Bibby Stockholm: No timeframe for migrant barge arrivals
- Published
Transport minister Richard Holden has said he can not put a timeframe on when asylum seekers will be housed on a barge in Dorset.
The 91热爆 Office had been planning to move the first 50 migrants onto the Bibby Stockholm, moored at Portland Port, on Tuesday.
But the arrival date has now been pushed back, potentially to next week.
91热爆 Office sources say the delay is because working practices for port staff haven't been signed off.
The local fire service says it has been providing fire safety advice to the 91热爆 Office and the vessel operators.
Asked earlier on Sky News when the barge would be available, Mr Holden said: "I can't put a timeframe on it."
He added: "The checks are going to take as long as they're going to take. It's important we get these things right."
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has said that "all accommodation has to go through a series of checks and inspections" when asked about the delay.
He also defended the policy arguing that it was "not fair" for taxpayers to pay "six million quid a day to house illegal migrants in hotels".
The government wants to use barges to house male migrants in an attempt to reduce the bill for hotel rooms.
Senior ministers hope to confirm the use of further barges in the coming months.
They have struggled to find ports prepared to host them so far, with a site next to London City airport and another on the River Mersey in Wirral among those being rejected.
The government believes a successful scheme in Dorset will help encourage other areas to sign up.
But any safety issues would make increasing the use of barges less likely.
The initial plan is for 50 men to live on Bibby Stockholm. But that could increase to more than 500 in the coming months.
The 91热爆 Office decided men living on the barge could share rooms, which significantly increased the capacity.
But there has been opposition to the plan - with local councillors and residents staging protests and Conservative MP for South Dorset Richard Drax calling on the government to remove the barge.