More than twenty left-wing mayors, including Anne Hidalgo, question the head of state on homeless families

Twenty-two left-wing mayors questioned the President of the Republic, Emmanuel Macron, on homeless families, in an open letter published by Le Journal du dimanche on February 5

More than twenty left-wing mayors, including Anne Hidalgo, question the head of state on homeless families

Twenty-two left-wing mayors questioned the President of the Republic, Emmanuel Macron, on homeless families, in an open letter published by Le Journal du dimanche on February 5. "We do not resign ourselves to the social distress that we see every day", write these elected officials, stressing that "this winter is particularly worrying because it combines several factors of weakening of people already in a situation of great vulnerability" .

The letter is signed by mayors of France, including those (Socialist Party, PS) of Paris, Anne Hidalgo; of Lille, Martine Aubry; from Rennes, Nathalie Appéré; of Nantes, Johanna Rolland; of Rouen, Nicolas Mayer-Rossignol; and the mayors (Europe Ecologie-Les Verts) of Strasbourg, Jeanne Barseghian; of Lyons, Gregory Doucet; of Bordeaux, Pierre Hurmic; or from Grenoble, Eric Piolle.

Left-wing elected officials make seven proposals "to be deployed urgently throughout the national territory", and undertake to "fully mobilize" for their implementation. They call for "an emergency plan for the care of all children and their families without a solution".

They propose to generalize the annual count of the number of people forced to sleep on the streets; to adopt "a programming and planning law" for accommodation places, "in a logic of territorial solidarity", with recourse to the requisition of empty buildings and a mechanism of financial penalties; to "remove the financial obstacles to the production of affordable housing and social housing" by simultaneously upgrading housing aid.

States General of Food Aid

The elected officials also wish to allow the regularization of people "long-term settled on the national territory", and the opening of "first reception centers distributed throughout the territory for people coming to seek refuge in France". They still propose the organization of States General of food aid.

In its annual report presented this week, the Abbé Pierre Foundation estimates the number of homeless people in France at 330,000. This is 30,000 more than the previous year, and an increase of approximately 130% compared to 2012.

A few months after his first election as head of state in 2017, Emmanuel Macron declared that he no longer wanted to see "anyone on the streets, in the woods, by the end of the year". “The first battle: to house everyone with dignity. I want emergency accommodation everywhere. I don't want any more women and men on the streets." In February 2019, the government had nevertheless decided to reduce the budget allocated to emergency accommodation by 57 million euros.