£18m Plan to Tackle Homelessness in Birmingham and Coventry
£18m Plan to Tackle Homelessness in Birmingham and Coventry

More than £18 million is set to be allocated to tackle homelessness and rough sleeping in Birmingham and Coventry. The West Midlands Combined Authority's Investment Board will consider proposals to deploy the funds when it meets on Monday, June 22.

Funding Breakdown

The total sum of £18,266,172 includes just over £13.4 million for Birmingham and more than £4.4 million for Coventry. Additionally, £395,000 will be retained by the West Midlands Combined Authority for coordination and oversight of supported housing needs across the region.

Government Programme

In February this year, the Government selected 40 areas with the highest levels of need to participate in the Supported Housing Funding Programme. Birmingham and Coventry were the two chosen from the West Midlands.

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Birmingham's Proposals

A report to the committee states: "Birmingham City Council proposes to use the funding to deliver 27 new 24/7 staffed supported housing units, including wheelchair-accessible provision, alongside enhanced support across existing services." This includes six female-only emergency accommodation beds and ten block-purchased beds for individuals requiring care-level support outside of hospital discharge pathways.

The majority of Birmingham's funding will be invested in providing additional support within existing Supported Exempt Accommodation (SEA), including both service-specific support and floating support across SEA provision. This enhanced support will provide a continuum of assistance, ranging from intensive stabilisation to support with move-on and independent living.

Additionally, eight dedicated caseworkers will operate proactively across the statutory homelessness pathway, supporting an estimated 240–320 individuals per year. Their role will be to help people access statutory homelessness assessments and prevention interventions, while maintaining engagement with those at high risk of rough sleeping.

All proposed activity is additional to existing commissioned provision and will increase both supported housing capacity and the range of support services available.

Coventry's Proposals

The report adds: "Coventry City Council proposes to create 66 new bed spaces and support around 215 people per year, centred on a 23-bed micro hostel for people with complex needs, 20 units of dedicated mental health supported accommodation, intermediate hospital and prison step-down beds, and expanded domestic abuse provision."

This is complemented by enhanced support into existing schemes, an approved Mental Health Practitioner embedded in the homelessness pathway, and a range of resettlement and floating support roles focused on move-on from SEA and temporary accommodation and tenancy sustainment.

Again, all activity is additional to existing commissioned provision.

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