And so to the Gee Street Court House for my stint as Duty
Solicitor, to represent any tenant without a lawyer in the undefended
possession list. A list where sometimes there are as little as five minutes a
case for the District Judges to decide on who must stay, and who must go, and
will live to fight another day.
Alberta has an eviction listed in two hours. A single parent
who has had serious abdominal surgery this summer, she has been advised to come
off her Jobseekers Allowance (JSA) to claim Employment and Support Allowance
(ESA). She is then failed for ESA, told to go back to JSA, then promptly
advised by benefit officers to reclaim ESA- which is again refused, apparently
when she was having surgery.
The Judge stays the warrant for 2 months.
Bea was rehoused after being shot twice. She used to work
with young offenders, more recently as a teaching assistant through an agency.
Her income is unstable and in school holidays she is forced to claim Universal
Credit. The shiny new benefit that insists on sending you your Housing Benefit
(HB) directly to you, not your landlord, every month not every week. The theory
is that people with proper jobs get paid monthly and this will teach Bea proper
budgeting skills. Yet hers is a weekly tenancy and she is paid by the week,
when there is work.
“I wish I had never claimed Universal Credit “ says Bea, who
offers to cash in her pension.
Judge and Housing Officer feel sorry and embarassed and
case is adjourned generally on payment of rent plus 5 pounds a week. As she
leaves, Bea promises to pay off her arrears once the compensation for her
injuries arrives- should it arrive.
Charlie worked as bartender and a cashier, always on the
edge. He fell apart after he was assaulted and has just gone onto sickness
benefits. After waiting for 3 hours he finally has to leave due to an anxiety attack.
His housing officer is late and apologetic. There has been a screw-up at head
office.
The housing officer agrees to adjourn the hearing for 2 weeks
while Housing Benefit adjusts to Charlie’s recently awarded ESA. While we wait
to get on he tells me that he is in despair, because the new Housing Act is the
death knell for social housing.
Feeling mildly cheerful at only 3 cases I jump on the 55 bus
and head back to the office. The sun is up, the air is clear, what could
possibly go wrong?
Then I am hit by a blizzard of homelessness.
Danny has lived for years in a fog of mental illness,
substance abuse and domestic violence. Every time she has a kid the Council
takes the child away. Incredibly, the Council does not think she is vulnerable,
so she will be on the street tomorrow. Time to get a Judicial Review cranked
up.
Eddy, who is almost 60, interrupts me. She has had a thyroid
removed, is diabetic, but does not yet inject insulin, hears voices and is long
term depressed. She is on ESA, a fairly stringent benefit that tests functional
impairment. The Council says she is not vulnerable, and she will be on the
streets quite soon.
Freda is a single mum who has recently given birth. As a
European she is required to work to claim Tax Credits and housing. Yet despite
her best efforts her zero hours contracts fail to give her the paperwork the
Council wants to verify her activities, so she and her baby will be homeless on
Friday.
Gary and his family were evicted the day before yesterday.
He suffers from mental illness and relies on local services. His kids are in
local schools. Yet the emergency accommodation offered is outside London.
Terrified of being uprooted, he refuses. The Council appears to have closed his
case and will do nothing more to help. The Supreme Court says this is the wrong
approach, yet it happens every day.
Helga was found intentionally homeless when she realised
that her landlord was going to have her home repossessed because he could not
keep up with the mortgage. She kept the
rent moneys so that she could rent somewhere else but could not find a landlord
prepared to help benefit claimants, even with the nest egg. She is worried that
social workers will take her kid into care in 5 days time because she is
homeless.
India left care and started to work in various nurseries.
Tragically this success story foundered when due to the various changes in her
jobs, the long hours, the delayed HB assessments, she lost the plot, had a
nervous breakdown, fell into rent arrears and was evicted. Having been found
intentionally homeless by the Council, she may risk her own child being taken
into care. She will be homeless in the next few days also.
Jamil worked 30 years in Sainsbury’s and then became too ill
to carry on. He’s 60 with various ailments, high blood pressure, depression. He
paid into the system all his life and did nothing wrong. Not vulnerable enough
it seems. Yet, at the last minute, the Council offers him sheltered housing.
Problem is, the offer hasn’t come though yet, and his temporary accommodation was
terminated yesterday.
As I foolishly wander by reception Kerry grabs me. Her
marital home was sold 8 years ago after mortgage arrears arose, but there was
substantial equity left after the mortgage was paid off. She has been homeless,
she tells me, for those 8 years because the lending Company have tied her up
with paperwork ever since.
All in one damn day. At this point my brain shuts down and I
have to leave the rest of the alphabet until tomorrow.
What conclusions can be drawn from a single day?
Is it that I hate the various Councils who have made palpably
inhumane decisions about the vulnerability of sick people and are prepared to
put them on the streets? Not really. Funding cuts mean there are fewer people
working in those Councils, and diminishing properties in London for people of
little means. Yet I wish that the wealthier leafy suburbs of West London would
stop dumping poor people in East London, abnegating all responsibility, and
then turning to their voters with a big smile and telling their voters that the
reason that they have lower Council Tax is that they are more efficient. More
efficient at turning a blind eye to the disabled, perhaps.
Is it that there are more evictions and more homeless problems
but less lawyer to help? Yes. The Legal Aid cuts have meant that in every
single one of the cases that I have mentioned a loss of service for people with
money problems have pushed the household into homelessness. Yet even though
Legal Aid is still there to prevent the roof over your head, fewer lawyers want
to do it. The warhorses retire. The colts shy away.
Is it that poor people and people of modest means are being
forced out of London? Yes. Those of you who believe that this is healthy expression
of the free market, consider. Where will the bartenders and cleaners you rely
on live? When you have a stroke, who will change your bedpan?
Is it that Universal Credit is the panacea? No. The
machinery so far has transferred HB applications to the Department of Work and
Pensions, who have lost every letter that I have written. This does not
look promising.
Is it that the Housing Act will fundamentally wreck social
housing? Yes. Council Housing will be decimated, which is an expression that is
almost always used wrongly. Think 10% of Council Stock being sold off every year
without any replacements for those who need homes.
Am I in despair? No.
Against all the odds, with 3 solicitors leaving and awaiting
replacements, with our debt adviser breaking his leg at our front door, with
our administrator Bella injuring her knee collecting the DX, we have something
special.
We have the volunteers. Angharad who was hit by a car on her
way to issue a Judicial Review, but issued. Justin, who helped us win 3 asylum
cases in one day. Aniko, who persuaded the Council not to call the police when
Mrs Angry came to discuss her rent arrears, then got at 3,000 backdated benefit
claim. Onuka, who holds the fort.
Welcome to London, the most affluent city on Earth. Welcome to the Jungle.