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News & Insights

Keep up to date with the current developments around housing disrepair and the failures of UK social housing landlords. Here, you will find real stories of tenants, who have suffered in dilapidated properties and have been ignored by their housing provider.

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MPs inquiry finds 'homes unfit for humans' following ITV News investigation

An inquiry by MPs triggered by an ITV News investigation has found the deterioration of social housing has left some unfit for human habitation, as landlords are told to significantly “up their game.”

In a scathing report, the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities committee found “it is undeniable that tenants… face poor treatment from providers who discriminate and stigmatise people because they are social housing tenants.”

Chair of the Committee Clive Betts thanked ITV News for its investigation into the social housing sector, which he said had forced MPs to launch their own inquiry.  

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Clive Betts sat down with ITV News' Daniel Hewitt on how the inquiry has unearthed 'failures at every point'

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“The current debate about the quality of social housing in England began after survivors of the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017 accused their housing provider of marginalising and belittling residents and repeatedly ignoring their concerns about the building’s safety,” the report states.

“More recently, a series of media reports, particularly from ITV News, has revealed appalling levels of disrepair in some social housing, including serious damp and mould.

“We also note with concern the extremely serious impact on the mental and physical health of those affected. Whatever the precise extent and causes of housing disrepair, we call on everyone in and connected to the sector to prioritise above all else the quality of housing being provided to existing tenants.”

MPs found too many (social landlords) are guilty of: 

• not responding quickly enough to requests for repairs or investigating the structural causes of disrepair;

• preferring quick fixes over proper remediation work; relying too heavily on tenants to report problems, rather than proactively monitoring the condition of their stock.

They said there is “a lack of respect for tenants arising from a stigma attached to being a social housing tenant” , a “power imbalance between providers and tenants” and that some providers had strayed from their “social mission” through commercialisation.

The inquiry also laid blame at the door of the government for failing to provide proper regulation of the sector, failing to build enough affordable homes or provide enough money to councils and housing associations to deal with old, decaying stock.

The inquiry recommends housing providers be required to support the establishment of genuinely independent and representative tenant and resident associations, and calls on the government to establish a national tenant voice body to drive up standards in social housing.

The report makes a series of recommendations in relation to the Housing Ombudsman with more public awareness of how tenants can complain. 

It recommends the government empower the ombudsman to order providers to award compensation of up to £25,000.

Scandalous and shameful: Housing bosses respond to ITV News investigation as inquiry begins

After a year-long ITV News investigation into the state of social housing in England, this week saw the start of an inquiry by MPs into how it has to come to pass that so many tenants are living in uninhabitable homes, struggling to get landlords to listen.“We’re here because there has been plenty of criticism recently about the quality of some social housing and the failure of providers to respond adequately for the request for repairs,” said Conservative MP Ben Everitt.On Monday, the UK Parliamentary Committee on Levelling Up, Housing, and Communities heard how conditions ITV News uncovered - from London to Liverpool and Birmingham to Bristol - are “scandalous” and have brought “shame” on the landlords responsible.Those were not the words of tenants, but the landlords themselves.

'They don't care how we live': Woman ends up in A&E after plaster falls on head

Mum whose ceiling collapsed after leaks tells ITV News her son could have died

The man with breathing difficulties left to live in squalid housing

“ITV and its other exposés have been scandalous,” said Professor Ian Cole of South Yorkshire Housing Association.“The actual conditions themselves were absolutely appalling. Secondly, the complete apparent absence of any communication between the tenants and the landlords, and thirdly, the cultural references about lifestyle creating the mould and damp, which I just think is just a measure of the distance between many landlords and the tenants they serve.”Asked if she agreed, Clare Miller, CEO of Britain’s biggest housing association Clarion, said “Yes I do, and we were caught up in this [ITV coverage]”. Ms Miller faced several questions over the organisations own failings. 

In 2021, an ITV News investigation found tenants across the Clarion-owned Eastfields estate in South London living in appalling conditions with residents suffering from leaks, collapsed ceilings, rotting bathrooms, mould-infested kitchens and a rodent problem that plagued the estate. 

Residents told us the damage and disrepair had gone unaddressed for decades.

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