Read the 2024 Youth Chapter Collective Open Letter to Chancellor Rachel Reeves

The Youth Chapter Collective of over 140 youth, homelessness and housing association organisations have come together to urge the Chancellor Rachel Reeves to support our campaign to Make Work Pay.

This is a shared call for the Chancellor Rachel Reeves to commit to Making Work Pay and ending the benefit trap that homeless young people in supported accommodation face when working. The campaign highlights how important a simple policy change from the Chancellor in the October Budget will be to the future of homeless young people’s ability to work.

Make Work Pay – An Open Letter to Chancellor Rachel Reeves  

14 October 2024  

Dear Chancellor Rachel Reeves,

We are a collective of over 140 youth, homelessness and housing association organisations who urge you to support our campaign to Make Work Pay in supported accommodation. We share your commitment to making work pay and growing the economy in a way that benefits everyone.  

We are asking you to remove the benefit trap that homeless young people in supported accommodation face when working.

Work is incredibly important for homeless young people – it's the chance to build confidence, gain financial independence and leave homelessness behind for good.  

However, the current benefits system punishes homeless young people living in supported accommodation who are just trying to work. Thousands are finding that their path to more money and an independent future is blocked because their housing benefit is tapered faster than their pay would increase if they started working more hours – leaving them with less overall income.  

What is worse is that this only affects people living in supported accommodation because they receive their rent via legacy Housing Benefit. Private renters – who receive Universal Credit to support their rent – have a much more lenient taper rate and so get a fairer deal.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. As the Chancellor, you can fix this in October’s Budget and change the futures for thousands of homeless young people. Centrepoint estimates that the Treasury could save over £12 million a year by ending the benefit trap and supporting thousands of young people into work; with the actual saving likely to be much higher as there are thousands more people living in supported accommodation over 25.  

You can unlock thousands of young people’s potential by lowering the Housing Benefit taper rate and increasing the applicable amount available under Housing Benefit.  

The current system sets up young people experiencing homelessness to fail. At the start of their careers, we should be encouraging them to dream big. Instead, we have them facing an impossible choice: work fewer hours in less meaningful jobs to avoid getting into debt - or chase their career ambitions by working more hours but struggling to afford basic essentials.  

We should be encouraging young people to dream big, whatever their background – rather than asking them to work more hours, for less overall income.  

The benefit system should promote work and foster ambition, particularly for people just entering the jobs market. On 30 October, you have a chance to create that system; we urge you to take it.

An unjust benefit system that disincentivises work and hinders ambition is a broken system. On 30 October you have a chance to fix it, we urge you to take it.  

Sincerely,  

1625 Independent People

akt 
Aberdeen Foyer 
Adullam Homes 
Alabare 
Amber 
Ayr Housing Aid Centre 
Become 
BHT Sussex 
Broxtowe Youth Homelessness 
Buttle UK 
Canopy 
Cardinal Hume Centre 
Caring in Bristol 
Carlisle Key 
Centrepoint 
CGL - Change, Grow, Live 
Changing Lives 
Christian Action Housing 
Cirencester Housing for Young People 
Citizen Housing 
Clarion 
Clocktower Sanctaury 
Coatham House Projects 
Commonweal 
Community Campus 87 
Coops Foyer 
Coram 
Coram Voice 
Crossroads Derbyshire 
Depaul Ireland 
Depaul UK 
Doorstep 
Doorway 
Drive Forward Foundation 
End Furniture Poverty 
End Youth Homelessness Cymru 
Every Youth 
Evolve Housing + Support 
Extern 
Falcon Support Services 
Fat Macy's 
Foyer Federation 
Fully Focused (Million Youth Media) 
G15 
GISDA 
Glass Door 
Gloucestershire Nightstop 
Greater Change 
Greater Manchester Better Outcomes Partnerships (GMBOP) 
Greater Manchester Mayor's Charity 
Growth Company 
Habitat for Humanity Great Britain 
Herts Young Homeless 
Home Connections 
Homefinder Uk 
Hopestead 
Impact Initiatives 
Include Youth 
Inspirechilli 
iWill 
Key Unlocking Futures 
Korban Project 
L&Q 
LandAid 
Latch 
Lifeshare 
LivShare Housing & Consultancy 
Llamau 
Local Solutions 
London Youth 
MACS Supporting Children & Young People 
Mayor's Fund for London 
Missing People 
Moving On 
MTVH (Metropolitan and Thames Valley Housing) 
My Bnk 
My Life My Say 
National Housing Federation 
Network Homes 
NHYC 
Nightsafe 
Nightstop Network 
On Side 
Only a Pavement Away 
Origin Housing 
Oxfordshire Youth 
P3 - People Potential Possibilities 
Park Lodge Project 
Partnership for Young London 
Proxy Address 
Ravenhead Foyer 
Red Thread 
Redditch Nightstop 
Rock Trust 
Roundabout 
Rush House 
Safe and Sound Homes (SASH) 
Settle 
Shelter Community 
Simon Community 
SLEAP 
Southend YMCA 
Spring Housing Association 
Springboard Opportunities 
St. Christopher's Fellowship 
St. Petrocs 
St. Basil's 
Stepping Stone Projects 
Stonewall Housing 
Street Soccer 
Streetlink 
Sussex Nightstop 
Switchback 
The Bridge 
The Children's Society 
The Running Charity 
The Warren 
The Whitechapel Centre 
The Zone, Plymouth 
Two Saints Limited 
UK Youth 
Verve Place 
Volunteering matters 
Wipers Youth 
Wyre Forest & South Worcestershire Nightstop and Mediation Service 
YMCA Downslink 
YMCA East Surrey 
YMCA England & Wales 
YMCA Exeter 
YMCA London City & North 
YMCA Scotland 
YMCA Trinity Group 
You Thrive 
Young Camden Foundation 
Young Devon 
Young Women's Housing Project 
Young Women's Trust 
Your Housing Group 
Your Place 
Youth Access 
Youth Concern 
Youth Employment 
YWCA