Homeless - meaning and definition. What is Homeless
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What (who) is Homeless - definition

OVERVIEW OF HOMELESSNESS IN ENGLAND
Homeless in England; Cambridge Churches Homeless Project
  • Soup Run provided by a charity
  • Number of homeless in England per 100,000 people 1998–2014
  • the Strand]], in the vicinity of [[Covent Garden]]).

Homeless         
CIRCUMSTANCE WHEN PEOPLE DESIRE A PERMANENT DWELLING BUT DO NOT HAVE ONE
Urban outdoorsman; Homeless people; Baglady; Homeless person; Bomzh; Homelessness in Europe; The homeless; Rough sleeper; Bagwomen; Bagwoman; Sleeping rough; Rough sleeping; Homelessness from natural disasters; Derelict (homeless person); Bum (homeless person); Homeless; Houselessness; Roadside sleeping; Houseless; Causes of homelessness; Health issues affecting homeless people; Health care for the homeless; Homelessness and health; Healthcare and homelessness; Homelessness in developing countries; Health and homelessness; Homelessness in Puerto Rico; Homeless persons; Disability and homelessness; Homelessness and disability
1. Disgruntled or in disprepair.
2. Name for a humorously odd-looking friend.
(Commonly used to affectionately address friends in the early morning hours.)
1. That has got to be the most homeless lawn job ever. Was he trying to make crop circles?
2. Hey, Homeless, glad you could make it to work this morning.
homeless         
CIRCUMSTANCE WHEN PEOPLE DESIRE A PERMANENT DWELLING BUT DO NOT HAVE ONE
Urban outdoorsman; Homeless people; Baglady; Homeless person; Bomzh; Homelessness in Europe; The homeless; Rough sleeper; Bagwomen; Bagwoman; Sleeping rough; Rough sleeping; Homelessness from natural disasters; Derelict (homeless person); Bum (homeless person); Homeless; Houselessness; Roadside sleeping; Houseless; Causes of homelessness; Health issues affecting homeless people; Health care for the homeless; Homelessness and health; Healthcare and homelessness; Homelessness in developing countries; Health and homelessness; Homelessness in Puerto Rico; Homeless persons; Disability and homelessness; Homelessness and disability
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
Homeless people have nowhere to live.
...the growing number of homeless families...
Hundreds were made homeless.
ADJ
The homeless are people who are homeless.
...shelters for the homeless.
N-PLURAL: the N
homelessness
The only way to solve homelessness is to provide more homes.
N-UNCOUNT
Homeless         
CIRCUMSTANCE WHEN PEOPLE DESIRE A PERMANENT DWELLING BUT DO NOT HAVE ONE
Urban outdoorsman; Homeless people; Baglady; Homeless person; Bomzh; Homelessness in Europe; The homeless; Rough sleeper; Bagwomen; Bagwoman; Sleeping rough; Rough sleeping; Homelessness from natural disasters; Derelict (homeless person); Bum (homeless person); Homeless; Houselessness; Roadside sleeping; Houseless; Causes of homelessness; Health issues affecting homeless people; Health care for the homeless; Homelessness and health; Healthcare and homelessness; Homelessness in developing countries; Health and homelessness; Homelessness in Puerto Rico; Homeless persons; Disability and homelessness; Homelessness and disability
·adj Destitute of a home.

Wikipedia

Homelessness in England

In England, local authorities have duties to homeless people under Part VII of the Housing Act 1996 as amended by the Homelessness Act 2002. There are five hurdles which a homeless person must overcome in order to qualify as statutory homeless. If an applicant only meets the first three of these tests Councils still have a duty to provide interim accommodation. However an applicant must satisfy all five for a Council to have to give an applicant "reasonable preference" on the social housing register. Even if a person passes these five tests councils have the ability to use the private rented sector to end their duty to a homeless person.

The five tests are:

  • Is the applicant homeless or threatened with homelessness?
  • Is the applicant eligible for assistance?
  • Is the applicant priority need?
  • Is the applicant intentionally homeless?
  • Does the applicant have a local connection?

The annual number of homeless households in England peaked in 2003–04 at 135,420 before falling to a low of 40,020 in 2009–10. In 2014–15, there were 54,430 homeless households, which was 60 per cent below the 2003–04 peak. However, in December 2016 the housing charity Shelter estimated homelessness in England to amount to more than 250,000 people; Shelter calculated the figure using four sets of official sources: statistics on rough sleepers, statistics on those in temporary accommodation, the number of people housed in hostels and the number of people waiting to be housed by council social services departments.

In England, it had been estimated in 2007 an average of 498 people slept rough each night, with 248 of those in London. But reportedly numbers sleeping rough have soared in recent years and doubled since 2010; figures reported for the 2015 count were 3,569 people rough sleeping in England on a single night, up 102% from 2010.

Given the costs of providing temporary accommodation and the limited amount of social housing in the United Kingdom some Councils have been criticised for attempting to circumvent their duties under the law, a process which has been termed "gatekeeping". The term "Non-statutory homelessness" covers people who are considered by the local authority to be not eligible for assistance, not in priority need or "intentionally homeless".

Households in temporary accommodation rose from 35,850 in 2011 to 54,280 in early 2017. Part of the cause is people losing private tenancies, which Shelter maintains increased drastically since 2011 when housing benefit cuts began. Almost three quarters of homeless people are single parent families. Just under 30,000 single parent families became homeless in 2017, this rose 8% from five years previously. Their limited income makes it hard for them to deal with rising living costs, high rents and benefit cuts. The number of households in temporary accommodation has risen by almost two thirds since 2010 and reached 78,930. Mothers of single parent families are particularly at risk of homelessness. According to Shelter one in 55 single parent families became homeless in 2017-18 and 92% of the 26,610 cases were headed by a mother.

Pronunciation examples for Homeless
1. homeless.
Trans Women Writers _ Imogen Binnie, Red Durkin + More _ Talks at Google
2. Homeless.
Yes Man (2008
3. homeless.
Blanket of Stars - Homeless Women in Santa Monica _ Frances Noble _ Talks at Google
4. homeless man.
Chuck _ Josh Schwartz & Chris Fedak _ Talks at Google
5. mostly homeless,
ted-talks_2453_AdamFoss_2016-320k
Examples of use of Homeless
1. The postwar economy allowed a lot of those homeless men not to be homeless anymore.
2. Each social business will provide employment to Camden‘s homeless community, and homeless and non–homeless people will be shoulder to shoulder both as workers and visitors.
3. Homeless advocates said the camera‘s presence merely recorded the everyday violence directed against the homeless.
4. The Northeast Ohio Coalition for the Homeless is ferrying voters from homeless shelters to polling sites in the Cleveland area.
5. A decade later the Housing (Homeless Persons) Act 1'77 gave homeless people legal recognition for the first time.