Ukrainian families become homeless in Edinburgh

A total of 22 Ukrainian refugee households in Edinburgh have become homeless since arriving in the country.

New figures have revealed the challenges faced by some displaced families trying to find  stable accommodation after fleeing their homes following the Russian invasion more than a year ago.
The council said in most instances of refugees presenting as homeless they have arrived without having secured a place to stay.
Council leader Cammy Day laid the blame on the Scottish Government, saying its scheme for housing Ukrainians hadn’t been “fully thought through.”
He added work was ongoing to find “longer term solutions.”
A total of 22 displaced Ukrainian households have sought help from Edinburgh Council’s homelessness services in the last year, a freedom of information request by the Local Democracy Reporting Service found.
Of those, 21 have been placed in temporary accommodation and four families have since been provided with permanent housing.
Homelessness has been rising over the winter amid “big housing challenges” the council said, adding the number of cases which relate to displaced Ukrainians “is very low.”
The local authority said this “tends to be people arriving without having secured a place to stay” or “people moving on from host accommodation and struggling to find somewhere suitable in the private rented sector and again needing temporary accommodation.”
It added they “are not sleeping rough” despite being classed as homeless.
The UK Government’s Homes for Ukraine scheme allowed people to offer spare rooms to refugees in the wake of the conflict, with over 1,000 Edinburgh residents signing up.
A ‘Super Sponsor’ scheme subsequently launched by the Scottish Government removed the need for applicants to be matched with a host before arriving in the country.
However, this was paused in July due to a shortage of suitable accommodation to “ensure that those displaced people who are already here, and those who will arrive in the coming months, will be safe, secure and supported for as long as they need, after the dangers they have faced at home” according to the government.
The scheme is yet to be started up again.
Councillor Day said: “We continue to welcome Ukrainians to rebuild their lives here in Edinburgh. This is their home and we are incredibly proud to support them.
“Unfortunately, the Scottish Government scheme to provide accommodation to everyone who arrives in Scotland hasn’t been fully thought through. For instance, we’ve found that some families fleeing war haven’t always secured a safe place to stay in advance. In other cases they need to move on from their initial host accommodation but Edinburgh’s housing pressures are well known.
“It’s with regret that a few people have found themselves facing homelessness but we will do everything within our means to support them. We’re working with government to try to find longer term solutions.”

by Donald Turvill, Local Democracy Reporter
The Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) is a public service news agency. It is funded by the BBC, provided by the local news sector (in Edinburgh that is Reach plc (the publisher behind Edinburgh Live and The Daily Record) and used by many qualifying partners. Local Democracy Reporters cover news about top-tier local authorities and other public service organisations.

The Scottish Parliament