HOUSING and homelessness charity Shelter has launched an appeal calling for urgent support for its advice helpline, as the number of calls taken from people struggling to pay for their homes in the West Midlands has soared by over 97 per cent in the past two years.

Last year the helpline spoke to more than 670 people in the region struggling to pay their rent or mortgage or going into debt because of their housing costs. Overall, calls to the charity from people in the West Midlands rose by 24 per cent over the same period.

The figures reflect the growing number of people in the region facing an ongoing battle to keep up with their housing costs. The charity is warning that with so many already living on a financial knife-edge, a job loss or serious illness can be all it takes to tip someone into a spiral that ends in homelessness.

Over the last year, the helpline’s advisers heard from 124,000 people across the country desperately in need of support but nearly 54,000 calls went unanswered as the charity struggled to keep up with growing demand.

Despite increasing the number of helpline advisers, the charity is finding that overwhelming need for its services continues to outstrip resource, making it impossible to answer every call.

Shelter helpline adviser Nadeem Khan said: “It’s heartbreaking to hear from families every day who are desperate to keep a roof over their heads but it’s even worse to know that at any given time there could be others waiting desperately on the line who we just can’t get to.

“For many people - from a family who have been evicted and have nowhere else to go, to a parent who has lost their job and is struggling to keep their head above water - we are the only place they can turn for help.

“Cut after cut to the housing safety net has left many families facing a downward spiral towards homelessness. We need more support than ever so that we can be there to answer every call for help.”

Campbell Robb, Shelter’s chief executive, said: “Every 11 minutes, a family in Britain loses their home. With more and more people having to stretch their finances to breaking point in a bid to makes ends meet, it’s not hard to see why but, as more people come to us desperate for support, sadly our helpline is also being stretched to its limits.

“Our advisers can be the difference between a family keeping their home or losing it, which is why we urgently need more support to make sure that no call for help goes unanswered.”