How COVID has deepened the housing crisis

As workplaces have been closed and jobs lost, the strain of managing expensive housing costs has affected both renters and homeowners alike. If you’ve found yourself in housing difficult as a result of the COVID-19 lockdown, please tell UNISON here.  When lockdown came, school kitchen assistant Adriana Chirica lost all her work: “Even though the school was open for some vulnerable students, the kitchen was not. So I had no income for 8 weeks. “Our housing costs are £1,100 a month with bills on top. My husband is freelance, and though he got a grant from the government, we have still had to borrow money from family in Romania and live off credit cards.” “It’s been hard. So hard. We’ve been counting each slice of bread we eat. I’m a cook, I never buy food ready-made, I do everything from scratch. But for months, there’s not even the money to buy ingredients.” Ruth Carter, a teaching assistant, found herself in a similar situation when lockdown came: “I was supporting a visually impaired student, but when lockdown came and he was in the shielding group, I lost my job in May.” “It was a nightmare really, because all the schools were shut and there were no jobs to apply for. Initially I was told I would get furlough pay as I was being kept on by them, and although they said I did qualify, they said they were waiting to find out from the government what the pay rate would be. I never heard from them again. “Luckily, my partner still has her job, an...
Source: UNISON meat hygiene - Category: Food Science Authors: Tags: Article Covid-19 housing Source Type: news