Focus E15: stories so far #iwd2014

At the end of this post is a list of the stories I’ve done so far on the Focus E15 mothers’ campaign for social housing for all. Will be adding another tomorrow – namely, a report from the West Ham Labour International Women’s Day event where MP Lyn Brown kept screeching that I was “exploitative” because I was filming the Focus E15 mothers. The mothers, meanwhile, kept saying that they wanted me to keep filming them because they needed to have a record of this interface with their MP – because nothing else seems to hold people in power to account.

Interesting day. More on it soon.

Update Sunday March 9:

Here’s some video from the part yesterday when MP Lyn Brown kept screeching that I was “exploitative” because I was filming the Focus E15 women. “Exploitative! Exploitative!” she kept shouting as she put her hand over the camera. “Exploitative! I think we both know what I mean,”she told me. Actually, I didn’t. I really didn’t. I still have no idea and we never got to discuss it, because Brown kept shouting “exploitative! Exploitative!” and her Spad-type person kept holding a notebook up in my face. Then, the Spad person tried to box me in for a while, to tell me that Brown was actually a wonderful woman who made a great contribution. I really wanted a drink. Meanwhile the Focus E15 women told me to please keep filming them. They often ask me to film them, because, they say, they need those records to hold politicians to account. This point can’t be made often enough. As Sam Middleton, one of the Focus E15 mothers said to me yesterday (you’ll see her talking about this in the video from 0:45): “If Lyn Brown feels exploited, that’s her business, but I’m not being funny – we’re all adults here. If I want to be filmed, that’s for me. Private conversations get us nowhere. That’s the only time we’re heard, is when we’re filmed. So.”

This is important. The video and that statement should tell you all you need to know about the faith people have in the political class. It also tells you all you need to know about the political class’ belief that it can and should control people’s responses to austerity. I don’t know if Brown noticed that other people were filming and photographing our exchange on their phones. I don’t know Brown at all. I would have asked her some questions and talked to her if there’d been any way to get a word in. But there wasn’t, which was doubtless the point. That’s the local political scene for you these days. People either bar you from public meetings, which Newham council did a fortnight ago, or they yell and physically try to stop you recording the scene. I can’t see how this works to anyone’s advantage. Even MPs must know that they’re onto a hiding. They look like twats when they carry on like this and they can’t even get their rare vaguely pertinent messages across while they’re trying to shut things down. There was mention yesterday, for example, of Brown finding washing machines for the women who don’t have them in their flats (will be watching to see if she does), but the big moment was lost on me because I was being swatted away with a notebook. Still – on we go. “Exploitative” is actually one of the better names I’ve been called in the last few years. It’s certainly a refreshing change from Cunt.

Control is the thing. These people want to control something that they can’t. They want to control the austerity narrative until the people on the arse end of it go away, or are dispatched out of sight via the benefit cap, or sent out of boroughs on Asbos if they’re homeless, or whatever. But the fact that people can’t house themselves is not going to go away. Neither is the fact that the Focus E15 women, like most people who are on benefits, have been left to fight for basics like housing on their own. For months now, these women – who were all homeless and living in the temporary Focus E15 hostel with their small children – have fought Newham council for social housing. Newham had told the women they’d be sent to live miles out of London and away from the families who’d provide free childcare when the women went into training and work. After months of campaigning, some of the women have been placed in private sector rents in the area. The tenancies are largely short-term and insecure. The women are perfectly aware that in as little as a year’s time (it’s less now for some), they’ll be right back at the beginning – trying to hang onto private rentals that they can’t afford and fighting removal from London and their free childcare.

These women are certainly on their own as far as meaningful political support goes. And that is their point. They’ve got as far as they have, because they’ve made a noise about it. Their campaign for secure social housing goes on. They continue to run it alone. They’re young and they’re on benefits and nobody wants to know. I could ask why local politicians don’t turn out in droves on Saturday to help these women leaflet Stratford about the housing crisis from their Broadway stall. I could ask why local councillors and MPs didn’t all join the women when they tried to deliver their petition for social housing to Boris Johnson last month. The Focus E15 mothers are making a straightforward point. They’re demanding decent social housing for everybody and saying that the private rental sector is impossibly grim and unaffordable. You’d think persons of moment would want to get behind that banner. But they don’t. They want these women to shut up and get out.

Happy International Women’s Day anyway. Mine certainly spoke volumes.

List of articles on Focus E15 to date:

Open Democracy article: Why is middle class feminism so disinterested in women hit by austerity? (interviews with the Focus E15 mothers on their campaign to date)

Newham council runs out of meeting to avoid Focus E15 mothers’ protest

Focus E15 mothers take their petition for social housing to Boris at City Hall

Focus E15 mothers’ battle for social housing: an update

Young mothers occupy Newham council housing offices to demand social housing

Rubbish, mice and mould – good enough for young mums without money

Put this on a banknote: young mothers without money abandoned by the political class

Protest today: stop criminalisation of sex workers. Safety first.

From the English Collective of Prostitutes:

Protest today against raids, evictions of sex workers and criminalisation.
Walkers Court, Soho
Wednesday 26 February, 11am-12pm

A motion by MEP Mary Honeyball to criminalise sex workers’ clients is being voted on in Europe today – Wednesday 26 February.

Lobby your MEP TODAY – Information from the International Committee for the Rights of Sex Workers in Europe here and model letter here:

Additionally, on 3 March, the All Party Parliamentary Group on Prostitution reports and is likely to recommend criminalisation of clients.

Criminalising clients will not stop prostitution, nor will it stop the criminalisation of women.  But it will make it more dangerous and stigmatising for sex workers.

Mass police raids last December against sex workers in Soho have thrown scores of women out of the relative safety of their flats. Premises were closed using laws promoted by Labour women ministers in the name of “gender equality”[i]. But where was the feminist outrage when women were dragged handcuffed in their underwear onto the streets? False claims about trafficking have been used to justify the crackdown.  If the police get away with attacking sex workers in Soho who have such strong and visible support, then arrests and illegality against those of us who work on the street will escalate.

Cuts, benefit sanctions, rising poverty and homelessness have forced more women, particularly mothers, into prostitution. Do feminist politicians have a thought for how we’ll feed our children if they further criminalise prostitution?

Sex workers are fighting the Soho closures. One appeal has been won but other flats remain closed. Local people have rallied to support because they fear the closures are to make way for the gentrification of historic Soho.

Consenting sex is not a crime; we demand the decriminalisation of prostitution. New Zealand decriminalised in 2003 and sex workers report feeling safer and more able to demand their rights. Why not here?

Closure order on sex workers’ Soho flat defeated

Sign the open letter for decriminalisation.

From the English Collective of Prostitutes:

Two sex workers’ flats in Soho, central London were last week re-opened by a judge at Isleworth Crown Court. Judge JW Kingston rejected police evidence that women working in walkup flats in Brewer Street were being controlled or incited into prostitution for gain. He overturned the closure order and directed that the flat could reopen.

Judge Kingston’s decision brought for the first time some common sense to legal cases, which have been rumbling through the courts since mass raids at the beginning of December closed 18 flats. He ruled that: “the furthest the evidence goes is to show that the Appellants used the first and second floor flats for prostitution by arrangement with other sex workers at mutually convenient and agreed times. That does not constitute control within the meaning of Section 53 [of the Sexual Offences Act 2003].”  Continue reading

Why is middle class feminism so disinterested in women hit by austerity?

Open Democracy article by me on the group of homelesss young Stratford mothers who have been battling for places to live. These women and their children have been living in Focus E15, a dirty temporary hostel – for years in some cases. They dare to demand something better and they’ve managed to push Newham council to an extent. Theirs has been an extrarodinary fight – and one that is relevant to all of us who must rent. Housing is a crisis issue for most people, unless they’re rich. Yet a campaign to get a face on a banknote is considered monumentally more important than this grassroots campaign by the political class. I’m guessing it’s considered monumentally more important by people who don’t have to worry about finding a place to live.

“Nobody wanted to make an argument for the rights of young single mothers in the anti-welfare era. Media coverage of the women’s problems was intermittent at best. It was certainly intermittent in comparison with reporting of other recent “women’s” campaigns. I think here, as I usually do, of the extraordinary coverage and endless twitter broadcasting gifted to middle-class feminism’s campaign to have Jane Austen’s face printed on a banknote – banknotes that low-income women in Jasmin’s situation struggled mightily to get their hands on from one day to the next. The banknote campaign – and the opportunistic MPs who supported it, like Stella Creasy – was everywhere in the news last year. It never stopped. Women and children who were directly affected by austerity were nowhere. Standing out in the rain with the women at their stall on Saturdays, it was hard not to long for the day when the likes of the young Focus E15 women were thought worthy of blanket, banknote-type coverage for months and months on end. I suspect that day is a long way off. These women are not politically useful to anyone. Labour won’t back them. Labour won’t fight the welfare corner. It also guns for people who say it should. Just after I began to publish stories about the Focus E15 mothers on my blog, Newham council sent a snooty email to say that officers would no longer communicate with me, because I was reflecting the council’s position unfairly.”

Read the rest here.

Focus E15 mothers take their petition for social housing to Boris…

…who of course wasn’t in to see the women. These people never are.

As many people will know, the Focus E15 women are a group of young mothers, classed as homeless, who have been fighting for decent social housing for all. They’ve been trying to convince Newham council and the East Thames housing association to find them decent social housing in London. They are concerned about being pushed into the highly unstable, unaffordable private rental sector. They are also concerned that to beat the benefit cap, Newham council will send them to live miles away in supposedly cheaper towns. That would remove these young mothers from the families and friends who they rely on and who can provide all-important free childcare when the women go into training and work. Continue reading

Fighting for decriminalisation: talking with the English Collective of Prostitutes

I’ve spent time recently with the English Collective of Prostitutes, talking with the women there about their fight against the criminalisation of sex work.

As readers of this site will know, this is a subject I have some knowledge about. I also feel that we don’t hear enough from sex workers themselves on the topic of decriminalisation. We hear an awful lot from “experts” and interest groups and opinion writers, but not anything like as much as we should from workers themselves. I have never been able to understand why people wouldn’t want to support sex workers in their campaign for decriminalisation and the safest possible working environment. Supporting that campaign does not mean that you support trafficking, which is horrific. It means quite the opposite. It means you support the notion that everyone – everyone – deserves recognition and the protection of the law. So, I’ll soon be posting some of the interviews I’ve done where ECP members talk about the working environment and the rights and protections in law that they rightfully seek. A lot of women do this job and a lot of them are mothers. They need the money. They need a safe working environment in which to get it, especially in this rotten economic environment. Judge that if you will.

I’ll start posting those transcripts in the next few days I think. In the meantime, here is a press release from the ECP about recent raids and attempts to close Soho workplaces.

Press release from the ECP:

“Violence against sex workers is increasing. Tragically, two sex workers have been murdered in London in the past three months. At the same time, the police have stepped up raids, arrests and closures of premises where women are working in relative safety. This is despite senior police officers admitting that: “[police] operations to tackle the trade are “counterproductive” and likely to put the lives of women at risk.”

Eighteen flats in Soho, Central London, have been closed. Most of the women who were evicted are mothers and have now lost their livelihood. Continue reading

Focus E15 young mums’ battle for social housing: an update

Back to Newham now, where the young homeless mothers who’ve been fighting a real battle for secure local social housing have been given an ultimatum by Newham council: they must take 12-month lets in the private rental sector, or they’ll will get no more “help” from the council. The women think if they turn the private-sector lets down, they’ll be considered to have made themselves intentionally homeless. “We have to take them,” the women said on Saturday. “The council says if we don’t, they won’t give us any more help to get housed.” I’d ask the council for a comment on this, except that the press office threw a tantrum a few weeks ago and said it wouldn’t talk to me again. It seems that my earlier stories about the women’s battle for secure social housing and the rotten standards at the hostel they’re living touched some kind of nerve.

Presenting the women with this “short-term private lets” ultimatum is a sneaky move by the council. It breaks the campaign group up by housing the young mothers in far-flung parts of London, away from each other. It also leaves the women and their children very vulnerable to further house moves. In 12 months’ time, when the lets are up, the council can say that the private rents exceed the benefit cap and send the women out of London to live in boroughs where they are not wanted and where there is no work, or family members around to provide childcare. It seems very unlikely that the women will be in private lets in London for the longer term – especially as rents increase and as the benefit cap is lowered even further, as it inevitably will be. If the women have to move again, their kids will have to be moved to new nurseries and schools again. And again and again and again.

This is the problem and future that all renters face – short-term tenancies, skyrocketing rents and no sure place for families to live for more than a few months at a time. That is why the Focus E15 campaign for secure social housing is so important to us all. The Newham quick-fire, private rental solution does not solve a single problem for anyone who must rely on the private rental sector for housing. It does not force the council to build more social housing for all, or to commit to opening up the many boarded-up homes on places like the Carpenters Estate which you can see in the video below. This short-term solution simply breaks up a campaign and shuts down a debate, which is surely the council’s aim.

Anyway. In the video below, you can see some of the many boarded-up flats on Newham’s Carpenters estate and hear the Focus E15 mothers’ views on this:

Residents put up an almighty fight recently to save their flats from council plans to create a UCL campus on the site. Flats on the estate have been boarded up for a very long time though. I asked the council about its plans for those flats and for the estate in general, but as I say, the council refuses point-blank to talk to me about anything. So we’ll have to leave that one hanging and simply look at the video of the boarded-up flats. And make the point again that the real problem here is an absolute lack of will – across the political spectrum – to truly commit to the notion of secure and plentiful social housing for all. Shoving a few campaigners into private lets for a bit won’t change that.

Young mothers occupy Newham council to demand social housing

Updated with new video:

Some video from today’s occupations of the East Thames Housing Association building (and showroom) and Newham council’s housing offices by a group of young homeless mothers who are battling for decent social housing in Newham. The fight these young women are putting up is becoming more and more relevant to anyone who does not have secure housing – which includes a great many people:

Video: young Newham mothers occupy Newham council housing offices

Video two: earlier in the day, the women occupied a showhome inside the East Thames housing association building, where they held a party. There isn’t room for parties at the temporary hostel they live in, so they decided the HA would be a good venue:

As one of the mothers says in the video at the housing office:

“Stop making people homeless. Stop making kids miss school. It’s not fair. You get to go home to your nice homes, while people here are struggling. People are here crying (they were – a woman in the office was crying, because she was homeless and trying to sort that out). They’re stressed, depressed. It’s not right. You’ve got a place here where you’re meant to help people. You’re meant to help people. You’re not helping people.”

That’s it in a nutshell, really.

I have been interviewing this group of young mothers for a while. They are all classed as homeless and they are all fighting a bloody battle with Newham Council for decent social housing in the borough for themselves and their small children.

At the moment, these young women live in Newham’s Focus E15 foyer – a hostel which has about 16 flats for young parents and about 210 flats across the complex. It’s supposed to be temporary accommodation. I’ve written about the concerns the women have about the health standards at the hostel – the mothers say there are rats, mice and problems with mould and ventilation. Some of the children in the hostel are as young as three months. I’m having something of a bloody battle with the council and HA myself about this. More on that topic soon.

The women’s options for permanent housing are not good. They are having to deal with so many of the problems that face people who are either on low incomes, or benefits (surely, too, these must also increasingly be problems for people who are on reasonable incomes. Nobody is securely housed unless they own something freehold).

Their options are these:

The women can try to find social housing in a borough which has 24,000 people on its waiting list and recently changed its allocations policy to prioritise ex-servicepeople and people in work over people not in work. So that isn’t much of an option.

Or they they can hope to be housed in private accommodation – in an era where private landlords like Fergus and Judith Wilson are asking their housing benefit tenants to leave because, as Fergus Wilson loftily informed the Guardian recently: “”All the landlords will tell you that there is so much default now with housing benefit tenants that you are just simply better off with somebody working.” Mothers like Jasmin Stone have told me that they’ve run up big phone bills calling around private landlords and letting agents – to no avail. So that option isn’t much of an option either.

The other option is that Newham will house the women many miles out of the borough – miles away away from the family members who could provide childcare while the women worked. Places like Hastings, or Birmingham, are often suggested as possibilities. Except I wonder if they are. I spoke to Jeremy Birch, leader of Hasting council last week. The facts are that Jeremy Birch is not keen on taking people who are benefits generally. He can’t stop London boroughs housing people in Hastings’ private rental sector, but he made it very clear that he wasn’t happy to know that was happening:

“We’re a deprived community in the south east, who are trying to reduce the amount of benefit dependency in our own borough. While we welcome anyone who wants to come to Hastings to move here, we are not happy that we would be taking further people who were benefit dependent. That is putting extra pressure on the services that we’ve got in the town.”

He also said – and this is important – that the council had specific housing projects which excluded people who were not in work.

I’ve got a lot more to post on this, but I’ll say for now that this is a very important campaign. We all deserve housing – and this campaign is proving that people are going to have to put up a hell of a fight for it. This is an era of monumental inequality and the political class is thumbing its nose at anyone who isn’t part of that class. MPs happily house their horses in heated stables courtesy of the taxpayer and expect taxpayers to fund their tennis court repairs and housing upgrades and sales. They watch a show about people with nothing and encourage the world to laugh. Clean, warm, decent housing is a right – and not just for horses. Councils and Housing Associations should not be surprised to see people turn up in their offices who refuse to leave without an answer.

Another important point: At the occupation, a lot of people who were waiting in the housing offices to hear about their own housing options joined in conversation with these mothers. Connections were made. One woman who’d been waiting in the queue even started to cry – she revealed that she was homeless. Another woman who had a young baby with her said she’d been told she’d be sent to Birmingham, miles away from anyone she knew.

Other people who were waiting in the queue cheered and applauded when the protestors arrived and explained their campaign for housing. So many people are affected by this. People everywhere, with nowhere secure to live.

Rubbish, mice and mould: good enough for young mums without money

Update January 21 2014

In the post below, I described some of the problems that young mums at the temporary Focus E15 hostel have with their accommodation. (These young women are campaigning for decent social housing in Newham borough. You can read more about their fight here). They talked about rubbish, mice and even rats in the Focus E15 hostel that they live in and I saw photographs of trash in the halls and broken sinks as you’ll see below in the original post. The women said that mould was a real problem at Focus E15, as was a lack of ventilation. That concerned me, not least because there are very small children living in that hostel. I could not leave things there.

So, I contacted the East Thames Housing Association, sent them the link to this post and asked if I could have a tour through the hostel with them to see things for myself and discuss some of these issues with them. If they cleaned things up and dealt to problems in anticipation of that visit – then even better. They agreed to that visit, which was good. A meeting was set up for this Monday – me and several officers were due to attend. But then last Friday, East Thames emailed me to say that they were cancelling the visit. I could no longer enter Focus E15. They’d found out that I’d been at the Focus E15 mothers’ occupation of the HA and the council on Friday and had reported on it and that they felt I was part of the campaign. That being the case, they would not take me through the hostel. They thought I’d be biased.

There are a couple of things here. The first is that there were a number of journalists at Friday’s action. Attending a protest does not make you part of a campaign, or allows you in any way to own it. This campaign belongs to the young mothers. Attending a campaign makes you a reporter who is attending a protest and who follows a story closely and who gets to know people who are involved and the things they’re doing. I have certainly spent hours over the past month with the young women of the Focus E15 campaign and gone to meetings and talked to the women as they’ve leafleted and organised – which is what you do when you’re talking to people and getting an understanding of their issues. Once upon a time, when I started out in journalism, that’s exactly what you did. Nobody saw anything strange about it. You spent ages with people affected by policy, rather than with people who wrote policy. Unfortunately, journalists today tend to spend their time with policymakers, not the people who have to live with the fallout from policy decisions. Think about the endless hours that Westminster journalists spend hanging out with MPs, rather than the people who are affected by policy. I’ll be writing a much longer essay about the whole campaign in a little while and that essay will reflect the fact that I’ve spent time with the Focus E15 people through their campaign.

The other point I’d make, though, is that campaigners are exactly the people who should be permitted through the hostel. If you ask me, these hostels should be opened up to regular inspections from housing campaigners – of whom there are a good number in East London – and the people who live there should be allowed to take whoever they like through to raise issues. I really don’t care if the HA wants to call me biased. Fine. I get called plenty worse. And who gives a damn if I am. None of that changes the fact that people have raised serious issues about the living standards little kids are having to tolerate in that hostel and that this needs looking at. Mould and ventilation problems – those things are dangerous. Infants should not be exposed to things like that. At Friday’s occupation, the young mothers raised again the issue of space at the hostel – they say rooms are so small at the hostel that little kids can’t move around and cry to get out. The hostel is only supposed to be temporary accommodation, but some of the mothers and their children have been there for years. There are little kids involved here. Can’t just leave things there.

One suggestion I would make to East Thames is that we reschedule the meeting at Focus E15 and film it. That way, everyone would have an individual record.

————————————————————————————

Original post: January 5 2014.

Since everyone’s talking about single mums and Cameron’s help-to-buy scheme, I thought I’d post a little something about the living conditions of a group of young mothers I’ve been meeting with recently. I thought – let’s just take a moment to inject a bit of reality into this. Let’s take a moment to look at the awful way that politicians of all stripes really treat single mothers who have nothing and need help. Let’s look at the way politicians behave towards young mothers who serve no useful political purpose – young women, say, who’ve had a baby early on, but have no money, no connections and none of the fancy schooling or (publicly-funded) expenses budgets enjoyed by so many of the MPs who judge these young mothers and who encourage everyone else to judge them and even to dob them in to authorities if they want. These mothers are some of the people on benefits who are taking the rap for a recession caused by the financial sector and for the slaughtering of social security that is so championed by politicians across the board. So – let’s take a moment to look at the way that some of these young women and their children live.

The fact is that the young women I’m talking with live in unpleasant places – dirty, mouldy places which, the more I hear about them, sound like the sort of places where small children’s lives are actually at risk. Something needs to be done about this. Probably eff-all will be, given that commentators widely hold that Cameron has won the welfare debate (they say this for all the world as though a two-sided debate has been had) and politicians across the board are too frightened to speak up for the welfare state and/or people who need it. Nonetheless, we press on. We must press on. The group of young mothers I met with yesterday – all classed as homeless and all broke – are fighting a bloody battle with Newham Council for decent, clean housing in the borough for themselves and their small children. Many, apparently, will think they don’t deserve that housing, or housing at all – but that line is rubbish. From MPs, it is monumental rubbish. This is an era where MPs happily house their horses in heated stables courtesy of the taxpayer and expect taxpayers to fund their tennis court repairs and housing upgrades and sales. This is an era in which a career ego like Iain Duncan Smith is permitted to trash whole chunks of the exchequer via his useless Universal Credit “project”. So – the hell with the “scroungers” rhetoric. Clean, warm, decent housing is a right – and not just for horses. It is certainly a right as far as small children are concerned.

Anyway, at the moment, these young women, who I’ve written about before, live in Newham’s Focus E15 foyer – a hostel which has about 16 flats for young parents and about 210 flats across the complex. It’s supposed to be temporary accommodation. Some of the women and their children have lived there for several years.

And what a charming place it sounds. Last time I met with them, the women said it was “like a prison” – visitors must show ID before going in and visiting hours are restricted. Rooms are very small with folding-out beds and damp is a real problem. And there’s more. Yesterday when we met, I was shown pictures of rubbish piled up outside one woman’s front door and of sinks hanging off walls under which small children crawl.

Here are some of the pictures – they’re a bit dark, but fairly clear.

Here’s one of the sinks in the room coming away from the wall:

Image of sink coming away from the wall

Here’s the gap between the wall and the sink in more detail:

Gap between sink and wall

Here’s some of the rubbish piled up outside one young woman’s front door.

Rubbish piled up at door

Of even greater concern is the damp, mould and rodents the women describe. Says Rachel, who is 20 and the mother of a three-month-old son who has already had colds and a chesty cough: “There’s no ventilation in the toilet… there’s mould upon mould. We’ve had mice and [we’re] constantly getting damp. There are even rats. [The rubbish ends up by my door] because of where the bin chute is. Half the time they never unlock it, so people just pile their rubbish outside. My door is here and the bin chute is there.”

“The smell is disgusting and it is really, really hard to live there. We try and stay out all day,” says 19-year-old Jasmin Stone.

So. I put it to you that such conditions are dangerous for young children – extremely dangerous, even. I also put it to you that nobody has the right to impose those dangers on infants – particularly MPs who blow wads of taxpayers’ cash on horses’ paddocks and upgrades to flipped homes, or even, say, Newham councillors who piss £111m away on new office buildings which served primarily as Olympic vanity projects. You will understand why Austerity has become synonymous with Elimination in many minds. Before Christmas, I asked East Thames housing association (the HA which manages Focus E15) if I could visit the hostel. I wanted to see the place and conditions for myself. The answer was a resounding No, because staff and residents were under pressure. I’m raising these issues, though, because they need to be raised. They were raised with me before Christmas and again with supporters and campaigners yesterday. I post the details here, because a real response is required. Not a defensive response – a constructive response that everyone can work with is needed. Continue reading

Put THIS on a banknote: young mothers without money abandoned by the chattering classes

This is a story about the struggle that young mothers without money have for the basics in an era where they and their children are stereotyped, written off as scroungers and not considered deserving – across the political spectrum. The women in this story are fighting for decent places to live.

The young woman in this video is Jasmin Stone. She is 19 and the mother of 17-month-old Safia.

Jasmin is also (this will sound patronising, but here it is anyway) an impressive organiser and a determined one. She needs to be and so she is. Neither she nor her daughter have a secure place to live. Jasmin and a number of other young mothers in Stratford are fighting for decent local housing for themselves and their babies. They’re doing it in the face of supreme indifference from the political class. They say that local councillors have been unhelpful and even dismissive. Their feeling is that Newham council wants them out of the borough.

Media coverage of this sort of issue has been intermittent at best. It has certainly been intermittent in comparison with coverage of other “women’s” campaigns this year. I think here of the extraordinary coverage given to middle-class feminism’s campaign to have a face printed on banknotes that will surely soon be obsolete anyway. The coverage that campaign got ahead of some of the monumental problems women that are dealing with in austerity amazed me. Sure – cover that campaign and the threats campaigners received, but what about the horrors that women who aren’t on twitter, or who aren’t on twitter all the time, are dealing with? Why aren’t their wars being fought with that kind of backing? Where’s the outrage for them? I realise that criticising the banknote campaign and coverage is about as socially acceptable as piddling in the altar wine – but really. I long for the day when the likes of the young women on the Stratford mothers’ campaign are gifted that sort of blanket coverage. I guess it is harder to win political and media love when you’re young, a mother, on benefits for now, needing a bit of help to get things on track and politically useful to nobody. If you’re a mother and want a warm place to live, be a horse with a foal and move in with Nadhim Zahawi.

Anyway.

The Stratford women have a problem. They have a real problem. Young, on benefits, wanting work and classed as homeless, they’re fighting eviction from the hostel they live in. They’re also fighting to convince Newham council that they and their children deserve housing in the borough – not hundreds of miles away. As I understand it (I’ve asked Newham council for a statement on this, but four days later, I’m sick of waiting) Newham council has said that a lack of local social housing means they may be moved out of the borough to places like Hastings – absolute miles and an expensive train journey away from friends and family childcare support in Newham (most of the women I’ve been speaking to for these stories were born and raised in the area).

Let’s start at the beginning. At the moment, Jasmin and her fellow campaigners live in Newham’s Focus E15 foyer – a hostel which has about 16 flats for young parents. There are about 210 flats in the whole complex and a variety of people living in them. They’re not just young parents. The women say that they were only supposed to be living in Focus E15 for around six to eight months, but that some have been there for several years. Life in the hostel doesn’t sound particularly easy. I know that we live in an era where anyone who isn’t rich and connected is supposed to be grateful for any home and/or state help at all – and the fact is that these women do express gratitude for the accommodation – but it is still a place they have mixed feelings about.

One of their number describes as “like a prison.” As I understand it (I asked East Thames Housing Association for a statement on this as well, but four days later, I’m sick of waiting) Focus E15 is a “foyer” – a variation on a social experiment-type idea where people get a place to live if they attend mandatory lifeskills programmes (whatever they are).

But – “it’s horrible,” Jasmin says. She’s lived in the hostel for about 18 months. Before that, she was homeless and sofa-surfing when and where she could. She was given a place in Focus E15 about a month before her daughter was born. Her daughter is nearly 18 months old now. She worries about staying there as her child grows. “It’s not fit for a mother and a baby. Its really small and there’s no space for them to move around. There’s damp and repairs don’t get done. There’s other people there that haven’t got children. There’s 24-hour security. You can only have people visiting you after 12pm in the day and they have to leave by 10pm.”

“You’ve got numerous problems,” says Rachel, 20. Rachel has a three-month-old son. “You get limited hot water. I have to wash my dishes up in cold water, because if I wash up in hot water, then I won’t get a bath even with a baby.” All the women I speak to say that dampness is a problem. “There’s mould,” Rachel says. “[My son] had the flu and he’s had a chesty cough, so it’s not good.” (I asked the East Thames Housing Association, which manages FocusE15, if I could go in and have a look around as I wanted to see things for myself and expand this crucial part of things out, but the HA said No because “the staff and residents were under a lot of pressure.” That was the only question I asked that they were able to respond to immediately).

So. Those are some of the perceptions people have of the place . Small. Damp. Cramped. Rigid. Still, Focus E15 has become a home of sorts for these young mothers. That’s why, earlier this year, they were horrified to receive eviction notices. Earlier this year,(again as I understand it – see earlier notes) Newham council made a decision to cut about £41,000 from Supporting People funding for the women’s flats. Apparently, East Thames HA said that the funding cut meant that they couldn’t afford to pay for support services for the women anymore. That being the case, the women would have to leave.

The notice could not have come at a worse time for some. “When I first got the phone call, I was eight months pregnant,” Rachel says. “I just got a phone call saying – can you come to a meeting to discuss you moving on?”

But here’s the problem. Where would they go? Where is a very young mother with an eviction notice and no money likely to end? As I talk to the women, I find that the answer from the council seemed to be “private rental if you can find it and/or miles away from Newham.” Miles Away From Newham seemed to be key here. In Patrick Butler’s story here, Newham council seems to claim that a shortage of social housing the borough (I’ll be looking into whose fault that is over the next little while) means that the mothers may be housed as far away as Birmingham, Manchester or Hastings (a trend that doesn’t thrill Hastings worthies, as you can read here). Patrick’s story also indicates that Newham council recently changed its housing allocation policy to give servicepeople and “working” families housing priority – ahead of single mothers (an issue one mother of one on of the Focus E15 women raised with me as well). That tells you plenty about the place that young mothers now occupy in political minds – and of the political view of motherhood as “non work” and of children as fripperies. As for private rental – forget it. You’ll see Jasmin saying in the video that she spent several days ringing round a list of landlords and rental agents the council gave her – to no avail. She repeatedly came up against a No DSS line. And when she got one property, a working couple was able to undercut her, because they came in and paid the deposit.

“They don’t want people on benefit,” Rachel says. “Personally I don’t want to stay on benefits. I want to go out to work, but like it is a struggle because there are hardly any jobs, so we’re kind of in the middle. We want to go to work, but we can’t go to work. Childcare would be so expensive. With me, if I was still living locally, my childcare would be my parents, but if I’m hundreds of miles away, I’m basically stuck.” Rachel wants to be a teaching assistant. She just needs a place to live and some help to do it. She says that she did not plan to get pregnant. We’re returning to a time where women without money are punished utterly for that.

Adora Chilaisha, 19, wants to sort out housing for herself and her son first, and then start looking for a job, “because all of this housing and stuff is just difficult. People need to get a job, but they need a house and a base.”

“We had the meeting on the Monday gone,” Jasmin says, “and they basically said that they don’t know where the properties are. We’ve been to see the Mayor, Robin Wales, and he was really negative about everything. He said to us that he was cross with our campaign. He just didn’t seem to help and he said in reality there’s no housing.”

——————-

So. I’ll be writing more about this in the New Year – and A LOT more in general with women who are fighting cuts and misogyny with little support from the Haves. Suffice to say for now that I find the bias that young mothers and single mothers face disgraceful. Read some of the snide remarks about birth control and “such generous benefits for single mothers” under this story. We’ve all read about the pressures and invasive questions that single mothers must deal with to prove that they are entitled to benefits. Adora says that the DWP insists she is in a relationship with her baby’s father, although she isn’t.

This is all a bit “Fallen Women Have Made Their Beds And Must Lie On Them” for me. All the young women I talked to for this story want to work and get things going. Rachel, as we’ve seen, wants to work as a teaching assistant. Jasmin was studying for childminding qualifications when she got pregnant and she wants to set up a home-based childminding service.

It’s clear that Jasmin has great organisational skills. She set up the fightback campaign when the first eviction notices came through. Now the group has a facebook page, a petition and a weekly stall on the Stratford Broadway. I spent several hours at the stall last Saturday. The women had set up facepainting for kids and Christmas music. They took turns on the mic and approached shoppers with their petition. They engaged a lot of people as they explained their housing problems and got a lot of people to sign their petition. There was something useful and important going on there. It was certainly a lot more useful and important than Zahawi fleecing the taxpayer to warm a stable for his horses. Letting that guy off the hook while other people can’t find decent homes for their children and are living in damp places is criminal in my book. So is Oliver Letwin charging the taxpayer for his tennis court repairs. So is George Osborne’s charging the taxpayer for a horse’s paddock. Those people are the out-of-control scroungers. Pity there’s no politicial opposition to them.

One last observation – it’s not the fact that women should be good enough to appear on a banknote that is the issue here. It’s the fact that appearing on a banknote is ALL that we’re good enough for. We’re obviously not good enough for decent housing, public services, decent places for our kids and equal pay.

Et cetera.

See you in the New Year.