Tuesday 9 February 2021

Cladding: Extra cash to deal with crisis expected to be announced

Further funding towards the cost of removing unsafe cladding on buildings is expected to be announced by the government on Wednesday.

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick will make a statement in the Commons later - although detail of the plan is unknown.

Thousands of flat owners are facing huge bills for fire-safety improvements after 2017's Grenfell disaster, when flames spread via combustible cladding.

The government announced a £1.6bn building safety fund in 2020 to help.

But pressure is growing on ministers to increase the pot for residents stuck in the buildings, with a committee of MPs estimating the total cost of the crisis could run to £15bn.

BBC Newsnight reported last month that the government had decided to allocate extra funding, possibly running into billions of pounds, to speed up the removal of unsafe cladding.

More than three and a half years since the Grenfell Tower fire, which killed 72 people, an estimated 700,000 people are still living in high-rise blocks with flammable cladding.

After Grenfell, round-the-clock fire patrols known as "waking watches" were put in place in hundreds of buildings, costing groups of leaseholders tens of thousands of pounds every month.

Fixing safety faults has seen costs surge for leaseholders, while residents have seen insurance costs on buildings with fire safety problems rocket.

Workers remove cladding from a building
Getty Images

Meanwhile, data released last month shows that cladding removal and repair work has been completed on only 58% of social housing blocks and 30% of private sector buildings.

Labour's shadow housing secretary, Thangam Debbonaire, said it was "shameful" that "hundreds of thousands of people are still trapped in unsafe homes".

She added: "Whatever is announced will be too late for those first-time buyers who have already gone bust."

On Tuesday evening, the National Leasehold Campaign tweeted that it was "another sleepless night" for leaseholders "worried sick" about what Mr Jenrick was going to announce.

"Please don't help some and not others," it said.

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'We could go bankrupt'

Amy Cottenden

First-time buyer Amy Cottenden, who is 28, bought a one-bed flat in Metis Tower in the centre of Sheffield for £85,000 in 2017.

Inspections of the 14-storey building in the wake of the Grenfell Tower tragedy revealed it had the same type of flammable ACM cladding and other safety faults.

"It is absolutely terrifying knowing that you are stuck here," she said. "With lockdown, they are saying not to go out, but you are in a building where all you want to do is not be in it. You can't leave. You can't sell. My flat isn't worth anything until it is made safe."

While the government's Building Safety Fund is paying for the Grenfell-style cladding to be removed, the building has other fire safety faults, including missing fire breaks, that aren't covered by the scheme.

It could cost up to £6m to fix. Flat owners fear they may face huge bills of up to £50,000 each.

"We can't pay it and we shouldn't have to pay it. It is not our fault. We could all go bankrupt because of this," Ms Cottenden said.

A spokesperson for Rendall & Rittner, the company which manages Metis Tower, said: "We understand and sympathise with residents and owners about the uncertainty that this situation is causing and will do all we can to assist."

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February 10, 2021 at 02:44PM

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-56005071

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