Decision details
To update the countywide Severe Weather Emergency Protocol (SWEP) in line with recommendation from the six Gloucestershire districts.
Decision Maker: Director of Governance, Housing and Communities and Monitoring Officer - Claire Hughes
Decision status: Recommendations Approved
Is Key decision?: No
Is subject to call in?: No
Decision:
To update the countywide Severe Weather
Emergency Protocol (SWEP) in line with recommendation from the six
Gloucestershire districts. The recommendation is to ensure that
SWEP remains a humanitarian, proportionate, and effective response
that protects life during genuinely severe weather, whilst
safeguarding the capacity and resources of front-line
services.
SWEP exists to prevent serious harm or death among people sleeping
rough during extreme weather. It is a humanitarian offer, not a
statutory duty, and is delivered through a countywide partnership
of local authorities, accommodation providers, and commissioned
support services.
Cheltenham already provides a strong year round safety net for
rough sleepers, including assertive outreach, the Somewhere Safe to
Stay Hub, discretionary placements, and personalised support. SWEP
is designed to complement, not replace these ongoing
services.
The recommendation is: -
• Temperature trigger unchanged (one night at –3°C,
or three consecutive nights at 0°C or below)
• Removal of yellow weather alerts as a trigger for SWEP
• Addition of amber weather alerts as a trigger for SWEP
• To continue to exercise discretion to trigger SWEP outside
of the above parameters, should the weather present a humanitarian
risk (for example, because the weather was notably worse than a
yellow weather warning forecast).
Reasons for the decision:
One of the council’s strategic housing
priorities, as set out in our Housing, Homelessness and Rough
Sleeping Strategy, is to reduce homelessness and prevent rough
sleeping. This initiative will help support this strategic housing
priority by targeting resources more appropriately and enabling
more effective support to be provide to those most in need.
Several years ago, yellow weather warning were introduced for SWEP.
However, experience over these years has shown that yellow warnings
are too broad, too frequent, and too unpredictable to be an
effective SWEP trigger. They were a visible trigger rather than a
humanitarian trigger.
Yellow warnings can be issued for low impact situations such
as:
“Some icy patches on untreated roads”
“Minor damage to trees or decorations”
“Possible disruption for those living near
rivers”
These are conditions that did not have a direct risk to life for
people sleeping rough, and as a result the current approach does
not represent value for money and is not effective.
Take-up remains consistently low, as many rough sleepers do not
consider the weather conditions as severe enough to engage. This
results in a high number of void nights, increasing costs without
delivering meaningful improvements in outcomes. At the same time,
valuable staff capacity is diverted away from individuals with the
most complex and pressing needs.
The frequent short notice alerts undermined effectiveness, making
it difficult for providers to mobilise safe, fully staffed
accommodation at pace. The model diluted focus and reduced the
ability to prioritise those at greatest risk, ultimately weakening
the impact of the assistance being provided to rough
sleepers.
Last winter, SWEP was activated on 10 occasions covering a 12-day
period in response to yellow weather warnings alone, often relating
to rain or low-impact ice alerts. This level of activation is
disproportionate, operationally unsustainable, and misaligned with
the intended purpose of SWEP, which is about the humanitarian
response.
Whilst removing the yellow weather warning would mean that SWEP is
not called when low-impact snow is forecast, but discretion remains
available if there was a humanitarian risk (particularly if the
weather turns out to be notably more severe than the forecast), and
CBC have the other safeguards in place if required as well as the
existing rough sleeper pathway.
We would want to include Amber warnings as they indicate a much
higher likelihood of severe impacts and may pose a risk to those
rough sleeping including a risk to life.
These conditions are far more likely to place rough sleepers at
immediate risk of harm and therefore align with the humanitarian
purpose of SWEP.
In summary: -
• Temperature trigger would remain unchanged
• Yellow weather alerts would be removed
• Amber weather alerts would be added
• Discretion would be applied if the weather became notably
more severe than a yellow whether warning forecast, resulting in a
humanitarian risk.
• The approach ensures SWEP remains targeted, effective, and
deliverable, while still offering protection during genuinely
dangerous weather.
Alternative options considered:
Not to adopt the suggested changes to the
protocol. This is rejected for the reasons set out above.
Finance Comments: Removing yellow weather warnings and replacing them with amber will reduce the number of low impact triggers for SWEP. Appropriate safeguards will remain in place and discretion will be available if there was a humanitarian risk. Prioritising humanitarian response over weather warnings will reduce number of unnecessary responses, this in turn will have positive impact on the general funds without reducing services provided within SWEP. Signed: Ela Jankowska – Finance Business Partner Date: 23.06.2026
Declarations: none
Other reasons / organisations consulted
This initiative is supported by our Cabinet
Member for Housing and Customer Services.
Contact: Paul Tuckey, Housing Enabling Officer Email: [email protected].
Publication date: 24/06/2026
Date of decision: 23/06/2026