Glasgow has declared a “housing emergency” amid mounting pressures on homelessness services.
The council’s city administration committee agreed the move on Thursday, with the local authority saying “unprecedented pressures” had “forced its hand”.
Earlier this month Edinburgh City Council was the first Scottish city to declare a housing emergency.
Argyll and Bute Council previously declared an emergency in June.
Glasgow City Council currently has around 6,000 open homelessness cases.
Meanwhile, the number of homeless refugees has doubled after the UK government implemented a streamlined asylum process in June to address the significant backlog of decisions and reduce the number of applicants in contingency and dispersed accommodation.
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Since the decision, a council report showed the number of single people and families being granted leave to remain in Glasgow rose from 65 in June to 176 in October.
Between 1 and 21 November, a further 97 single people and 35 family referrals (132 total) were made by Mears for households in the city for those granted asylum.
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Glasgow’s declaration comes on the heels of the Home Office’s plan to make around 2,500 batched asylum decisions in the city by the end of the year, which the council said could cost the local authority £53.4m.
The move was recommended in a report by councillor Allan Casey, city convenor for workforce, homelessness and addiction services.
Cllr Casey said: “There is no doubt that the pressures we are facing constitute an emergency.
“We agree with partners that we urgently need resources to help us deal with these added pressures.
“We also need the UK government to pause their unconscionable asylum-batching decision, which is already increasing homelessness and destitution, until they work with us to put a proper plan in place and commit to fully funding their decision.
“The city is experiencing an overwhelming increase in people presenting as rough sleepers as well as a significant rise in individuals, from elsewhere in the UK, seeking assistance here in Glasgow.”
The council said it will continue to lobby both Holyrood and Westminster for “appropriate funding and legislative change” to respond to the emergency.
A UK government spokesperson said: “We are committed to ensuring asylum claims are considered without unnecessary delays.
“Once someone is informed that their asylum claim has been granted, they get at least 28 days’ notice to move on from their asylum accommodation.
“Support is offered to newly recognised refugees by Migrant Help and their partners, which includes advice on how to access Universal Credit, the labour market and where to get assistance with housing.
“We are working with local authorities to help communities manage the impact of asylum decisions as the legacy backlog reduces.”
The 36-year-old told the BBC: “My stomach just dropped.
“When I found out some of the things that had been going on, I just felt enormous guilt, enormous remorse.”
After the former Hazel Grove MP handed over the personal information, the catfish told Mr Wragg to vouch for their identity with their next potential victims, with the catfish telling their fresh targets they were a former researcher for Mr Wragg.
Mr Wragg agreed and this is what he feels “the most regret for” as it was “deceitful”.
Panic attacks
After he was allegedly blackmailed, Mr Wragg started having panic attacks, with instances of yelling, crying, and swearing shocking his sleeping flatmates.
Police are investigating the scandal with at least 12 men with links to Westminster believed to have received unsolicited messages from the aliases “Charlie” and “Abi”.
The fake accounts were allegedly part of the scam to get MPs and other people in politics to send explicit images and other private or sensitive information.
Unlike others who were approached by the catfish accounts, Mr Wragg approached “Charlie” himself after spotting the profile on gay dating app Grindr.
And he thought the account was a real person before exchanging explicit photos with the catfish.
Suicidal thoughts
When the scandal broke, the humiliation and shame became too much for Mr Wragg.
He recounted photographers and the media camped outside his parents’ house, which is where he went to as he began to have suicidal thoughts.
Shortly after receiving medical attention, he returned to Westminster to resign as Conservative whip and from his posts on two parliamentary committees.
He had already announced he would not run in the next general election.
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In June, a member of the Labour Party aged in his mid-20s was apprehended in Islington, north London, on suspicion of harassment and offences under the Online Safety Act.
He has since been released on bail.
Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK.