Issue - meetings

Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy 2026-2031

Meeting: 25/02/2026 - Environment and Place Overview and Scrutiny Committee (Item 46)

46 Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy 2026-2031 Update pdf icon PDF 376 KB

Homelessness continues to be one of the most significant challenges facing Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole. Demand for assistance has risen sharply, driven by rising private rents, household income pressures and increasing complexity of need. In 2024 to 2025, BCP Council determined that 2,767 households needed formal intervention because of their homelessness or threat of homelessness, representing a doubling of demand compared with 2020. Rough sleeping reached a peak of 193 individual people seen over the month of July 2024 before beginning to reduce through targeted outreach, expanded supported housing and strengthened multi agency work.

The proposed Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy 2026 to 2031 sets out a long term, evidence based and partnership led plan for reducing homelessness and rough sleeping across the area. The Strategy is fully aligned with national Government priorities on homelessness and rough sleeping, including the emphasis on earlier prevention across public services, national commitments to reduce families and children in Bed & Breakfast, rough sleeping and the monitoring of performance within the Local Outcomes Framework.

Developed through comprehensive review, extensive engagement, consultation and strong lived experience input, the Strategy presents a shared ambition to make homelessness in BCP rare, brief and unrepeated. It reflects updated statutory data, changing system pressures and learning from recent years. Approval will help BCP Council and its partners strengthen prevention, reduce unsuitable temporary accommodation usage, improve multi agency practices and support people to secure and sustain safe and stable homes.

This report sets out the approach taken to developing the Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy 2026–2031, outlines the emerging strategic direction, and seeks the Committee’s input, noting that the detailed Delivery Plan is in its final stages of development and will be presented alongside the Strategy for Cabinet approval in May 2026.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Cabinet Member for Housing and Regulatory Services presented a report, a copy of which had been circulated to each Member and a copy of which appears as Appendix 'B' to these Minutes in the Minute Book.

Public Report 

 

Homelessness continued to be one of the most significant challenges facing Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole. Demand for assistance has risen sharply, driven by rising private rents, household income pressures and increasing complexity of need.

Progress has been made across Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole which was not only measurable but human. The impact over the past five years, the partnership approach had transformed the way we responded to homelessness. We created more than 275 new support accommodation claim placements. The somewhere safe to say service continued to prevent people slipping into rough sleeping in the hardest moments.

Some of the most inspiring progress we made was in prevention work. We saw more than a 30% increase in prevention outcomes in the last year alone, keeping significantly more people in their homes and preventing crises before they unfold.

BCP had worked really closely with private landlords and enhanced the relationship to catch those issues, early services like let's talk, renting, youth, family support and enhanced triage meant that more households than ever were able to remain in their homes or find suitable alternatives.

There was a dramatic fall in the use of bed and breakfast accommodation from over 140 families in B & B’s for well over the statutory 6 week limit to over a year of no families in B & B’s for over 6 weeks. 

 

This was noted as good work but there was still work to do there were still families in who were struggling which was why the strategy was important.

 

The strategy had been very well consulted on with various partners and people with lived experience.  The things that were stated that mattered the most were even earlier intervention, stronger integration with health and wellbeing services and compassionate and consistent support.

 

The strategy set out a clear hopeful direction in which homelessness in BCP became rare, brief and unrepeated. BCP were committed to changing the narrative around homelessness, challenging stigma and building empathy.

 

The Chair reported that the Chair of Health and Adult Social Care O & S reported to him that it was quite high level and didn’t seem mention mental health support.  That ensuring that those with mental health or medical conditions were an essential part of helping people with homelessness and rough sleeping. The Chair agreed that there was not a lot of detail around the homelessness and rough sleeping and was there any scope to include that with the document. It was stated that there was a lot of mentions of health and there had been a constant push from the partnership, partners and organisations.

The delivery plan would be evolved over time and within that health colleagues would help shape some contents and contents of the delivery.

Regarding rough sleeping, the committee were informed that every  ...  view the full minutes text for item 46