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St Mungo's (charity)

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(Redirected from Putting Down Roots)
St Mungo Community Housing Association
AbbreviationSt Mungo's
TypeRegistered charity
PurposeSupporting homeless people
Headquarters3 Thomas More Square, Tower Hill, London E1W 1YW
Region served
Southern England
Websitemungos.org
St Mungo's hostel in Covent Garden at the junction of Endell Street and High Holborn. The building was formerly a national school and now accommodates 53 homeless people, providing training for a period of up to two years to try to get them into work.[1]

The St Mungo Community Housing Association, working as St Mungo's, is a charity registered in England[2] to help homeless people.

Soup run

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St. Mungo's Community began as a splinter group from The Simon Community which was started by a former probation officer Anton Wallich-Clifford and was unique among organisations for its success in alcoholic recoveries. This was essentially due to its controversial approach of allowing drinking actually on the premises. The lease for the East End shelter in Sclater street was ending and it was at a time when shortage of money drove the Simon Community into constant reorganisation. However, due to the services of Conservative MP James Allason, the chairman of the East End house managed to break through the almost impenetrable bureaucracy that surrounded the London County Council. Unaware that it was for a new charity they offered the short lease on a house in Home Road, Wandsworth, which was due to be demolished in two years time.[citation needed]

Harry Stone had a choice of two people for the job of warden. One was the warden of the closing Simon wet house and the other was a young ambitious worker at the Simon headquarters. The warden at the time was a reformed alcoholic and it was therefore felt he might not be able to withstand the considerable pressure he would likely be under. Jim Horne was chosen. Horne agreed to become the new Chairman while Harry Stone became secretary, treasurer and fund raiser.[citation needed]

Horne ridiculed the suggestion the enterprise should be called The Home Road Hostel and pressed for the name St. Mungo's. Being Scottish, he believed the powers of Glasgow Cathedral might be persuaded to make an ample donation if it was named after their patron saint. It proved to be a false hope. But otherwise Horne's enthusiasm and ability drove St. Mungo to increasing success. Among his early helpers was Graham Parr who in turn broke away to start up the original Vauxhall Broadway hostel. Due to the enlightened support of Wandsworth Council, even though they had never been officially informed of the occupation in Home Road, the Mayor opened the second house, which was also in Home Road.[citation needed]

St. Mungos gained the interest of the Department of Health and Social Services and Jim Horne persuaded the Head of the Department and the Minister Sir Keith Joseph to spend an evening on the soup run. The department subsequently offered major financial support so that the Community could become an experimental embryo for further possible development. The organisation was later completely reorganised. Qualified accountants, medical practitioners and psychiatrists were appointed as additional trustees. Out of this it soon became clear that whenever either of the original Trustees held opposing views or questioned Horne's dealings, the new Trustees backed Horne since he had the responsibility for the daily running.[citation needed]

In the late 1960s, it faltered. Its management started cutting back and so, in May 1969, its soup run was to be ended.[3] The soup run was a nightly distribution of soup in six locations in London's West End where homeless rough sleepers or "dossers" gathered. This was provided by Wandsworth Council for a nominal rent and in 1970, the council provided three more houses nearby. The fourth house was used as an office by the developing organisation.[3]

Hostels

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Splits and mergers. The original trust is now Hestia Housing and Support while the separate housing association became the main St Mungo's charity which merged with Broadway Housing in 2015 becoming for a short period St Mungo's Broadway before reverting to St Mungo's in 2016.

A large hostel, accommodating up to 200 people, was started in a disused Marmite factory in Vauxhall in 1973.[4][5] This large building had previously been notorious for the strong smell of the production process.[6] In the same year, another large hostel was opened on a short-life basis in Suffolk Street, off the Strand, formerly the Charing Cross Hospital. The hospital had been relocated to Fulham and Jim Horne negotiated cheap terms for occupation of the old building with the Greater London Council pending its conversion to a police station.[7]

There was a schism in the organisation in 1979. Jim Horne left and the organisation split into three. The Charing Cross hostel was managed by a new charity — St Mungo's Community Housing Association until closed due to its insanitary condition and replaced by a refurbished building in Endell Street, Covent Garden. The Marmite hostel became Bondway Shelter, registered as a separate housing association. The St Mungo's Community Trust then focussed upon the soup run and partnered with other organisations, such as the Shepherd's Bush Housing Association, to open a hostel in Fulham. In 1980, the soup run was passed on to the Bondway organisation and the original trust now operates as Hestia Housing and Support. It was renamed to avoid confusion with the St Mungo's Community Housing Association, which operates as "St Mungo's".[8]

Today St Mungo's has grown and developed a wide range of services becoming the largest charity dealing with the homeless in London.[9] In 2010, it provided a bed for over 1500 people each night.[1] By 2011, they managed over a hundred sites across southern England providing accommodation in hostels, group houses and independent units or offering other services to the homeless.[10]

Projects

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The charity has pioneered a variety of novel programmes and initiatives.

"Bricks and Mortar" and "ReVive" training programmes

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Bricks and Mortar provides the homeless with training and experience of bricklaying. ReVive is a similar scheme which develops other building skills such as plastering and decorating.[11]

"LifeWorks" project

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The LifeWorks project started in 2008, providing psychodynamics psychotherapy to homeless people, especially those who are addicted to drugs or alcohol.[12]

"Putting Down Roots" project

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Jonathan Trustram showing the use of self-seeding plants by the Putting Down Roots project in the Mint Street park. These guided tours formed part of the Chelsea Fringe in 2012.

The Putting Down Roots project enables the homeless and hostel dwellers to develop gardens and other horticultural features. It was started by Martin Snowden for St Mungo's in 2000 and has been sponsored and supported by a variety of partners. In 2012, it was still going strong with Jonathan Trustram leading the development of gardens at St John's Church, Waterloo and other places.[13][14]

Street stories

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In 2009, for the 40th anniversary of the organisation, a project was started to record the oral history of the homeless. Six clients were given training in this and they then interviewed other clients, recording the history of their time on the streets and other recollections. These were then presented in an exhibition at the LSE and the results were then archived in Southwark Library.[15][16]

Home Office compliance teams

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In March 2018, St Mungo's confirmed to The Guardian newspaper that it had cooperated with Home Office immigration, compliance and enforcement (ICE) teams, who were responsible for identifying rough sleepers who were deemed as living in the UK illegally.[17] The North East London Migrant Action group said: "The role of homelessness charities should be to uphold the rights of vulnerable people. St Mungo's have forfeited the trust of asylum seekers and other migrants who sleep rough by working with the Home Office who have people deported from the UK."[17]

While acknowledging that their outreach teams had worked with the Home Office, St Mungo's said that their role was to protect the rights of the homeless: "We took the decision that it was better to be there to provide support to vulnerable people sleeping rough than not be able to advocate for them at these times. Our role should not be confused with that of enforcement agencies."[18]

Pay dispute

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From 27 June 2023 workers at St Mungo's started an indefinite strike in a dispute over pay.[19] The workers accused management of a shocking dereliction of duty towards the homeless and the charity's own staff.[20] The organisation has also been charged with fostering an internal culture of corporatism and cronyism, with particular focus toward CEO Emma Haddad's background working for the Home Office, Borderforce, and the DWP.[21]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Sean Coughlan (17 June 2010), Homeless but not hopeless, BBC News
  2. ^ "St Mungo's (charity), registered charity no. 1149085". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  3. ^ a b John Leach, John Kenneth Wing (1980), "The origins and growth of the St Mungo Community 1969-71", Helping Destitute Men, Taylor & Francis, pp. 20–23, ISBN 9780422767606
  4. ^ Christopher Holmes (2005), A New Vision for Housing, p. 63, ISBN 1134236360, Jim Home founded St Mungo's, a hostel in a former Marmite factory in south London...
  5. ^ Timothy Cook (1979), Vagrancy: some new perspectives, p. 57, In December 1973, this shelter was supplemented by a much larger building, an old Marmite factory in the south London district ...
  6. ^ Marmite factory, The Vauxhall Society, 19 February 2012
  7. ^ Anne Donaldson (6 May 1978), "Homeless Scots find refuge at Jim's classy hostel", Glasgow Herald
  8. ^ 40 year history (PDF), Hestia Housing and Support
  9. ^ DWP's Commissioning Strategy and the Flexible New Deal, House of Commons Work and Pensions Committee, 2009, p. 161, ISBN 021552893X, St Mungo's is the main provider of services for London's rough sleepers.
  10. ^ Anna Tims (7 December 2011), "Charities for Christmas #5: St Mungo's", The Guardian
  11. ^ Bruce Thain (12 April 2013), "Homeless charity St Mungo's work programme helps renovate house in Bounds Green", Enfield Independent
  12. ^ Ann Taylor (21 August 2009), St Mungo's LifeWorks psychotherapy scheme, Community Care
  13. ^ Francine Raymond (28 October 2012), "Gardening Against the Odds 2012", The Daily Telegraph
  14. ^ Rae Spencer-Jones (22 March 2003), "Putting down roots for a brighter future", The Daily Telegraph
  15. ^ "Current British Work", Oral History, 37 (2), Oral History Society: 15, 2009, JSTOR 40650286
  16. ^ "Street Stories – St Mungo's Oral History Exhibition", Time Out, 11 October 2012
  17. ^ a b Taylor, Diane (5 March 2018). "Homeless charity helped target rough sleepers to deport". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
  18. ^ "How we work with non-UK nationals - St Mungo's". St Mungo's. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  19. ^ Christy Cooney (26 June 2023), St Mungo's: Staff at homeless charity begin indefinite strike over pay, BBC News
  20. ^ After four weeks strike St Mungo's strike now indefinite, Unite the Union, 26 June 2023
  21. ^ St Mungo's strikes and the parasitical culture of corporatism, cronyism, and white supremacy, Freedom Press, 1 June 2023
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