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Emergency accommodation is supposed to mean anything from a week to six months. But I ended up being there for over a year.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2023

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Summary

When I was 17 I decided I wanted to leave home. I’d been all over the place from around that time. I was at various hostels and at one point I was in assisted housing before I moved back in with family. That didn’t work out, so once I was pregnant I was out in the world alone. I found that if I didn’t have a stable home and I was moving around a lot, it made it hard for me to keep a job.

As a single mother I was fortunate to stay in my borough when I was moved to emergency accommodation. Some people get moved out, so I was lucky in that respect. My accommodation wasn’t excellent. It was a hostel that I was grateful to have, but I was sharing a bathroom with strangers. I had just had a baby and sometimes you had people that were on drugs or people in relationships where there was domestic violence, which made the set-up difficult at times.

Emergency accommodation is supposed to mean anything from a week to six months. But I ended up being there for over a year. I think the council sometimes try to delay the process of moving you on because of the shortage of housing and the resulting backlog.

Eventually, in 2014 we moved to the place where we are now. At first, it was like ‘wow’, because I had a newborn baby and a new job, but both came with a lot of responsibility, plus the addition of a new flat that needed a lot of work. I was grateful but overwhelmed.

I appreciate my area. I feel that there’s a real sense of community and it’s very mixed, so my son gets to interact with different children. His school is only five minutes up the road from us and he has a diverse group of friends. It’s nice for him to grow up in that environment.

At the same time there are a lot of changes that are happening around my area, which is daunting because people don’t know what’s going to happen. There was a recent issue with my estate where they want new buildings.

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Invisible Britain
Portraits of Hope and Resilience
, pp. 36
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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