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Labour’s migrant plan in tatters as councils to rebel against housing asylum seekers | UK | News

Councils will rebel against the Workers’ Government and the plans to move hotel migrants to houses in more than one profession (HMO). They are used by the Ministry of Interior to host asylum seekers, and the existing rules allow contractors to convert to HMO for six people without the planning process of a house.

It is believed that eight councils throughout England have passed or tried to pass measures that make it difficult for hosts to establish beds. In Wigan, where approximately 200 HMO used to host asylum seekers, the Council said that new rules will allow each application to examine every application. Derby City, Warrington Borough, North Lincolnshire, Bolton, Lambeth, Certain and Eastbourne Borough, including other councils, are also considering pressure to make planning permission.

As reported SunThe Wigan Council said that the properties used by the Ministry of Interior to asylum seekers were not “authority or number or position”. Meanwhile, both the Eastbourne and the Bolton Council said that their measures are indifferent to their plans to host asylum seekers.

HMOs are also used as student housing or to host homeless people and old prisoners. They should be rented by at least three unrelated persons who make up more than one household who share the possibilities.

In hotels, immigrants currently cost British taxpayers about £ 5.5 million every day. The Ministry of Interior said: “At the end of this parliament, we are working close to local authorities while trying to close all shelter hotels.”

In Lincolnshire, the locals recently expressed their disappointment on their plans to transform the former Dambusters center Raf Sampon into immigrant detention center. The Labor Party introduced the site as a center for asylum seekers as Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer struggled to grasp the immigrant crisis.

It turned out that the Leeds Municipal Assembly turned a student office block into migration. The application for converting this into a pension was presented last month and the result is expected in October.

The Council said: “The Ministry of Interior told the Council that the presentation is part of the wider central government efforts to reduce the confidence of the hotel for those looking for asylum seekers.”

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