Almost 40,000 disabled on Scottish social housing list
That includes over 1,500 children
The Scottish Conservatives has slammed "wholly unacceptable" figures showing almost 40,000 disabled people are waiting for social housing.
Tory social justice, housing and equalities spokesman Miles Briggs claimed the waiting lists are the result of reductions in the housing budget and the "brutal underfunding of Scotland's councils" by the Scottish Government.
He also challenged ministers to declare a national housing emergency.
Miles Briggs said: "These figures are an absolute disgrace and wholly unacceptable.
"It should be a source of shame for the SNP-Green Government that at least close to 40,000 disabled Scots are languishing on social housing waiting lists.
"Vulnerable disabled people have been abandoned by the SNP, including more than 1,500 who are under 18.
"These appalling figures are the product of SNP cuts to the housing budget and their brutal underfunding of Scotland's councils.
"Scotland is in the grip of a housing emergency because the SNP have failed to meet their own housebuilding targets and starved local councils of essential funding to tackle the growing problem of homelessness.
"We need urgent action from the SNP Government before this crisis deepens - starting with them declaring a national housing emergency."
Over 1,500 disabled children waiting for place to live
Figures from 27 of Scotland's 32 councils show 39,875 people with disabilities are waiting for either a council or housing association property.
That includes 1,569 disabled children.
Five councils said they do not hold the relevant data, so the Tories warned the true total of disabled people waiting for either a council or housing association home could be even higher.
Housing Minister Paul McLennan said: "The Scottish Government has led the UK in housing by delivering more than 126,000 affordable homes since 2007, over 89,000 of which were for social rent, including almost 24,000 council homes.
"We will invest £556 million in affordable housing in 2024/25, the majority of which will be for social rent.
"The UK Government failed to inflation-proof their capital budget, and this has resulted in nearly a 10% real-terms cut in our UK capital funding between 2023/24 and 2027/28.
"This is on top of the disastrous impact Brexit has had on construction supply chain issues, labour shortages and the inflationary pressures driven by UK Government financial mismanagement.
"Additionally, we remain deeply concerned by the UK Government's proposals to change work capability assessments which could reduce vital financial support for the most vulnerable in our society.
"We remain focused on delivering 110,000 affordable homes by 2032 and to support that, we will bring forward the review scheduled for 2026/27 to 2024, which will concentrate on deliverability.”