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    5 commenti

    1. Mccobsta on

      > The number of asylum seekers being housed in hotels rose slightly to 32,059 in the year to June, according to Home Office data.

      > This was higher than when Labour came to power, but well below a peak of 56,000 in September 2023 under the Conservatives.

      > Meanwhile, a record 111,000 asylum applications were made to the UK in the same year – a 14% increase from the previous year – but the government is processing more cases than before the general election.

      Something that many people forget is people aren’t in them by choice they’re stuck In limbo as their claims are being processed, the article says that more are getting done under the current gov and yet it still dosent appear to be going quick enough.

      We do need some way to house people whilst their claims are being processed to see if they can claim asylum, which for what is a question not many have answers for

    2. baldy-84 on

      Of course they are. These asylum hotels are a negative in every possible dimension for the places they’re dumped into. It’s all costs, and no benefits. The only people likely to be happy about it are the hotel owners who get a guaranteed income.

    3. rustyb42 on

      Have they tried removing hotel licenses from millionaires who are making shit tons of cash off this?

    4. evolveandprosper on

      Councils still intending to squander public money on unwinnable law suits at a time when they are already having to make spending cuts to the services that they offer due to shortfalls in funding. That isn’t putting their constituents first, it’s expensive posturing.

    5. CurtisInCamden on

      As a single British male who has previously suffered hardship with no hope of free government accomodation and food, this prioritisation system seems very discriminatory.

      Sure with infinite money everyone could get free housing but there isn’t so why do those who paid criminal gangs to get here get top priority?

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