A damning report from the Home Affairs Committee has exposed a shambolic asylum seeker accommodation system, costing taxpayers billions due to the Home Office’s ‘incompetent’ mismanagement.
The department’s reliance on hotels as the main solution for housing asylum seekers has spiralled into a costly, unpopular and unfit system, MPs say.
What began as a temporary fix became a default, leaving local communities frustrated and asylum seekers in inadequate conditions with the budget tripling from £4.5bn to £15.3bn.
The report also says that the Home Office ‘must finally learn from its previous mistakes or it is doomed to repeat them’.
‘Failing asylum accommodation system’
Dame Karen Bradley, chair of the Home Affairs Committee, said: “The Home Office has presided over a failing asylum accommodation system that has cost taxpayers billions of pounds.
“Its response to increasing demand has been rushed and chaotic, and the department has neglected the day-to-day management of these contracts.”
She added: “The government needs to get a grip on the asylum accommodation system in order to bring costs down and hold providers to account for poor performance.”
Ms Bradley went on to say that urgent action is needed to bring housing costs down and ‘address the concerns of local communities’.
Set up for more failure
The Home Office also failed to monitor accommodation providers effectively, allowing poor performance to go unchecked.
Despite hotels costing more than 75% of the budget, no penalties have been enforced on poor standards at various sites.
The department also failed to cap costs or claw back excessive profits from providers, leaving taxpayers to foot an ever-growing bill.
Ms Bradley said: “There will always be a need for flexibility within the system, and the Home Office risks boxing itself in by making undeliverable promises to appeal to popular sentiment.
“It shouldn’t set itself up for more failure.”
Doomed to repeat mistakes
With contract break clauses coming next year and a pledge to stop using hotels in 2029, the Committee warns that without a robust long-term strategy and the capability to implement it, the same mistakes will continue.
It warns that the department’s track record of knee-jerk, short-term fixes has done little to inspire confidence.
Ms Bradley said: “There is now an opportunity to draw a line under the current failed, chaotic and expensive system, but the Home Office must finally learn from its previous mistakes, or it is doomed to repeat them.”
Furious over illegal numbers
A Home Office spokesperson said: “The government is furious about the number of illegal migrants in this country and in hotels.
“That is why we will close every single asylum hotel – saving the taxpayer billions of pounds.
“We have already taken action – closing hotels, slashing asylum costs by nearly £1bn and exploring the use of military bases and disused properties.”