Escape from the insufferable elections BS with a news item

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Asbestos stuck to wall
Asbestos stuck to wall

I don’t often write articles about myself and my own experiences … but FM this wall to wall election BS is insufferable. Days and days of election commentators talking BS, excluding everything else …

Asbestos was widely used as a building material in the 1970s. People recognise it as being fireproof but it was also used simply as a bulking filler. Boy-abusing paedo politician Cyril Smith had close ties with Turner and Newall Ltd, a major asbestos company and promoted it despite health dangers becoming apparent.

Since asbestos was widely used as a building material, many buildings built in the 60s and 70s era still have a lot of asbestos in them. It is not particularly dangerous unless it is disturbed – particularly using power tools like drills and sanders – and fibres are released into the air. It is accepted practice to isolate and encapsulate discovered asbestos to prevent it from being disturbed.

My social housing flat – let’s call my provider BCC – was built in the 70s when asbestos use was widespread. Many of the floors were originally tiled using tiles containing asbestos on bitumen oil-based adhesive containing asbestos. The tiles were removed previous to me moving in and the bitumen adhesive was notionally isolated and encapsulated in a self-levelling ‘latex’ flooring to make it safe. Except that it wasn’t.

My social-housing provider BCC signed my flat off as fit for habitation before I moved in and actually before any work was done to make if fit for habitation. There was bare bitumen exposed where the flooring hadn’t been done. After that was resolved I tried painting the floors using a roller and the floor was so thin that it came away attached to the roller.

My social-housing provider BCC agreed to redo the floor in my lounge after this nonsense. It was done by a company – let’s call them FF. FF redid the flooring in my lounge on a Thursday but the following day it was cracked throughout. The guy redid it on the Friday but it was poorly finished because he was doing 2 floors at different locations and rushing between them and needed to finish to get home and go to the pub.

So the ‘latex’ concrete flooring isolating the oil-based bitumen adhesive containing asbestos is a rushed job so that it is uneven with high and low points and the door doesn’t open or close properly. The floor is left as bare concrete because that’s what the regulations allow. Installing vinyl tile flooring would involve a big premium because the floor is so poorly finished i.e the floor would have to be repaired or replaced.

So somehow my floor – I have no idea how – got wet. So I’ve got a cat that could have vomited on it or I had a friend who would visit who suffered from ADHD. I suppose that he could have spilled a drink and neglected cleaning it up, it’s the sort of thing he could do. So just living in my flat really. I didn’t notice because there was a sofa close to the wall hiding it.

The water gets into the bitumen and reacts violently damaging the floor. I complain to my social-housing provider BCC that my floor is not sealed adequately, that they are not managing and maintaining asbestos properly. BCC deny everything, says they and everything they do is perfect and actually tell me that this asbestos is “deemed safe”. As part of the complaints process I tell them that it is not a council surveyor’s place to “deem” asbestos to be “safe”.

So this complaint is now with the Housing Ombudsman after a year’s wait … The Housing Ombudsman notionally decides on complaints while what they really do is excuse social housing providers’ neglect. The “safe asbestos” shit will be coming from them – they serve as a ‘regulator’ providing examples to crap social-housing providers about what is acceptable. If it is excused by the Housing Ombudsman councils know the shit they can get away with.

Asbestos stuck to wall
Asbestos stuck to wall

So I have brown bitumen splashes on my wall at a height of a foot and more which have now dried exposing globs of white, fibrous material stuck to my wall. The social-housing provider BCC claims to have done nothing wrong and that the floor is perfect. The Housing Ombudsman will now decide in BCC’s favour and tell me that I’m wrong. The problem is of course, if BCC has acted so perfectly how is there asbestos stuck to my wall?

Continue ReadingEscape from the insufferable elections BS with a news item

Complaints about social housing repairs soar

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https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/complaints-about-social-housing-repairs-soar

Houses under construction on a housing development in Basingstoke

https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/complaints-about-social-housing-repairs-soar

THE government came under pressure to let tenants withhold rent over disrepair today, after complaints from social housing residents jumped by over 40 per cent.

A report by the Housing Ombudsman revealed it had to intervene 26,901 times between April 2024 and March 2025 in disputes about landlords’ failings.

Property condition was the most common complaint category, with complaints about repairs soaring by 43 per cent.

Over 40 per cent of the £5.4 million compensation ordered was for failures in handling leaks, damp and mould. 

Article continues at https://morningstaronline.co.uk/article/complaints-about-social-housing-repairs-soar

Continue ReadingComplaints about social housing repairs soar

Housing ombudsman for England warns of ‘simmering anger’ over living conditions

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https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/29/housing-ombudsman-for-england-warns-of-simmering-anger-over-living-conditions

Richard Blakeway called the quality of social housing in England ‘completely inadequate in the 21st century’. Photograph: Michael Kemp/Alamy

Richard Blakeway says 474% increase in complaints to his office in last five years points to risk of ‘social disquiet’

The housing ombudsman has warned “simmering anger at poor housing conditions” could boil over into social tension as his office recorded a 474% increase in complaints about substandard living conditions since 2019/20.

Richard Blakeway, the housing ombudsman for England, said repairs were now the single biggest driver of complaints his office deals with, accounting for 45% of its workload.

“Without change we effectively risk the managed decline of one of the largest provisions of social housing in Europe,” he said. “To replace these homes would take more than 60 years at recent building rates.”

He said it was “neither fanciful nor alarmist” to suggest the growing anger at housing conditions could become “social disquiet”, saying the “shock of Grenfell Tower and Awaab Ishak’s death resonate still”.

“I travel across the country to different public meetings and there is a sense of people feeling invisible, of voices not being heard, their issues not being taken seriously, a lack of respect and dignity in the way in which residents have been treated. It is leading to a really serious fracturing of trust, which in some cases is irreparable,” he said.

Guardian article continues at https://www.theguardian.com/society/2025/may/29/housing-ombudsman-for-england-warns-of-simmering-anger-over-living-conditions

Continue ReadingHousing ombudsman for England warns of ‘simmering anger’ over living conditions