The number of Watford children living in temporary housing has doubled in a year as hundreds do not have a permanent home, new figures show.

A total of 268 children were living in temporary accommodation in the town by the end of March, according to data from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government.

Government figures show that 194 households were being housed temporarily, which is considered a form of homelessness, of which 128 had children.

Labour has described the homelessness crisis as a "national scandal" as the figures for children rose by 15 per cent, surpassing 150,000 and reaching the highest figure since records began in 2004.

Labour called the figures a national scandal.Labour called the figures a national scandal. The data means the number of Watford children in temporary accommodation has more than doubled from 133 last year.

Nationally, a record 120,000 households were living in temporary accommodation, which can include people living in hostels or bed and breakfasts.

Big Issue founder and crossbench peer Lord Bird described the latest figures as "appalling" and warned that "another winter looms and there’s little being done to turn this terrible tide".

He added: "The time for nebulous homelessness taskforces and woolly cross-government strategies is over. This is an urgent and immediate crisis, on which our new government must act now."

In Watford, 16 households were living in B&B hotels as of March, which are meant to be used only in an emergency and for no longer than six weeks by law.

But across England, the number of households with children exceeding that timeframe has rocketed by 80 per cent from 1,810 in 2023 to 3,250 this year, including three in Watford.

Housing charity Shelter said this Government must "tackle the housing emergency head on".

Chief executive Polly Neate said: "Without a clear plan to invest in genuinely affordable social homes, thousands more children will be forced to grow up in damaging temporary accommodation, spending months if not years living out of suitcases, crammed into grim bedsits and B&Bs, and unable to put down any roots."

Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary Angela Rayner said: "We are facing the most acute housing crisis in living memory and homelessness remains at record levels. This is nothing short of a national scandal.

"Urgent action must be taken to fix this. That’s why we are working across Government and with local leaders to develop a long-term strategy to end homelessness for good."

To prevent people from becoming homeless in the first place, Ms Rayner said the Government will deliver "the biggest increase in social and affordable homebuilding in a generation".