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Nacro's response to Breaking the Cycle Green Paper

Nacro's response to Breaking the Cycle Green Paper

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<strong>Breaking</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Cycle</strong>: Nacro’s <strong>response</strong> | 29Deposits and rent in advance. Deposits are not always sought (a number of landlords find <strong>the</strong>government-backed schemes for securing <strong>the</strong>m <strong>to</strong>o bureaucratic and so have simply s<strong>to</strong>ppedasking for <strong>the</strong>m) but rent in advance almost always is. There are a number of examples ofgetting around this – for instance, overpaying for a few months, crisis loans – but it is an areathat needs <strong>to</strong> be looked in<strong>to</strong>. Consistency of practice is needed.Rent deposit schemes. Often <strong>the</strong>se are of no use <strong>to</strong> offenders, as <strong>the</strong>y will only take peoplewho have been able <strong>to</strong> register for housing, ie, those who have no arrears and those whodon’t have a questionable housing his<strong>to</strong>ry. Specialist deposit schemes are very good and arehighlighted in <strong>the</strong> report.LHA/rent shortfalls. These are considerable in some parts of <strong>the</strong> country and will only getworse as some of <strong>the</strong> changes <strong>to</strong> LHA come in<strong>to</strong> effect. Prospective tenants need <strong>to</strong> be awareof what <strong>the</strong>ir contribution <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> rent will be and need <strong>to</strong> feel that <strong>the</strong>y can realistically meet it if<strong>the</strong> tenancy is going <strong>to</strong> succeed.Standards. Standards in <strong>the</strong> affordable end of <strong>the</strong> sec<strong>to</strong>r can be low. Clustering is also anissue in some areas. There is a private rented sec<strong>to</strong>r landlord in Birmingham who targetsoffenders who has filled quite a large bed & breakfast with ex-offenders, as well as nearbyrented properties that he owns. This is causing all sorts of issues in <strong>the</strong> surrounding areas as<strong>the</strong> residents tend <strong>to</strong> ga<strong>the</strong>r <strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>r outside <strong>the</strong> properties <strong>to</strong> socialise and pass <strong>the</strong> time.There are apparently strong campaigns from o<strong>the</strong>r local residents <strong>to</strong> bring about change. It ishard <strong>to</strong> see how <strong>the</strong> cycle of offending will be broken here, as <strong>the</strong>se ex-offenders are known asex-offenders by virtue of where <strong>the</strong>y live, and are spending all <strong>the</strong>ir time with o<strong>the</strong>r ex-offenderswho are not in work or engaged in any o<strong>the</strong>r constructive activity.Support. There are a number of examples in <strong>the</strong> report about <strong>the</strong> positive difference tha<strong>to</strong>ngoing support makes. Private sec<strong>to</strong>r accommodation plus floating support will often be <strong>the</strong>best option for offenders, some of whom are known <strong>to</strong> local supported housing projects and nolonger accepted. The cuts in floating support obviously mean this equation may no longer beviable, but <strong>the</strong> point needs <strong>to</strong> be made that without support, a tenancy can quickly fail and, asa result, that landlord may eventually decide <strong>to</strong> avoid offenders al<strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>r.Issues for <strong>the</strong> under 25s (soon under 35s). Many landlords simply refuse <strong>to</strong> take under 25s.Where projects did work <strong>to</strong> place under 25s in <strong>the</strong> private rented sec<strong>to</strong>r, <strong>the</strong>y reported that<strong>the</strong>y had <strong>to</strong> work far harder <strong>to</strong> get anywhere and carry out a lot of negotiations, brokering etc.Individuals will often leave good quality accommodation because <strong>the</strong>y don’t want <strong>to</strong> meet<strong>the</strong> shortfall in rent and will move in<strong>to</strong> cheaper, often poor quality accommodation in areaswhere <strong>the</strong>y are more likely <strong>to</strong> be tempted in<strong>to</strong> reoffending. Whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> change of age <strong>to</strong> 35will ultimately help (as landlords may feel <strong>the</strong>y are losing <strong>to</strong>o big a chunk of <strong>the</strong>ir prospectivemarket if <strong>the</strong>y rule out all those under 35) or hinder remains <strong>to</strong> be seen of course.

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