centre to a brand new, purpose-built - but still unfinished - hostel complex safely just out of sight. A number of homeless people were then subjected toCRASBOs and excluded from the city centre area, and several were taken into custody for breaking the terms of those orders.



The local press published a timely article just before the start of the Games. A local jeweller David Hughes-Lewis, on behalf of Cardiff Retail Partnership, argued for using the 1824 Vagrancy Act against beggars and homeless people so that tourists would not be put off.
“If this is a law which is still in existence and South Wales Police aren’t making use of it then the question is why? If it’s there to be used and the Met are using it then so should we.”


There was widespread anger when this article appeared. A meeting was called by concerned citizens and over 50 people gathered in Bute Park. The jeweller's son, Jonathan Hughes-Lewis attended and attempted to defend his father, claiming that he had been misquoted and had been complaining about anti-social behaviour in the city centre rather than attacking the homeless. Mr Hughes-Lewis was listened to politely and was taken at his word. However, the press has since denied that there was any misquoting in the original article and an interview with Hughes-Lewis Junior expressing the same views that caused the initial consternation was broadcast on BBC Wales news.

At the same Bute Park meeting plans were laid for a protest demonstration by the Olympic rings on the City Hall lawn the following week. This was again well attended, in spite of poor weather, with speakers from a number of organisations as well as homeless and ex-homeless people, and culminated in a picnic on the lawn.

The Cardiff Homelessness Solidarity Campaign now seems to be firming up for the long term. It's a diverse group that seeks to cooperate with existing charities and organisations in the field rather than duplicating already-existing services. The campaign is also free to make the political points about homelessness and its causes that charities are unable to express. There are a number of concrete plans being worked on, including the "People's Kitchen" where homeless and the poor can have a free meal and chat informally to campaigners. Plans for a regular homeless solidarity stall in the city centre as a focus for practical and political support are well advanced. The major focus for the short term is gearing up for campaigning on World Homelessness Day.



The group has produced a statement called "Everyone has the right to a home" that links homelessness to poverty in general and the precariousness of virtually everybody's lives in the current climate where the poor are being made by the state to pay for the mistakes and naked greed of the wealthy. "In Austerity Britain many are only one paycheque away from homelessness." The fact that squatting in residential properties has just been criminalised while the government seeks to cut the huge amounts of housing benefit paid to exploitative private landlords is surely the ultimate irony.

A future that works


EVERYONE HAS THE RIGHT TO A HOME
We note the outcry prompted by Cardiff Retail Partnerships' reported call for the police use the 1824 Vagrancy Act to detain homeless people; “so that visitors to Cardiff were not given the wrong impression during the Olympics”.
The prospect of further 40% capital cuts to the Welsh Government budget endangers existing provision whilst threatening many more with destitution and homelessness. With these cuts hitting existing grants it is difficult to see how many projects will survive. The way to deal with rough sleepers is increasing and improving help to assist into safe, supported homes; not invoking some punitive hangover from the 19th century.
In Austerity Britain many are only one paycheque away from homelessness. Research conducted on behalf of Unite suggests two-thirds of working people have to borrow money ahead of payday and almost half of young people already need financial assistance in order to avoid being forced onto the streets. One opinion poll suggests over three quarters of people would not be confident of surviving on the current rate of Jobseekers Allowance.
Currently there are 45,000 jobseekers in South East Wales chasing 7,000 available jobs. Others are in part-time or temporary work, and subsist on less than a living wage. The demonization of benefit claimants is routine. Disability benefits are under attack with £1.4 billion cuts to Disability Living Allowance ,while the £26,000 cap on welfare payments threatens a further 40,000 families with homelessness, yet in the wake of the Olympics, rather than helping the homeless, authorities have unleashed ‘public order crackdowns’
As the government criminalises squatting, the number of empty domestic properties in Cardiff exceeds 7.000. Across the UK, the empty homes statistics group estimate almost a million empty homes. Today there are 1.8 million families on council housing waiting lists, representing over 4 million people, while Data analysts SSentif’s research shows that 50,290 families and individuals were already classed as homeless in 2011/12.
The government has failed to build new council housing providing provision for those currently denied the basic right of shelter granted under the UN Charter, yet a systematic construction scheme could create jobs, reduce unemployment, and boost the economy. It would end housing benefit subsidising the lifestyle of wealthy landlords.
The most positive thing emerging from this attack on the homeless is the opposition voiced by so many people; both on the streets and via social media suggesting a strong feeling of solidarity with people in difficult circumstances. We now need to build on this to respond to any future attacks on the homeless, and link the fight for dignity for homeless people with the wider struggle against austerity; such as World Homelessness Day (10/10/2012), and the TUC sponsored event in London (20/10/2012). Then we can strive to ensure we all have ‘A Future That Works’.