FIGURES reveal how thousands of homes are lying empty in Dorset - almost twice the national average.
Of those lying empty, a significant majority are second homes - meanwhile, the number of families in temporary accommodation in Dorset continues to rise.
Campaigners argue that the county's empty properties should be brought back into use to help solve the current housing crisis.
Action on Empty Homes said it is "exceptionally worrying" that more than half a million homes lie unused across England, while tens of thousands of families are living in temporary accommodation.
The campaign group's analysis of Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) figures show that 7,570 homes in Dorset were not being used as of October, up from 7,246 the year before.
Of these, 1,820 were long-term empty having been unoccupied for at least six months - while 5,750 were second homes.
This means one in every 24 homes in Dorset were out of use – above the average of one in 47 across England.
There were 268,000 long-term empty homes across the country – 19 per cent more than the previous October, the biggest annual increase since current records began in 2004.
A further 263,000 are classed as second homes which are not in residential use long-term, and are not charged extra council tax when they are unused.
Action on Empty Homes said that the 531,000 properties without residents should instead offer "vitally needed housing" to the homeless.
Director Will McMahon said: “It can’t be right that in the last four years we have seen an escalating housing crisis while the number of long-term empty homes keeps rising.
"There are over 100,000 children languishing in overcrowded and temporary accommodation at a time when we know that overcrowded housing is being linked to the spread of the coronavirus and to higher mortality.
"It will be impossible to ‘build back better’ if we keep letting our housing crisis get worse."
Separate figures from MHCLG show the number of households in temporary accommodation in Dorset is rising.
There were 273 households without their own homes as of September, including 199 children, which was up from 214 in September 2019.
They are among 59,400 families, including 120,600 children, in temporary accommodation across England.
Housing charity Shelter said it is frustrating to see so many empty properties, but a new generation of social homes is needed to solve the problem.
Chief executive Polly Neate said: "Tackling these empty homes is not an adequate alternative to building more genuinely affordable housing.
"We could fill every one of these properties and we still wouldn’t have solved the chronic housing shortage we face."
A further 400,000 vacant homes across England had been used within the last six months, including 2,520 in Dorset.
An MHCLG spokesman said: “We have given councils powers and strong incentives to tackle empty homes, including the power to increase council tax by up to 300 per cent on these properties, and take over the management of homes that have been empty for a long period.
“They also receive the same New Homes Bonus for bringing an empty home back into use as for building a new one.”
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