In our 30th year of operation, we intend to celebrate our Anniversary by embarking on a programme of fundraising, to provide opportunities for our service users which we are unable to fund through our normal resources. Our most ambitious event will be a challenge to climb
SHAP exists to promote social justice, to combat poverty and to prevent
homelessness.
We aim to enable homeless, vulnerable or disadvantaged people to take control of their own lives, and to receive the quality of housing and services to which they are entitled.
Since 1981, SHAP has provided services for young and vulnerable people: those who have been homeless, poorly housed, escaping abusive situations or leaving care. Over the years, we have housed many of these people at a point of crisis in their lives, given them a safe space within which they could catch up, and provided them with individual support to help them to make and carry out decisions about their own lives.
We have grown over the years and so has the range of services that we provide. We now support 160 people in accommodation that we provide, and 150 more in floating support services across the
Our core services remain targeted at meeting the needs of young adults: 16 – 25. This is where our strength, expertise and experience as an organisation has been located and will continue to be at the core of our identity as an organisation. However, as our areas of activity broaden, so does our experience and expertise. We have successfully developed new services by demonstrating our vision and capacity to manage, and then bringing in people with the expertise to develop and grow those services.
Whilst remaining committed to our vision, we remain concerned about the immediate and long term issues facing people in general and the prospects for services for excluded groups in particular. We intend to lobby at local, regional and, where possible, national level to promote the interests of our services users and the need for appropriate levels of funding.
- People’s right to live independently and take control over their lives.
- People’s right to safe, secure, good quality housing and the support that they need to maintain it.
- People’s right to their individuality. We will respect and take account of their race, colour, gender, sexual orientation, age or disability.
- Mutual respect for the people with and for whom we work.
- The rights of our tenants and service users to tell us their views and be involved in decisions that affect their lives and influence the services that they receive.
