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Vulnerable people ‘set up to fail’ in Birmingham’s streets of unregulated ‘supported’ housing

1 day ago
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In just four years, John Freeman has lived in about 30 different “exempt” accommodation properties in Birmingham, his stay in each place frequently breaking down without support for his mental health and his addictions.Use of exempt accommodation, a type of unregulated supported accommodation for vulnerable people, has soared across the country in recent years, particularly in Birmingham which now has about 30,000 units.“It’s terrible.Putting people with mental health problems in a house of people with mental health problems with no supervision is not helping anyone,” the 37-year-old said.“They say they’re going to do this and that, but as soon as they get you in there, they’re not interested.

There’s no support, so you just end up moving from place to place.“They’re setting people up to fail.The whole thing is just a money-making scheme.”Freeman lives in Pershore Road, in Selly Park, which has become saturated with exempt accommodation – 42% of the properties here are now exempt housing, many having previously been student houses.A campaign group estimates that there are 258 people living in 55 exempt accommodation properties concentrated in this small area, approximately 12% of the local population.

On this road and others nearby, landlords are snapping up cheap terrace houses and converting them from family homes into six- to nine-bedroom properties, cramming bedrooms into attics and extensions,They can then lease these to exempt accommodation providers, who can charge higher rents through housing benefit,But many of these supposedly supported houses come with little support – Freeman said someone came to check on him once a week but he was otherwise left to fend for himself in a house where he was often kept awake all night by people taking drugs and banging on the walls,“You put people with all different conditions in one house with basically no supervision, so obviously there’s going to be conflict,” he said,Sarah*, 32, moved into nearby exempt accommodation after fleeing 13 years of domestic abuse, and said she was distressed by the environment she was forced to live in, which stopped her from being able to move on from her trauma.

“I couldn’t sleep because people would be banging on my door asking me for money,” she said,“They shouldn’t be putting us in homes with drug addicts and alcoholics, we’ve all gone through abuse in different ways,”She sought help from Christ Church Selly Park, across the road, where volunteers said the past few years had been a steep learning curve about how exempt accommodation worked, and why people were not being given enough support,“Often people will just arrive having been sent here by the authorities, and some of them have literally nothing, just the clothes they’re in and a one-way bus ticket to Pershore Road,” said the Rev Ben Green,The church has started stocking emergency bags of food to help new arrivals, and volunteers have undertaken training on how best to help people while maintaining professional boundaries – they don’t hand out money, but they will buy people bus tickets.

“We’re mainly just here to try to be nice to people, to love them, but we don’t have experience of social work and, actually, the level of support some people need is far more than we can offer.But then we’re stuck because we know they’re not getting it from somewhere else,” said Green.One local resident and campaigner, Chris Hasler, pointed to a two-bedroom family home on his street that had been converted into a seven-bedroom exempt accommodation property.The owners had lowered the ceilings to squeeze in more rooms without needing an extension.He said there had been a sharp increase in antisocial behaviour, including drug dealing and violence, and the area was now in the top 10% in the country for crime, according to the latest English Indices of Deprivation.

People had been evicted from the homes and ended up sleeping rough nearby, and residents were concerned the area could soon be irreversibly transformed by the high concentration of poorly run homes,“Two years ago there was none of this sort of stuff on the street but it’s really building up,This is the worry with all these delays to the legislation – there’s a tipping point and then how do you ever get the street back to family homes?” he said,Hasler said although residents were frustrated at the problems these properties brought, they were more concerned about the people living in them,“These are vulnerable people.

They’ve got to live somewhere.But it’s how we manage it.They need to be getting the care for their own benefit and for the benefit of the community,” he said.*Names have been changed to protect anonymity.
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The Guide #223: From surprise TV hits to year-defining records – what floated your boats this year

Merry Christmas – and welcome to the last Guide of 2025! After sharing our favourite culture of the year in last week’s edition, we now turn this newsletter over to you, our readers, so you can reveal your own cultural highlights of 2025, including some big series we missed, and some great new musical tips. Enjoy the rest of the holidays and we’ll see you this time next week for the first Guide of 2026!“Get Millie Black (Channel 4), in which Tamara Lawrance gives a powerhouse performance as a loose-cannon detective investigating a case in Jamaica. The settings are a tonic in these dreary months, and the theme song (Ring the Alarm by Shanique Marie) is a belter. But be warned: the content of the final, London-set episode goes to some dark places.” – Richard Hamilton“How good was Dying For Sex! This drama about a terminally ill woman embarking on an erotic odyssey was so funny and sad and true and daring

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My cultural awakening: a Turner painting helped me come to terms with my cancer diagnosis

My thyroid cancer arrived by accident, in the way life-changing things sometimes do. In May of this year, I went for an upright MRI for a minor injury on my arm, and the scan happened to catch the mass in my neck. By the following month, I had a diagnosis. People kept telling me it was “the good cancer”, the kind that can be taken out neatly and has a high survival rate. But I’m 54, and my dad died of cancer in his 50s, so that shadow came down on me hard

2 days ago
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From Marty Supreme to The Traitors: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Marty SupremeOut nowJosh Safdie’s new sports comedy takes loose inspiration from the career of New York ping-pong icon Marty “the Needle” Reisman, with Gwyneth Paltrow, Abel Ferrara and Fran Drescher in supporting roles, and Timothée Chalamet in the lead as the vibrantly eccentric sportsman.The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePantsOut nowThe ever-popular underwater adventures of the amiable yellow sponge continue, with a fourth big-screen adventure that sees SpongeBob tracking down the Flying Dutchman (Mark Hamill). Expect to see just as many child-free millennials in the audience as families.AnacondaOut nowApologies to anyone who views it through rose-tinted spectacles, but the original 1997 Anaconda was a load of drivel. But this isn’t a faithful remake: it’s a meta-horror-comedy-action remake about a couple of guys (Jack Black and Paul Rudd) attempting to remake Anaconda only to be attacked by – yes – a giant snake

2 days ago
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Jewish klezmer-dance band Oi Va Voi: ‘Musicians shouldn’t have to keep looking over their shoulders’

After 20 years playing around the world, the group had two UK gigs cancelled this year after protests from activists. It’s made them feel targeted for who they are, the band sayJosh Breslaw was looking forward to a homecoming gig with his band of two decades’ standing. Oi Va Voi, a predominantly Jewish collective mixing traditional eastern European folk tunes with drum’n’bass and dance, were due to conclude a spring tour of Turkey with a gig in May at Bristol’s Strange Brew club, plus one in Brighton where Breslaw lives. But then, after protests from local activists about both the band’s past performances in Israel, and with Israeli singer Zohara, Strange Brew abruptly cancelled, citing “the ongoing situation in Gaza”.To be told they hadn’t met the venue’s “ethical standards” was devastating, says Breslaw, the band’s 52-year-old drummer: “It felt so unjust

3 days ago
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British Museum’s plan for ‘red, white and blue’ ball sparks row

An internal row has broken out within the British Museum over its director’s suggestion of a “red, white and blue” themed ball for 2026, after staff condemned it as “in poor taste” following the rise in flag-hoisting across the UK.Nicholas Cullinan, the director of the 272-year-old museum, has proposed a colour theme based on the union jack and French tricolore to mark next year’s loan of the Bayeux tapestry from Normandy.The suggestion has led to concerns being raised by staff within the museum’s curatorial and administrative departments, the Guardian understands.Some of the staff are said to argue that the idea is “in poor taste due to the current far-right flag campaigns around the country,” a source said.Since the summer, union jacks and other flags of the four nations of the UK have been hoisted from windows, bridges and lamp-posts in what has been described by some as a celebration of Britishness

3 days ago
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The Titanic, Sinclair C5 and Brexit: the Museum of Failure is coming to the UK

Britain has been mismanaging inventions and ideas with impeccable style for centuries. Next spring, we will finally get a museum to celebrate the results: the Museum of Failure is coming to the UK.Its founder, Dr Samuel West, is anticipating a warm welcome: Britain, he said, was the museum’s spiritual home. “I’ve travelled all over the world with the museum but I’ve always wanted to bring it back home because of our black humour and our support of the underdog,” he said. “The Brits totally get it

4 days ago
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How Las Vegas police ended up with a fleet of free Tesla Cybertrucks

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Apple seeks to appeal against £1.5bn ruling it overcharged UK customers

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‘Undermines free speech’: Labour MP hits back at US government over visa ban on UK campaigners

5 days ago
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Visa ban for European critics of online harm is first shot in US free speech war

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European leaders condemn US visa bans as row over ‘censorship’ escalates

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‘A gamechanger’: 200,000 UK small businesses sign up to TikTok Shop

5 days ago