Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Chat

Join the discussion and chat with other Mumsnetters about everyday life, relationships and parenting.

Grenfell.............three years on!

5 replies

HeIenaDove · 13/06/2020 16:05

56,000 people still at risk from flammable cladding.

www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/grenfell-tower-fire-flammable-cladding-labour-a9563936.html

www.independent.co.uk/voices/grenfell-fire-inquiry-anniversary-residents-cladding-safety-fund-money-a9563636.html

Three years after Grenfell, the government’s lack of action is a disgrace
Tens of thousands of people have spent the lockdown in dangerous homes. The public inquiry has still not delivered justice. And ministers’ promise to give social housing residents a bigger voice has not been delivered

This weekend marks three years since the horror of the Grenfell Tower fire. It was a moment that shocked and shamed our nation.

Coronavirus prevents us from marching silently in west London on Sunday. But across London and across the country, we will come together in silence at 6pm. In that moment, we will stand together in powerful solidarity. We will remember the 72 lives that were taken, and a community shattered by grief.

Grenfell lifted a curtain on inequality in our country. Yet three years on, the scale of government failure is stark. Tens of thousands of people have had to endure the lockdown in dangerous homes. The public inquiry has still not delivered justice. And ministers’ promise to give social housing residents a bigger voice has not been delivered.

This inaction from government comes amid more major fires in the last year, from Barking to Greater Manchester. The risk of another fire like Grenfell is still sky-high.

Last year, in response to public pressure the government announced a new deadline. All Grenfell-style cladding was to be removed from buildings by June 2020. The housing secretary at the time warned that “building owners can expect enforcement action to be taken” if work was not done

Yet on Thursday, official figures revealed that 300 buildings are still wrapped in this deadly cladding. New analysis from Labour finds that 56,000 people are living in these death traps. This weekend should have marked the end of a three-year nightmare for residents across the country. Instead, they will go to sleep tonight in unsafe buildings due to government inaction.

It shames the government that this deadline has been missed by such a large margin. Ministers should now live up to the promises made last year and take enforcement action against building owners who are failing to do this work

The recent launch of the £1bn Building Safety Fund is a welcome step forward. It was something Labour had repeatedly called for over the last three years. But it is increasingly clear that the size and scope of the fund is nowhere near sufficient to ensure that all tall buildings are made safe.

Many leaseholders who have already taken out expensive loans to pay for work are excluded from the fund. If your building is lower than 18m, you are excluded from the fund. Interim safety measures like “waking watch” patrols are also excluded. Some residents are being charged more than £800 per month for waking watch.

To cap it off, leaseholders are reliant on their building owners making an application on a first come first serve basis. There are too few winners and too many losers in a landscape that should have put people’s safety centre stage

The scale of this crisis is vast. Grenfell-style cladding is just the tip of an iceberg. There are another 1,700 buildings with other types of dangerous cladding. At the current rate it would take 39 years to remove it all.

Insurance premiums have rocketed by as much as 1,300 per cent in buildings such as Brindley House in Birmingham. Waking watch schemes are costing leaseholders hundreds of pounds per month with no support offered by the government. Too many tenants feel stigmatised and shut out of the decision-making process with social landlords.

Yet despite all this, the government has still not passed a single piece of primary legislation on building safety. Three years after the fire, this is a failure. The government can, and must, do better.

The human impact of this failure is tragic and growing. A survey of residents, published this week by the UK Cladding Action Group, found that one in five leaseholders trapped by dangerous cladding have thought of suicide or self-harm.

We stand with Grenfell United in calling for real, concrete action to fix this crisis and to get justice. After Grenfell we said, “never again”. But “never again” needs to mean something. Never again should a community like Grenfell be so let down. Never again should so many be left living in fear in their own homes.

Mike Amesbury is the shadow minister for housing and planning

OP posts:
HeIenaDove · 13/06/2020 19:46

.

OP posts:
HeIenaDove · 14/06/2020 00:43

www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/jun/13/grenfell-tower-fire-anniversary-covid-19-response

Grenfell relative draws comparisons between fire and Covid-19 response
Families of 72 victims of tower block blaze will mark third anniversary of blaze this weekend

A bereaved relative has drawn parallels between the coronavirus crisis and the aftermath of the Grenfell Tower fire before the third anniversary of the disaster.

Karim Mussilhy, whose uncle Hesham Rahman died in the blaze, said the pandemic had been tough for many of the bereaved and survivors of the fire, which killed 72 people.

Speaking before the third anniversary of the fire on Sunday, Mussilhy, the vice chairman of the Grenfell United group, said: “Especially in the beginning, there were a lot of similarities to what was happening just after the fire.

Karim Mussilhy.
Karim Mussilhy.
“Being able to know what’s going on with your loved ones when they were taken into hospital, waiting by the TV listening to the number of deaths rising every day, being glued to the TV for any sort of news and not being able to know where to go or who to turn to.”

Mussilhy also drew parallels between the government’s response to Covid-19 and the aftermath of Grenfell.

“The government has been criticised for not reacting quickly enough, making sure the NHS has the right equipment and is supported in the right way to be able to tackle the pandemic. They just didn’t react quickly enough

It’s also three years on, people always say that time changes, time is the best thing for healing, but in this case it feels like it just gets worse and so many things are happening that have so many similarities to what happened to us, and what continues to happen to us.”

In tribute to each victim who died in the west London tower block, bells of London churches will toll 72 times and green lights will glow from tower block windows as remembrance and commemoration moves online because of the pandemic.

Green lights to shine for Grenfell victims on anniversary of disaster
Read more
Faith leaders will conduct sermons and reflections online throughout Sunday and from 10.30pm people in homes across the UK are asked to display a bright green light from their screens to show solidarity with survivors and the bereaved, the Grenfell United group said.

Mussilhy said the lack of face-to-face contact with other victims and those who are bereaved would make this year’s anniversary more difficult.

He said: “I guess going through extremely tough times, the one thing that’s helped me the most is being able to be around people and be around friends and family. Not being able to do that, it’s just been extremely tough.”

A statement from Grenfell United said: “It is a day of remembrance and mourning. This year will be different to the last two years. We are living through another tragedy – Covid 19 – and it has affected our community

“Please join from home to remember 72 lives lost and reflect on our ongoing journey to justice and change. Even apart we remain together until justice comes.”

A spokeswoman for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said: “The safety of residents is our priority and we took immediate steps after the tragic Grenfell Tower fire to ensure nothing like it could ever happen again.

“This included setting up the Building Safety Programme and testing process to quickly identify all high-rise buildings with ACM cladding. Since then we have worked tirelessly with councils to ensure buildings at risk are made safe, backed by £1.6bn in funding

We will ensure everyone affected by the Grenfell Tower tragedy continues to receive the support they need with over £158m committed to supporting the community so far.

The public inquiry into the disaster was paused in March because of the pandemic and is due to restart on 6 July

OP posts:
HeIenaDove · 14/06/2020 00:52

Thanks Thanks

OP posts:
Awwlookatmybabyspider · 14/06/2020 00:54

Good God where have those 3 years gone, Helena. Will certainly be remembering all the victims survivors and their families in my prayers.

Sleep in eternal peace beautiful Angels of Grenfell. Halo. Xxx

OP posts:
New posts on this thread. Refresh page