Mental Health and Homelessness Market test

Manchester City CouncilcontractFind a TenderRef ocds-h6vhtk-06b809Procurement Act 2023Light-touch servicesVCSE suitableplanning
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Estimated value

services

Awarded value

Suppliers

0

Lots

1

0 awarded

Published

18 Jun 2026

This is a preliminary market engagement notice

Map the supplier landscape and document your shortlist before opening the tender. The market simulation produces a defensible audit record you can attach to your procurement file.

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Description

We estimate there are around 100 people in Manchester who have a combination of at least 2 of the following: impaired executive functioning, acquired brain injury/alcohol-related brain damage, neuro-divergence, mental illness, foetal alcohol syndrome, substance misuse and complex trauma - who also often experience multi-exclusion homelessness. These people are not having their (statutory, Care Act) needs met. They often cycle in and out of hospital supported/temporary accommodation and bounce around services. They can be refused services such as psychological therapies because they are drinking/taking drugs to self-medicate. Sometimes people get stuck in homelessness services which are intended to be short-term/temporary, including being placed in hotels. Others move on from temporary services, only to lose their tenancy and then start the cycle again. Repeated failures of services and housing insecurity compound the trauma people have experienced and diminish their capacity for hope and trust. Case studies show these people can have poor outcomes while consuming a high level of resources from health and social care providers, housing / homelessness teams, police, voluntary sector partners and others, most often at crisis points. This group may also access multiple health settings in varying states of distress or engagement including A&E / use of ambulance, acute settings for physical health treatments, and/or mental health hospital settings for short or long-term stays. Health colleagues often find people in this group very hard to discharge from hospital as these citizens can present with distressed behaviours and may have been evicted from accommodations, so housing and/or care providers refuse to support them. Case studies and research also show that with the right support, people can move on with their lives. There are examples of specialist services elsewhere in the country which successfully work with people in this group, taking a long-term, therapeutic approach, and which also provide End of Life care. We want to engage with the housing and care markets to understand your readiness to support this group of people and to better understand what models you think work. We would also like to gather information about the service type (e.g. supported accommodation, residential care or something else) and the funding model. Please complete the attached questionnaire. All questions are optional. You can answer anonymously or leave your contact details if you are open to a follow up conversation.

Scope

Reference
ocds-h6vhtk-06b809
Total value
Above the relevant threshold
Commercial tool
Standalone contract
Contract dates
30 Sept 2027 to 30 Sept 2031
Main category
services
CPV classifications
85144100
85311000
Particular suitability
Voluntary, community and social enterprises (VCSE)