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A social worker turned interior designer is tackling furniture poverty by transforming the homes of social housing tenants through her charity.

Emily Wheeler, founder of Furnishing Futures, says the need for her charity is not just cosmetic design – domestic abuse survivors are often driven back to their perpetrators after being given empty social housing with no beds for their children.

When families escaping domestic violence are rehoused by their local council, properties are often stripped of all white goods, furniture, and flooring for health and safety reasons.

Having left their old homes suddenly without any of their belongings, families often end up in a flat or house with nowhere to cook or store food and no beds to sleep in, Emily Wheeler, founder of the charity Furnishing Futures, tells Sky News.

Before. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

After. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

“There are no curtains at the windows, there’s no oven, no fridge, no washing machine,” she says. “Children are expected to sleep on concrete floors with no beds or bedding.

“Mothers may have experienced economic abuse or coercion and might not have access to their money and find themselves having to start again.

“So you can understand why some women think ‘this is actually no better for my children than going back to my previous situation’.”

Emily has been a frontline social worker in east London for more than 20 years. During a career break, during which she had her two children, she retrained as an interior designer.

When she returned to social work in 2014, she says austerity meant council budgets were being cut and previously available grants for social housing tenants were no longer funded.

“I’ve always seen furniture poverty throughout my career, but it had got worse,” she says.

“I was meeting families living in these conditions without furniture and without access to support.

“When you look at the amount of stuff councils have to spend money on just to keep people safe, furniture isn’t the priority.”

Before. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

After. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

Moved into empty flat two days after giving birth

Laura, not her real name, moved between different emergency accommodations while she was pregnant with her first child after being abused by her ex-partner.

She says she was offered a council flat two days after giving birth.

“When I first moved in it was all dirty, there was no furniture, no carpet, no cooker, fridge, or washing machine.

“I had to take out an emergency loan from Universal Credit to get away from my partner, so I didn’t have any money left when my baby was born. The first couple of nights I could only eat takeaway food because there was nothing to cook with.

“It had concrete floors. I’d get up in the middle of the night to make my baby a bottle and it would be freezing, so I had to put blankets all over the floor.”

Before. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

After. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

Chief executive of the National Housing Federation Kate Henderson says: “In social housing, carpets have historically been removed as standard practice for practical reasons, to ensure hygiene between lets and to prevent any possible contamination.

“In some cases, housing associations provide new flooring as standard when a home is re-let, or in other cases they may provide decorating vouchers to new tenants, which can be used for flooring of their choice.”

According to a 2021 study by the campaign group End Furniture Poverty, only 1% of social housing properties are furnished.

Councils under ‘no legal obligation’

The Housing Act 1985 states that a local authority “may fit out, furnish and supply a house provided by them with all requisite furniture, fittings and conveniences”.

But Emily says this means there is no legal obligation to do so.

“Councils are fulfilling their duty by providing housing, so in the eyes of the law they’re not doing anything wrong.

“But having an empty shell of concrete is not a home – just because you’re not on the streets.”

Before. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

After. Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

Having seen the problem on a wider scale when she began chairing multi-agency child protection conferences, she decided to combine her skills as a designer and social worker – and create a charity to help bridge the gap.

Furnishing Futures was set up in 2019. Emily and her team refloor, paint, and furnish empty properties given to trauma and domestic abuse survivors by councils.

She uses her industry connections, which include Soho House, DFS, Dunelm, and others, to source donated furniture, and fundraises for the rest.

She believes it is the only charity of its kind in the UK.

So far they have furnished more than 80 homes across east London, and a pilot scheme with Waltham Forest council and housing association Peabody will see another three completed there.

But with thousands of families on social housing waiting lists in each of the capital’s 32 boroughs alone, she wants to expand nationally.

“The hardest thing about my job is having to say no to people because we don’t have the capacity,” she says.

“Every day we get inquiries from women, midwives, health visitors, other local authorities, domestic abuse agencies – but we’re just a small team and the demand is huge.”

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Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

The charity has a 4,000-square-foot warehouse, a team of five full-time staff, and a group of regular volunteers who help with flooring, painting, and assembling furniture.

As situations are often urgent, work is usually done in just one day.

Empty homes are form of ‘revictimisation’

Jen Cirone, director of services at Solace Women’s Aid, one of the charity’s partners, says being housed in an empty home and having to start again is a form of “revictimisation”.

But she says of the charity: “It’s not only the practicalities of having a beautiful space to live in but also demonstrates that others care.

“Together, Furnishing Futures is able to complete the road to recovery that work with Solace has put them on.”

Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

Pic: Furnishing Futures
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Pic: Penny Wincer

Hannah, not her real name, is another of Emily’s clients.

She was homeless after leaving her ex-partner and given emergency accommodation a day before she was due to give birth to her first child.

“I felt extremely stressed and vulnerable,” she says. “As a victim of domestic violence and heavily pregnant, I already felt alone and unsupported.

“This empty space didn’t feel like ‘home’ and it certainly wasn’t suitable for baby.”

As a type one diabetic she also had nowhere to store her insulin injections, she adds.

“I ended up staying in hospital for some time due to an emergency C-section and during that time Emily turned my empty, scary space into a home for me and my child.”

Emily says that although COVID and the cost-of-living crisis have opened the conversation about poverty and how it affects domestic abuse survivors, the situation is “worse than ever”.

“We’re not just talking about poverty now, we’re talking about destitution,” she says.

“People need safe and comfortable homes. You won’t be able to recover from trauma, rebuild your life, and be a productive part of society if you don’t have your basic needs met.”

A social worker turned interior designer is tackling furniture poverty by transforming the homes of social housing tenants through her charity.
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Pic: Furnishing Futures

A Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities spokesperson said: “Domestic abuse survivors deserve a safe home and we are grateful to Furnishing Futures for the work they do to help these families rebuild their lives.

“We expect social housing providers to play their part and provide homes that are of a decent quality, if tenants are unhappy, we encourage them to speak to their landlords.

“Our Social Housing Regulation Act is also driving up standards and strengthened the role of the Ombudsman so that it is easier for tenants to raise complaints.”

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Why many victims will welcome a national inquiry into grooming gangs

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Why many victims will welcome a national inquiry into grooming gangs

In 2019, nine men were jailed for raping and abusing two teenage girls living in a children’s home in Bradford.

One of the victims, Fiona Goddard, says more than 50 men raped her.

When the government began to talk about offering councils money for local inquiries, Fiona hoped Bradford would be one of the first to take up the offer. But there didn’t seem to be much enthusiasm.

The council was quick to point out that there had already been an independent case review into Fiona’s case, along with four other victims.

This, then, was Fiona’s first reasoning for wanting a national inquiry: The council felt it had done all that needed to be done. Fiona didn’t.

The Independent review, published in July 2021, found that while in the children’s home, Fiona “went missing almost on a daily basis”. The police attitude was that she could look after herself – she was “street-wise”.

There was “agreement by all agencies that Fiona was either at risk of Child Sexual Exploitation (CSE) or actively being sexually abused and exploited”. But “this was not addressed by any single agency”.

And “when Fiona became pregnant at the age of 15, there was little curiosity or enquiry who the father was”.

So, obvious failings were discovered.

The predictable response was that lessons had been learned and new processes put in place. But no one seemed to be held accountable.

Grooming gangs timeline: What happened, what inquiries there were and how Starmer was involved

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Grooming gangs: What happened?

Ms Goddard told Sky News: “In my serious case review she [Jane Booth, the independent chair] found seven incidences at least, in them records that she found, of them not reporting sexual abuse or rape or assault, from as young as eight years old, and one of the incidences I literally turned up covered in blood and they didn’t report it.

“That is not just misunderstanding a crime, that is making intentional decisions not to report the sexual abuse of a child.”

She adds: “Let’s not forget, these people still work within social services and the police force.”

Not only did this Independent review not satisfy Fiona, but it also didn’t begin to reflect the levels and scale of abuse Fiona had experienced outside of Bradford.

Fiona Goddard, who says more than 50 men raped her in Bradford
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‘I literally turned up covered in blood and they didn’t report it,’ Fiona says

Asked where she was trafficked to, Fiona rattles off a list of cities.

“Blackburn, Rotherham, Rochdale, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Oldham – never Telford, I’d never even heard of Telford until it all came out if I’m honest – Nottingham, Oxford.”

Then she remembers she didn’t go to Oxford – men from Oxford came to her – but the point is made.

Local enquiries can’t possibly begin to explore the networks of men who traffic women, often down routes of drug trafficking being done by the same gangs.

Bradford Council told Sky News it contributed to the national Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) and published more than 70 reports where child sexual exploitation was discussed and has implemented findings from the independent local review which included Fiona’s case.

Fiona believes there are numerous connections leading back to Bradford – but victims from each city often believe their abusers are at the centre of it.

We’ve spoken to grooming victims across the country, and in 2022, a case was reopened in Humberside after a Sky News investigation, where we found diary entries, texts, photos, and school reports all indicating that teenage victims had been abused.

Read more on this story:
Telford child abuse victims speak out

What we know about grooming gangs, from the data
The women who blew whistle on Rotherham

One of them was “Anna”, who also wants a national inquiry. She believes there is a national pattern of police forces not believing victims or even criminalising them instead.

Obtaining her own police records using a Subject Access Request (SAR), Anna found officers’ attitudes towards her were similar to what we heard with Fiona in Bradford, blaming her abuse and injuries on “lifestyle choices of her own”.

Anna said: “Every time I look at my Subject Access Request, I still think it’s shocking.

“It was the same sort of terminology – lifestyle choices, liar, attention seeker, and the majority of it was negative.

“It was really rare that I’d come across something where they were actually listening or they were concerned.”

Humberside Police told us: “As the investigation is active, it is imperative we protect its integrity; as such are unable to comment on aspects of the investigation as this could impact or jeopardise any criminal or judicial proceedings.”

But it is years now since Anna first reported her abuse, and she believes the police have left it too late to gather evidence.

She told Sky News: “I think it’s either happening everywhere, or young people have been taken everywhere.

“I think the attitudes of the professionals, the police, social services, from what I’ve heard and seen, they seem very similar in every area.”

The government-commissioned rapid review by Baroness Casey is due to be published next week and is expected to call for a national inquiry into grooming gangs.

Like Anna and Fiona, many victims will welcome Sir Keir Starmer’s early response accepting the recommendation.

They will want the inquiry to probe into the operations of the perpetrators – who they are and how they are connected.

But they will also want clear accountability of the people and organisations who failed to act when they reported their abuse – and an understanding of why, so often, authorities fail to protect these vulnerable girls.

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Woman, 23, dies after falling in water at beauty spot in Scottish Highlands

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Woman, 23, dies after falling in water at beauty spot in Scottish Highlands

A woman has died after falling into the water at a popular beauty spot in the Scottish Highlands.

The 23-year-old had fallen into the water in the Rogie Falls area of Wester Ross.

Police Scotland confirmed emergency services attended the scene after being called at 1.45pm on Saturday.

“However, [she] was pronounced dead at the scene,” a spokesperson said.

“There are no suspicious circumstances and a report will be submitted to the Procurator Fiscal.”

Rogie Falls are a series of waterfalls on the Black Water, a river in Ross-shire in the Highlands of Scotland. They are a popular attraction for tourists on Scotland’s North Coast 500 road trip.

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‘Happy Father’s Day, Papa’: Royal children share ‘before and after’ photos with Prince William

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'Happy Father's Day, Papa': Royal children share 'before and after' photos with Prince William

Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis have wished their “Papa”, Prince William, a happy Father’s Day.

The post on the Prince and Princess of Wales‘s official social media pages features two photos – captioned “before and after”.

The children are seen hugging their father – and then piling on top of him.

The post reads: “Happy Father’s Day, Papa (before and after!) We love you! G, C & L.”

The two photographs of the family – one colour and one black and white – were taken earlier this year in Norfolk by photographer Josh Shinner, who also took Prince Louis’s birthday portraits earlier this year.

The post follows yesterday’s Trooping the Colour, celebrating King Charles‘s official birthday, after which the family shared a rare posed photo taken on the day of the event.

The first photo shows the Prince of Wales wearing a green woollen jumper and jeans, with his arms around George, 11, and Charlotte, 10, with Louis, seven, standing in front of him.

The second picture shows everyone in a bundle, lying on grass and daffodils, with Prince William at the centre.

The Royal family traditionally shares public wishes for Father’s Day and Mother’s Day.

Last year, the Prince of Wales shared a photo of himself playing football with the King, taken in the gardens of Kensington Palace in June 1984, just ahead of his second birthday.

This year, Buckingham Palace posted a black and white photo of Prince Philip pushing a young King Charles and Princess Anne on a swing.

A second photo showed the Queen and her father, Major Bruce Shand, taken on the day of her wedding to Charles in 2005.

The message read: “To all Dads everywhere, we wish you a happy Father’s Day today.”

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