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Social housing residents second class citizens over home repairs.

27 replies

HelenaDove · 10/06/2019 16:55

news.sky.com/story/social-housing-residents-second-class-citizens-over-home-repairs-11738733

Social housing residents 'second-class citizens' over home repairs
Homeless charity Shelter says approximately 2.5 million people have had a problem with their homes

More than half of people living in social housing in England have experienced a problem with their home in the past three years, including electrical faults, gas leaks and faulty lifts.

Research by the homeless charity Shelter shows approximately 2.5 million people have had a problem and one in 10 had to report it 10 times before it was dealt with.

Michael Mohid, 70, has lived in the same council flat in southeast London for more than 30 years.

He said the flat has been permanently damaged by four major floods in that time.

"When I had a flood in the downstairs toilet, the council didn't fix it for weeks because it had asbestos panelling," he said

"I had to walk through the flood water every morning, I tried to mop it but couldn't keep up with it."

On another occasion Mr Mohid said the flat was without electricity for three weeks.

"It makes you very stressed," he said.

"The garden has some subsidence so there was a crack in the wall. Every time it rained, water would get in and leave the carpet squelchy. I had to keep on reporting it."

Karen Connelly, 54, lives on the same housing estate and has been campaigning for residents for more than a decade.

She was awarded £4,000 in compensation from Southwark Council after being exposed to asbestos.

She said: "People are at their wits' end. They are scared, anxious and angry and don't feel like they are being listened to.

"The whole complaints procedure for any disrepair is harrowing. Every step of the way we are treated like second-rate citizens.

"We are dealing with faulty electrics, raw sewage and the heating and hot water never works.

Councillor Kieron Williams, cabinet member for housing management and modernisation at Southwark Council, said: "As the landlord of London's largest social housing stock, it is a mammoth task to manage our repairs in a timely way, and successive cuts by central government to council budgets have only made it harder.

"However, we always strive to deliver the very highest standards of service to our tenants and as a council we are proud to have an 89% repair satisfaction rate from our residents.

The research comes almost two years after the Grenfell Tower fire, which exposed the failures of social housing in the UK. There have been calls for tougher regulations to better protect people living in social housing.

Shelter chief executive Polly Neate said: "Tenants were not listened to at Grenfell and they are still not being listened to in social housing up and down the country.

"They are acutely aware of that and it's leading them to fear for their safety, which is hardly surprising given what happened at Grenfell.

"So what we really need is a new regulator that will hear tenants' concerns, and follow them up, and be accountable to tenants themselves."

A spokesperson from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said: "No one should be forced to live in unsafe housing and we are working closely with Grenfell United and others to ensure social homes are safe and issues are resolved quickly.

"In our recent Social Housing Green Paper consultation we set out proposals to re-balance the relationship between residents and landlords, to tackle stigma and ensure residents' voices are heard - and we will publish our response before the summer recess

OP posts:
HelenaDove · 02/07/2019 23:07

www.insidehousing.co.uk/insight/when-builders-become-landlords-61858

OP posts:
HelenaDove · 04/07/2019 14:18

bylinetimes.com/2019/06/14/grenfell-two-years-on-little-has-changed-for-social-housing-tenants/

Today
Thu 4 July 2019
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Fact
Argument
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GRENFELL
TWO YEARS ON
Little Has Changed for Social Housing Tenants
Natalie Bloomer and Samir Jeraj
14 June 2019
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Natalie Bloomer and Samir Jeraj report on how the tragedy at Grenfell Tower still hasn’t led to change for others living in poor conditions.

In the aftermath of the Grenfell Tower fire, there was lots of talk about giving a voice to social housing tenants and the need to take their concerns more seriously.

Two years on, how much has really changed?

Michelle Fox and her four children moved into their housing association home in 2015. It quickly became apparent that the property had a serious problem with damp.

“Most rooms were damp,” she says. “But there was also groundwater coming up through the concrete floor.”

She made a number of complaints to the housing association but she says that, rather than taking action, they told her they would monitor the problem for two years.

We have to change the culture in social housing so people are treated with respect.
Karim Mussilhy, vice-chair, Grenfell United 

“There were puddles on the carpet,” she says. “We lost two sofas and my feet were always wet.”

Eventually, three years after her first complaint, the housing association moved the family into temporary accommodation while they repaired the floor.

Things didn’t get any better.

The new house also had problems with mould and damp and Michelle says that old windows let the cold in.

“The cold was brutal,” she says. “And there was no oven, so we lived off junk food for months.”

Even once back in their home, Michelle says there continued to be issues with the floor. As a last resort, she put in for an exchange and moved out of the property last month.

“Nothing has changed [since Grenfell],” Michelle says.

“They’re dealing with society’s most vulnerable people, but there’s a ‘put up and shut up’ attitude.”

Emma (not her real name) and her teenage daughter, spent two years living in temporary accommodation on the Aylesbury Estate in London while they waited for social housing.

In February, during freezing conditions, a burst pipe meant that tenants on the estate were left without heating and hot water for eight days. This wasn’t the first time something like this had happened. We spoke to Emma at the time.

“We continuously have heating and hot water shut downs,” she said. “I can wake up one morning and go to have a wash and there’s no hot water. This is how we’ve lived for the past two years.”

During the shut downs, the council provided tenants with electric heaters but Emma said she was concerned with the cost of using them.

“I’m having to use hot water bottles, extra clothing, fan heaters and I’ve also brought a mattress into the living room so we can stay in one room. I can’t afford to have these heaters running all over the house.”
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Another resident on the estate told us there were holes in one of her bedroom walls which let rain water into the flat. It was so bad that they had to stop using the room and, instead, she and her three children all had to sleep in the same bedroom.

Both she and Emma said they made repeated complaints to the council over the two years they were living on the estate.

“I’m trying to deal with all this the best I know how, while still trying to remain an example for my daughter,” Emma said.

“I’m trying to teach her that you go to work so you can have nice things, but living in the conditions we are living in, I don’t know if I’m doing a good job of that anymore.”

In recent months, both families were moved into permanent homes. But, social housing tenants across the country face similar problems.

New research from the housing charity Shelter shows that 56% of social renters in England have experienced a problem with their home in the past three years.

The issues included gas leaks, faulty lifts and electrical hazards. One in 10 of those people had to report the problem more than 10 times.

The survey also found that half of all people asked had less trust in the Government to keep social tenants safe in their homes since Grenfell, and another third believed the Government’s response to the tragedy had made no difference.

Christopher Mosley is Chair of the Homes in Sedgemoor arms-length management organisation in Somerset. He’s been a council house tenant for the last 40 years. He says things have got a lot worse for social housing tenants in recent years.

“There’s bad housing, a lot more poverty and people just being ignored,” he says. “When the terrible fire happened at Grenfell it brought attention to social housing but it hasn’t lasted. People think it’s yesterday’s news.”

Christopher is also part of the group Benefit to Society, which campaigns to end the stigma of social tenants. This month he and others will be visiting Parliament to raise the issues faced by those living in council or housing association homes.

They’re dealing with society’s most vulnerable people, but there’s a ‘put up and shut up’ attitude.
Michelle

“We’ll be telling them that programmes like ‘Benefits Street’ should never be aired again and that press and politicians should end the stigma associated with council housing,” he says.

They will also be travelling around the country to speak to other tenants groups.

“We’ll be going all over and, after each meeting, we’ll be putting on an afternoon for residents so we can talk to them about the issues they face. This is about us coming together and raising our voices.”

The London residents and campaigners group Housing Action Southwark and Lambeth (HASL) say that its members continue to face overcrowding, poor responses to repair issues and long council waiting lists.

“HASL members have always understood the importance of good, secure council housing,” spokesperson for the group, Elizabeth Wyatt, says. “While there were some claims that attitudes towards council tenants softened after Grenfell, national and local politicians’ contempt for social housing is clear.”

This week, the Grenfell survivors group, Grenfell United, projected messages onto tower blocks which they believe are still unsafe.

One read: “Two years after Grenfell and the fire doors in this building still aren’t fit for purpose.”

Another said: “Two years after Grenfell this building still has no sprinklers.”

Vice-chair of Grenfell United Karim Mussilhy, who lost his uncle in the fire, said he had visited residents in Newcastle and heard how their concerns were being ignored.

“That’s what happened to residents in Grenfell before the fire.

“We have to change the culture in social housing so people are treated with respect. Two years after Grenfell, we are coming together and our voices can only get louder.

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