Sadiq Khan has pledged to wipe out rough sleeping in the capital by 2030 if he is re-elected as London mayor.
In a speech on Monday, the Labour incumbent will promise to end “once and for all” the “indignity, fear and isolation” felt by those enduring a life on the street.
Some £10 million – the biggest single intervention to tackle rough sleeping from City Hall on record – would be used to fund an expanded network of “ending homelessness hubs” under the plans.
Ending homelessness hubs
The hubs are designed to help an extra 1,700 rough sleepers every year with rapid reassessment and rehousing.
In his speech, Mr Khan will say it is time “to reject the notion that homelessness is some natural, stubborn feature of modern life that we have no option but to abide”.
The mayor’s campaign has framed the May 2 vote as a “neck-and-neck” two-horse race between Labour and the Tory candidate Susan Hall, despite recent polling putting him on firm course for a historic third term.
On Monday, Labour will present the contest as a choice between “a mayor who is delivering a fairer London for all and the Tory candidate who has voted against free school meals for all state primary school pupils and Sadiq’s fares freeze”.
The party said Mr Khan’s opponent “has strongly backed a programme of cuts by the Government which has led to a 14-year Tory failure over rough sleeping”.
Criminal Justice Bill
It comes after the Conservative Government faced a backlash over plans to clamp down on “nuisance” rough sleepers in its Criminal Justice Bill.
Charities have voiced concerns that proposals to allow police to fine homeless people could see vulnerable women penalised for seeking shelter, while dozens of Tory backbenchers were expected to rebel against parts of the legislation.
The Conservative Party has been contacted for comment.
Responding to the announcement, Ms Hall said: “This is yet another promise that Sadiq Khan will fail to deliver, given his appalling record on housing.
“Sadiq Khan has only started building 4 per cent of the affordable homes he promised in the latest programme, and it is his failure that has kept people stuck in temporary accommodation and made it harder to get rough sleepers off the streets.
“We cannot solve homelessness without solving the housing crisis, which is why I have pledged to build more family homes Londoners can afford.”
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