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Supporting people with No Recourse to Public Funds Good practice in homelessness services

Supporting people with No Recourse to Public Funds Good practice in homelessness services. Tasmin Maitland, Head of Innovation and Good Practice tasmin.maitland@homelesslink.org.uk @tasmin_igp. Refugees have recourse to public funds! Refugee status Humanitarian protection

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Supporting people with No Recourse to Public Funds Good practice in homelessness services

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  1. Supporting people with No Recourse to Public FundsGood practice in homelessness services • Tasmin Maitland, Head of Innovation and Good Practice • tasmin.maitland@homelesslink.org.uk • @tasmin_igp

  2. Refugees have recourse to public funds! • Refugee status • Humanitarian protection • Discretionary leave • Indefinite leave to remain • usually same entitlement to public funds as UK citizens • and able to work • although, increasingly, discretionary leave is awarded with NRPF • www.homeless.org.uk/effective-action/refugees

  3. The issue • NRPF refers to people who are subject to immigration control and have no entitlement to welfare benefits or public housing • High risk of homelessness and destitution • No access to mainstream housing, welfare benefits • No / limited access to employment • Hidden homeless • Mistrust of statutory and voluntary agencies • Few specialist services • Generic services reluctant to engage – assume nothing can be done

  4. Who has no recourse to public funds? • Asylum seekers • asylum claim in process, Home Office Asylum Support • reached the end of the legal process and been refused • Undocumented or ‘irregular’ migrants • entered without a visa • stayed after visa expiry • other immigration irregularities • Documented or ‘regular’ migrants with no income • entered with visa, loss of income due to change in circumstances • Migrants who do not have the right to reside • includes non-EEA migrants and some EEA nationals • Migrants who do not pass the habitual residence test • includes returning UK citizens

  5. It is legal to support ‘irregular’ migrants • It is Home Office Immigration Enforcement’s role to take action where necessary, not the role of charities. • Even when a client has absconded (i.e. evaded Home Office reporting, detention or deportation) there is no obligation on services to contact the Home Office and report them.

  6. Assessment & Support • Return to ‘country of origin’ • Regularise immigration status to remain in the UK legally • Start or re-start a claim for asylum • Get support to alleviate destitution

  7. Assessment & Support • Check status, collect information, source translation • Explain all the options at the start • Legal aid • Working with Home Office Immigration • Home Office financial support: • Section 95: active asylum claims • Section 4: hardship claims • Accommodation: • Specialist services • Voluntary sector – night shelters, SWEP, spare room schemes, hostels, supported housing etc • Local Authority / Social Services / Mental Health

  8. Funding • Statutory sources: • Home Office Asylum Support • Local Authority Homelessness Grant • Social Services • Mental Health Act • Domestic Violence (Local Authority) • Voluntary sector: • Mixed funding streams for bed space allocation • Grants and donations • Challenging ‘contract culture’

  9. Resources • Homeless Link guidance: • www.homeless.org.uk/effective-action/nrpf • www.homeless.org.uk/effective-action/refugees • www.homeless.org.uk/effective-action/trafficking • www.homeless.org.uk/effective-action/EEAresponseandoffer • www.homeless.org.uk/effective-action/reconnectingroughsleepers • www.homeless.org.uk/effective-action/EEAentitlements • Other useful links: • www.nrpfnetwork.org.uk • www.lawcentres.org.uk • www.asylumaid.org.uk • www.ilpa.org.uk • tasmin.maitland@homelesslink.org.uk

  10. Choices Refugee Action’s Services Support and Advice to Asylum Seekers UNHCR Gateway Protection Programme for Refugees Refugee Action is a independent national charity working to enable migrants to build new lives. With more than 30 years’ experience, we empower refugees, asylum seekers and migrants by providing confidential, impartial and non-directive advice. Assisted Voluntary Return Policy and Campaigning

  11. Choices Model of Advice Impartial, non-directive & independent Empower clients to make their own informed decision • Confidential • No personal details need be given, nor will any be passed on to 3rd parties (including UKBA), in order to obtain information and advice. • Client Centred • Explore all options available to client • Life in UK • Legal avenues (OISC 2)

  12. Choices Motivation of Return Pull Factors • Change of government • Peace agreement • Family Illness • Death/bereavement • Offer of employment • Marriage • Partner and family ask to return • Homesickness Push Factors • Refusal of asylum/appeal • Time waiting for decision • Refusal of a friend/family member • Poor accommodation/Destitution • Limited access to legal advice • Unable to seek employment • Language difficulties • Isolation/loneliness • Cultural differences/way of life

  13. Choices Assisted Voluntary Return Programmes • Assisted Voluntary Return for Irregular Migrants programme (AVRIM) • Voluntary Assisted Return and Reintegration Programme (VARRP) • Assisted Voluntary Return for Families and Children Programme (AVRFC)

  14. Choices Eligibility Criteria • Irregular Migrants • Asylum Seekers or refused Asylum Seekers • Migrants with Discretionary Leave to Remain • Not eligible if: • Subject to on going criminal proceedings in the UK • Received prison sentence in UK which adds up to 12 months or more (FRS) • Removal Directions issued

  15. Choices Assisted Voluntary Return Programmes • Our 3 programmes offer: • Flight and onward travel to final destination • Assistance with obtaining Travel Documents • Reintegration planning • Assistance at the airport • In addition financial assistance is provided to: • Asylum Seekers and migrants with Discretionary Leave to Remain - up to £1500 • All families and unaccompanied minors – up to £2000 per family member • Irregular Migrants -vulnerability payment up to £1000 in exceptional circumstances

  16. Choices Client Journey

  17. Choices Safeguarding Policies • Physical and Mental Health Needs • Victims of Trafficking (NRM, Salvation Army, First Responder) • Domestic Violence • High Risk Countries • Unaccompanied Minors (Best Interest Assessment/Social, CFAB)

  18. Choices Assistance by our Overseas Partners • Algeria • Bangladesh • Bolivia • Brazil • China • Ghana • India • Iraq • Jamaica • Malawi • Mauritius • Mongolia • Nigeria • Pakistan • South Africa • Sri Lanka • Uganda • Zimbabwe • Meet and Greet at Airport • Reintegration payments • Advice and assistance • Tailored reintegration packages

  19. Choices How to contact Choices Clients can call us Freephone on: 0808 800 0007 We have multilingual Leaflets and posters available Drop-in Sessions: Mondays & Wednesdays 10am – 12pm 2pm – 4pm Or visit the Choices website: www.choices-avr.org.uk

  20. Choices Personal Contact Details Aftaar Malik AftaarM@refugee-action.org.uk Mobile: 07795300766 Choices Freephone Number: 08088000007 Referrals: ChoicesDutyLondon@refugee-action.org.uk

  21. Accommodating People with No Recourse to Public Funds Set up Boaz Trust in 2004 To provide accommodation and holistic support for destitute asylum seekers Currently supporting 78 people: 58 refused asylum seekers with NRPF and 20 refugees.

  22. Accommodating People with No Recourse to Public Funds NACCOM began in 2005 Network of organisations accommodating destitute asylum seekers and migrants Currently 31 projects from Brighton to Glasgow July 2013 there were 374 accommodated naccom.org.uk/news report - “Tackling homelessness and destitution”

  23. Accommodating People with NRPF – The Challenges Not mainstream: against the tide Hard to fund (especially statutory): no rents or HB Not profitable Long-term sustainability The numbers with NRPF are huge!

  24. Accommodating People with NRPF – Solutions Think outside the box Schemes will be ethos-driven Quality staff working for less Shared resources Working with people of goodwill Less statutory = more resilient

  25. Accommodating People with NRPF – Schemes Hosting: spare rooms in private houses Night shelters Religious orders / communities

  26. Accommodating People with NRPF – HousingSchemes Rented for NRPF Asylum Link Merseyside Private Leased Boaz Trust Vicarages / Presbyteries Arimathea Trust Housing Associations Hope Housing Rented Mixed Open Door NE

  27. Accommodating People with NRPF – Considerations There must be a way out of NRPF There must be wide support, or staff and volunteers will burn out Good communications are essential Campaigning is also important Funding will always be needed but seek sustainability

  28. Accommodating People with NRPF – Conclusion It can be done! It requires determination and innovation Ultimately there has to be a political solution

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