Hastings has highest child poverty rate in region, says new study

Hastings has the highest child poverty rate in the south east, according to latest statistics.
Hastings town centre May 26 2020. SUS-200526-123124001Hastings town centre May 26 2020. SUS-200526-123124001
Hastings town centre May 26 2020. SUS-200526-123124001

A study by the End Child Poverty coalition and Loughborough University shows that the rate in the town has increased more over the past four years than anywhere else in the south east of England.

According to the data, the percentage of children living in poverty in Hastings was 18.2 per cent in 2014/15.

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In 2018/19, the latest figures to be published, the rate was 25.5 per cent, an increase of more than seven per cent.

Hastings Borough Council’s leader, Cllr Kim Forward, said: “We are incredibly saddened to see such an increase in child poverty in Hastings, but we are not surprised; the rate has been high and rising for years.

“It is especially worrying that these figures indicate rises before coronavirus (Covid-19) hit us.

“We are still working out what the long-term effects of this pandemic will be, but we know that child poverty levels are very likely to continue to rise.

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“It is not acceptable for so many of our children to be experiencing such poverty and it should not be acceptable to any government or any society.

“Although years of austerity and cuts to key services have very much limited what we as a council can do, we are still committed to doing everything possible, with our partners, to tackle child poverty.”

Natalie Williams, community engagement director at King’s Church, which runs Hastings Foodbank, said: “It is really troubling to see Hastings with an increasing level of child poverty.

“At the foodbank and other projects we run, we see so many desperate situations across the town and we’ve seen huge increases in need over the last three years. The coronavirus crisis has made this worse.

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“In April, for example, the parcels we gave out included food for 821 local children.

“There is a lot of good work going on across Hastings and St Leonards to support people in poverty, but there’s a lot more work for us all to do together to stop people being swept into poverty and trapped in it.”

Carole Dixon, chief executive at Education Futures Trust, said: “These figures unfortunately confirm what we see through our day-to-day work in Hastings.

“Families living in poverty face an uphill battle and parents struggle to meet their children’s needs.

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“Covid-19 has added to the inequality, and life for some is bleak.

“We want to see our children succeed, but the widening gap makes it difficult for them to share the aspirations of those who do not face these challenges.

“We need to break the cycle of poverty to provide a better future. This will require long term investment in the local structures and organisations, where the problems are understood, and solutions can be found.”

Cllr Forward added: “Last year the council passed a unanimous motion to help tackle child poverty and the actions we are pursuing include calling on the Government to end short-term funding through competitive grants (such as homelessness provision) and other initiatives and return to providing us with adequate long-term support based on local needs.

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“It is vital this short-term piecemeal funding approach to fundamental issues such as this is stopped.

“There must to be a commitment from the Government to meaningful, secure, long-term funding, to allow an effective strategy that can make a real difference to be delivered.

“We are calling for a community conference to consider how best to tackle poverty, learning from the impact of our current anti-poverty strategy and working towards a longer-term 10-year approach which sees partners planning joint action more strategically.

“The council is already committed to funding which supports voluntary sector advice and support agencies in 2020/21 but doing so in future years may be impossible without sufficient funding from the Government.

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“We encourage others to join us and support the day of action on child poverty in Hastings on August 1, led by Unite the Community and other local voluntary organisations.

“Our motion made our position clear, and we emphasise that we will continue to do all that we can, working with partners to help tackle the issue of child poverty in Hastings.

“At the same time, we call on the Government to do much more; we simply can’t do this on our own. We surely all agree that we must eradicate child poverty in our town.”

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