Recent scandals have highlighted the brutal truth: those who could solve this crisis have no interest in doing so

Housing associations are hard to defend right now. This week, an investigation by the BBC exposed disturbing new details about the case of Sheila Seleoane, the woman whose body lay undiscovered for two years despite neighbours repeatedly complaining about the smell to their landlord. Peabody continued claiming her rent despite cutting off her gas because she did not open the door for a routine safety check.

And last week, a damning report exposed the failings of Rochdale Boroughwide Housing (RBH). Two-year-old Awaab Ishak died after prolonged exposure to black mould in his family’s flat. A housing ombudsman’s inquiry prompted by his death found that tenants were routinely judged by “prejudiced” staff who made “lazy assumptions”.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Scrawny trees, patchy grass, terrible view … why £6m Marble Arch Mound still falls flat

After a summer of free entry, visitors will now have to pay…

‘So many women are going to die’: Olivia Rodrigo lambasts Roe vs Wade decision at Glastonbury

Nineteen-year-old pop singer names Supreme Court justices and tells them ‘we hate…

Ship crew member charged after allegedly swimming to Western Australian port against quarantine rules

Premier Mark McGowan said the man, who jumped off the ship, was…