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Morning Briefing: homelessness minister apologises for racist language towards rough sleepers

Housing and homelessness minister Heather Wheeler has apologised after leaked emails showed her using racist language to describe rough sleepers

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Heather Wheeler, housing and homelessness minister
Heather Wheeler, housing and homelessness minister
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Morning Briefing: homelessness minister Heather Wheeler has apologised after leaked emails showed her using racist language to describe rough sleepers #ukhousing

In the news

The emails, sent before Ms Wheeler joined the government, are reported by The Guardian, which says they emerged during the filming of a Ross Kemp ITV documentary due to air next month.

In them the minister described rough sleepers as “the traditional type, old tinkers, knife-cutters wandering through”, with national charities working on behalf of Gypsies, Travellers and Romas condemning the use of the racist term “tinker”.

Also in The Guardian is a report on the investigation into the death of 64-year-old Stephen Smith, who was denied benefits despite being seriously ill and weighed 38kg (6st).

An internal review by the Department for Work and Pensions, according to the newspaper, found that the department missed “crucial safeguarding opportunities” but that it nevertheless “followed policy”.

The same newspaper has also used the Freedom of Information Act to uncover the news that the outsourcer Serco was handed nearly £7m in fines for its management of asylum seeker housing.

Serco, which nevertheless was awarded £1.9bn worth of new asylum seeker housing contracts earlier this year, was fined for failing to meet performance indicators.

Elsewhere, the Financial Times has published a piece on the growth of private investors owning their own registered providers of social housing.

It asks whether this is a good or bad thing, pitting the claims of private equity giants like Blackstone against the criticism of figures such as the UN’s special rapporteur on the right to housing.

In local news, Room 151 reports that Manchester City Council is lending £25m to one of its joint ventures in order to help the project move forward.

The money will go towards buying land for the council’s Northern Gateway project, which it is delivering together with the Hong Kong-based Far East Consortium.

In Cardiff, Wales Online reports that one of the city’s biggest developers has won planning permission to build a block of flats despite paying nothing towards affordable housing.

According to the website, Rightacres will build 74 apartments, contributing a mere £30,000 for a bike station, a fraction of the £1.4m the council had asked for to pay for infrastructure and affordable housing.

On social media

Yesterday saw Twitter-filled with debate over Camden Council’s development strategy after an article in The Guardian:

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