We represent and support 500 organisations working with homeless people in the UK
We represent and support 500 organisations working with homeless people in the UK
Today a coalition of four leading charities will call on the government and opposition parties to prevent the most vulnerable in society from falling between the gaps in care services. The Making Every Adult Matter (MEAM) coalition, made up of Clinks, DrugScope, Homeless Link and Mind and supported by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, will say that services often struggle to help people with multiple care needs and that current failings result in inefficient use of public funds and engrained social exclusion that is costly to the individual and society as a whole.
Making Every Adult Matter is today setting out a four point manifesto that seeks to improve the way people with multiple needs are treated and supported. It calls for a Green Paper on multiple needs and for the next government to create a framework in which all local authorities, criminal justice agencies, health services and the voluntary sector must actively cooperate in solving the problem, rather than simply shifting responsibility elsewhere. People with multiple needs experience a combination of issues including substance misuse, mental health problems, homelessness and criminal behaviour, but individual services are often not set up to help people who have more than one problem. Differing priorities and a lack of coordination can mean that people with multiple needs are left to ‘recycle’ around the system, being passed from one service to the next, without ever receiving the overall help they need to make meaningful changes to their lives. Although there has been progress on addressing social exclusion in recent years, specific targets across government still don’t include this group, compounding their exclusion.
To support the manifesto the MEAM coalition is committing itself to supporting a programme of locally based service development, building on the work that is already underway across its 1600 frontline member agencies. Oliver Hilbery, the MEAM Project Director, said: “In every local area, councils, services and the police can list individuals who face multiple needs and exclusions by name. But differing priorities and a lack of coordination can mean that they are passed from service to service, without ever getting the overall help that they need.
“Today’s manifesto is a call to change that for good. A national framework that focuses on greater local cooperation would prevent people from falling through the gaps in services, improve our communities and ultimately be more cost-effective. “We have promised to tackle multiple needs and exclusions by working with our frontline agencies. We are now calling on politicians to make their promise and commit to the manifesto.”
Andrew Barnett, Director of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, said: “The Foundation is committed to assisting individuals to fulfil their potential and contribute to society and this is particularly important for those who currently live at the margins of our communities. We are therefore pleased to be supporting the work of the Making Every Adult Matter coalition.
“The launch of the four-point manifesto presents a real opportunity for government policy to support practical work on multiple needs and exclusions and is a basis from which we can further develop local service responses in the future.”