LONDON, April 14 -- The government of the United Kingdom issued the following news:

In line with his 2026-27 Inspection Plan, the Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration has commenced an inspection of the Home Office's engagement with local authorities in the planning and development of asylum accommodation. 

This inspection will examine how the Home Office plans, prepares, and engages with local authorities in developing asylum accommodation. There will be a particular focus on:

* the effectiveness of the Home Office's engagement strategy in enhancing the responsiveness,consistencyand quality of engagement with local authorities * local asylum accommodation delivery models and initiatives involving local authorities * how the Home Office ensures that accommodation providers fulfil their responsibilities for engagement with local authorities on delivery of new accommodation * consideration of the impact on local services and community cohesion during site selection processes.

This call for evidence will remain open until24April 2026.

The Independent Chief Inspector invites anyone with knowledge and experience of how the Home Office plans, prepares, and engages with local authorities in developing asylum accommodation tosubmitevidence to inform this inspection and would be pleased to hear both what is working well and what could be improved. The ICIBI Inspection Framework will be used to assess the Home Office in this inspection.

The information yousubmitmay be included in the final inspection report, but it is the ICIBI's practice not to name sources and to anonymise as much as possible any examples or case studies.

Please note that Strategic Migration Partnerships and local authorities will be invited to complete a separate survey and do not need to respond to this call for evidence.

Please click hereto email your submission to the Chief Inspector.

Please note: The ICIBI's statutory remit does not extend to investigating or making decisions about individual cases. Thisremainsa Home Office responsibility. However, the Chief Inspector can take an interest in individual cases to the extent that they illustrate or point to systemic problems.

Data Protection

Information on how we process personal datasubmittedin response to a call for evidence can be found in the ICIBI privacy information notice available on the ICIBI website.

John Tuckett, Independent Chief Inspector ofBordersand Immigration

14April 2026

Disclaimer: Curated by HT Syndication.