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No more late-night ATM runs — and no huddling in the enclosures to stay warm, either.

Some London banks are closing the door on customers as well as the city’s homeless because of safety concerns in the lobbies of automatic teller machines and other private properties where some people go to sleep or escape the cold.

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The move by several banking giants — what one advocate calls a “legal bind” — flies in the face of a new compassion-first London approach to people “sleeping rough,” piloted by city hall, police and support services.

It also highlights a gap in the city program.

Workers sent to help connect people struggling to find a shelter bed, health care, housing or addictions support are handcuffed by laws that bartrespassing on private property, even by those who want to help others.

“The legal context is that they (are forced to) walk by,” Abe Oudshoorn, chair of the London Homeless Coalition, said of the would-be helpers.