Lord Young of Cookham (Con) My Lords, with the leave of the
House, I will now repeat a Statement made today by my right
honourable friend the Secretary of State in the other place. The
Statement is as follows: “Mr Speaker, with permission, I
would like to make a Statement on the publication of Dame Judith
Hackitt’s final report following her Independent Review of Building
Regulations and Fire...Request free
trial
-
(Con)
My Lords, with the leave of the House, I will now repeat a
Statement made today by my right honourable friend the
Secretary of State in the other place. The Statement is as
follows:
“Mr Speaker, with permission, I would like to make a
Statement on the publication of Dame Judith Hackitt’s final
report following her Independent Review of Building
Regulations and Fire Safety. Honourable and right honourable
Members will be aware that my predecessor and the then Home
Secretary asked Dame Judith to carry out this review
following the Grenfell Tower fire. We are approaching one
year on from that tragic event, and those affected are firmly
in our minds. I met some of the bereaved and survivors as
soon as I could after I was appointed. This strengthened my
determination to ensure that they continue to receive the
support they need and to ensure that we learn from this
tragedy so nothing like this can ever happen again. With this
in mind, Dame Judith was asked to undertake her review of the
existing system as part of a comprehensive response to the
fire. I want to pay tribute to Dame Judith and all those who
contributed to this important report.
The report’s publication is a watershed for everyone who has
a stake in ensuring that the people living in buildings like
Grenfell Tower are safe—and feel safe. Dame Judith is clear
that the current system—developed over many years and
successive Governments—is not fit for purpose. She is calling
for major reform and a change of culture, with the onus more
clearly on everyone involved to manage the risks they create
at every stage, and government doing more to set and enforce
high standards. This Government agree with that assessment
and support the principles behind the report’s
recommendations for a new system. We agree with the call for
greater clarity and accountability over who is responsible
for building safety during the construction, refurbishment
and ongoing management of high-rise homes.
The Hackitt review has shown that in too many cases, people
who should be accountable for fire safety have failed in
their duties. In future, the Government will ensure that
those responsible for a building must demonstrate that they
have taken decisive action to reduce building safety risks
and will be held to account. We agree that the system should
be overseen by a more effective regulatory framework,
including stronger powers to inspect high-rise buildings and
sanctions to tackle irresponsible behaviour. We agree that
there should be no buck-passing between different parts of
the industry and that everyone needs to work together to
change the system and, crucially—given the concerns raised
following the Grenfell tragedy—we agree that residents must
be empowered with relevant information. They must be able to
act to make their homes safer.
This review has implications for government as a whole. I am
committing today to bring forward legislation that delivers
meaningful and lasting change and gives residents a much
stronger voice in an improved system of fire safety. Changing
the law will take time. But, as Dame Judith acknowledges, we
can—and must—start changing the culture and practice right
now. As a first step, we are asking everyone involved to have
their say on how we can achieve this by contacting us by the
end of July. Their response will inform a more detailed
Statement to the House in the autumn on how we intend to
implement the new regulatory system. I will also update the
House on progress before the Summer Recess.
We all have a role to play. For our part, this Government
have accepted and have been implementing the recommendations
that relate to us since Dame Judith published her interim
report in December. First, we are consulting on significantly
restricting or banning the use of “desktop studies” to assess
cladding systems. Inappropriate use of desktop studies is
unacceptable and I will not hesitate to ban them if the
consultation—which closes on 25 May—does not demonstrate that
they can be used safely.
Secondly, we are working with industry to clarify building
regulations fire safety guidance, and I will publish this for
consultation in July. Let me be clear: the cladding believed
to be on Grenfell Tower was unlawful under existing building
regulations. It should not have been used. But I will ensure
that there is no room for doubt over what materials can be
used safely in the cladding of high-rise residential
buildings. Having listened carefully to concerns, the
Government will consult on banning the use of combustible
materials in cladding systems on high-rise residential
buildings. Thirdly, we will work with the industry to make
the wider suite of building regulations guidance more user
friendly. All of this continues our work to ensure that
people are safe.
Since the Grenfell tragedy, my department has worked with
fire and rescue services, local authorities and landlords to
identify high-rise buildings with unsafe cladding, ensure
that interim measures are in place to reduce risks, and give
building owners clear advice about what they need to do, over
the longer term, to make buildings safe. In addition, I am
issuing a direction today to all local housing authorities to
pay particular regard to cladding-related issues when
reviewing housing in their areas.
Remediation work has started on two-thirds of buildings in
the social housing sector, and we have called on building
owners in the private sector to follow the example set by the
social sector and not pass costs on to leaseholders. I find
it outrageous that some private sector landlords have been
slow to co-operate with us on this vital work. I am calling
on them to do the right thing. If they do not, I am not
ruling anything out at this stage.
As the Prime Minister announced yesterday, the Government
will fully fund the removal and replacement of potentially
dangerous cladding by social landlords, with costs estimated
at £400 million. This will ensure that they can focus their
efforts on making ACM cladding systems safe for the buildings
they own. We want to allocate this funding for remediation as
soon as possible and will announce more details shortly,
including how we will encourage landlords to continue to
pursue other parties for costs where they are responsible or
at fault. We will also continue to offer financial
flexibilities for local authorities which need to undertake
essential fire safety work.
We must create a culture that truly puts people and their
safety first, inspires confidence and, yes, rebuilds public
trust. Dame Judith’s review and the significant changes that
will flow from it are important first steps, helping us
ensure that when we say ‘never again’, we mean it. I commend
this Statement to the House”.
2.35 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, it is customary to thank Ministers for repeating
in this House Statements made in another place. There is no
one in your Lordships’ House, or indeed in the House of
Commons, who is not saddened by the necessity for this
Statement to be made. The tragedy of Grenfell, the dreadful
loss of life, and the shock and terror generated by the
events that have led to Dame Judith’s report will resonate
for years.
Nobody who has read this week’s Guardian with its moving
description of so many of those who perished in the
conflagration will fail to welcome—indeed, to insist
upon—stringent measures being taken to avoid any repetition
of this catastrophe.
Noble Lords will welcome many of the proposals in the
report, based, as it is, upon its clear findings of
failings in the present system of building control and the
need to secure more effective regulation and enforcement.
It also stresses the need for clarity as to where
responsibility will lie. It is, however, disappointing that
the report does not appear to accept the need to ban the
use of combustible material in cladding systems on
high-rise residential buildings. The Government are to
consult on this issue. I believe that most Members of this
House would join the plea by survivors of the disaster, the
RIBA and others in calling for a ban on combustible
construction materials, certainly in high-rise developments
but perhaps more generally.
The Secretary of State agrees that,
“residents must be empowered with relevant information.
They must be able to act to make their homes safer”.
With due respect to the Secretary of State, I find that a
curious formulation. What, beyond expressing concerns, can
residents do about issues such as those which led to the
disaster?
There are some issues not mentioned in the Statement which
I would like to raise. The first is to ask the Minister for
an update on the progress of rehousing the survivors of
this tragedy in housing which meets their needs. Too many
tenants and their families continue to live in
accommodation which fails to meet their needs.
The second is to ask for clarification in relation to the
funding of the essential work necessary to ensure the
safety, and alleviate the fear, of residents of high-rise
accommodation. Will this be met by the Government?
The third is to ask about the position of residents in
blocks of flats where the freeholder is not the local
authority. Some will be leaseholders; others will be
renting. In the former case, do the Government expect the
leaseholder to finance the necessarily expensive work? If
not, what steps will they take to ensure that the
freeholder does so and that the cost is not borne by the
resident? Will local authorities have a role in enforcing
any requirements in such cases and, if so, will the cost be
treated as being within the new burdens doctrine, under
which they can look to the Government for the necessary
funding?
Finally, the Statement, perfectly properly, deals with
high-rise housing. What consideration is being given to
other high-rise buildings—offices, shopping centres,
hotels, hospitals and the like—which may also present
problems, in relation to both existing buildings and those
which might be built in future? The tragedy of Grenfell
must never be repeated.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I associate myself with the remarks of both the
Minister and the noble Lord, , in relation to this
terrible tragedy and the need to make sure that it never
occurs again.
I should start by declaring that between 2010 and 2012 I
was the Minister with responsibility for building
regulations.
I very much welcome the report and I welcome the
Government’s endorsement of its recommendations. We share
the Secretary of State’s commitment to making sure that
they are brought into force as quickly as possible. In that
respect, my first point is to raise with the Minister the
following phrase in the Statement:
“Changing the law will take time”.
When will the primary legislation that the Secretary of
State has promised be introduced? We know that there is a
legislative logjam further in the system. Can the Minister
give us an assurance that this legislation will vault over
that logjam and reach this House and the other place in
good time for an early introduction and passage through the
parliamentary system?
Secondly, does the Minister recognise that in fact the
Secretary of State already has powers to start the process?
The Building Act 1984 was amended by the Sustainable and
Secure Buildings Act 2004 to provide a power requiring a
nominated person to be appointed for each building project
to sign off on building regulation compliance. That power
is not yet in force but it would produce what the Hackitt
report calls a “dutyholder”. That can be introduced now by
statutory instrument and could be in force by October this
year. Changing the law does not always have to take time,
and I hope that the Minister will undertake to press his
colleagues in the department to get on and make sure that
this simple, straightforward introduction of a duty holder
takes priority and does not get stuck in the legislative
logjam.
The Hackitt review rightly outlined the dysfunctional and
fragmented nature of the construction industry and
identified a culture of cost-cutting and corner-cutting at
the expense of good quality, good safety and common sense.
I want the Minister to recognise that it is not just fire
regulations in high-rise buildings that have been the
victim of, or bypassed by, that cost-cutting,
corner-cutting approach. Buying a new house in 2018 is like
buying a new car was in the 1960s, with complaints very
high and quality standards very low. Will the Government
learn from this review and make sure not only that
compliance with the right fire regulations is automatic in
future but compliance with the full range of measures in
building regulations, all of which are aimed at saving
life, promoting the health and well-being of the buildings’
occupants, and delivering a long-term, sustainable
environment?
Finally, I welcome the Government’s £400 million allocation
for social housing repairs to cladding. I want to press the
Minister on this, as I did the noble Lord, , last week: is it not
time to give a similar “pay now, recover costs later”
pledge to tenants and leaseholders living in privately
owned high-rise flats? Surely they are just as deserving of
living in safe homes as anybody living in social housing.
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My Lords, I endorse the moving words of the noble Lord,
, at the beginning of his
remarks. Like him, I listened to a survivor on the “Today”
programme emphasising his very strong view that we should
ban the use of combustible materials. I know that, as we
consult on that option, a number of professional bodies, as
well as survivors, will strongly endorse that suggestion.
The noble Lord may not have had time to read the whole of
the Hackitt review but there is an interesting section on
resident empowerment, regular safety reviews, improved
communication with residents and a duty holder —as was
mentioned by the noble Lord, . It recommends
that, where there is an unsatisfactory response from the
freeholder, there should be an opportunity to leapfrog over
the freeholder to an independent body with powers to
intervene.
The noble Lord will know that £400 million has been
allocated to local authorities to compensate them for the
costs of remediation. Both noble Lords raised the issue of
leaseholders. In many cases, the leaseholders are also the
freeholders because they have used the legislation to
enfranchise themselves, so it is no good telling them to
get the money from the freeholder because it is a circular
discussion. I was interested in the noble Lord’s suggestion
that local authorities might intervene to underwrite in
some way the costs of remediation. Discussions are
continuing at a ministerial level about the problems facing
private sector leaseholders. We hope that, where it is
possible, freeholders will follow the example of Barratt,
which has, I think, undertaken in one case to pay for
remediation itself and not pass the cost on to
leaseholders. Where practical, we would encourage other
freeholders to do the same.
The noble Lord asked whether the recommendations could
apply beyond high-rise buildings. Many recommendations—on
changing the culture and on ownership of risk, for
example—apply to the wider construction industry and not
just to high rise. There is read-across there.
The Government place a high priority on public safety, and
the legislation involved is quite extensive. Dame Judith
suggests establishing a new body—the joint competent
authority or JCA—combining powers from the Health and
Safety Executive and building standards departments. There
are other legislative changes also. We want to consult and
we want to get it right. The Secretary of State will make a
progress report before the Summer Recess and again in the
autumn on how we are taking forward the legislative
consequences from this report.
I agree with what the noble Lord, , said towards the
end of his remarks. The culture should filter through not
just to fire safety but to the whole range of building
regulations. Dame Judith wants what she calls an
outcomes-based strategy—where people assume responsibility
for risks and do not shield themselves behind prescriptive
solutions and try to game them, to use her words.
Finally, to pick up the point made by the noble Lord,
, we are considering
whether any of the current powers could be used to take
forward Dame Judith’s vision. I think I put the Building
Act 1984 on the statute book in an earlier capacity, and I
am delighted to learn that those powers are still relevant.
We are inviting people to contact us with views on how we
implement the review, which will include using existing
powers where they are available.
2.46 pm
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Lord Deben (Con)
My Lords, we are all deeply concerned that this should not
happen again and I welcome what the Minister has read out. In
particular, I hope the Government will give a clear
indication that the banning of combustible materials is
something they would like to do. We have to have a
consultation, but, given our debate yesterday on why it is
important to make clear in any consultation where the
Government believe the future should be, it is important that
the Government are very clear about this.
Does my noble friend accept that Dame Judith’s report clearly
highlights that inspection and enforcement have a big role to
play, and failed in this case? Therefore, I hope I am not
extending it too far to say that there is a fundamental
problem with the building regulations in general. We have to
recognise that building regulations are not being met by new
housebuilders, for example, because they are not inspected
and the regulations are not enforced. In my view, this is a
clarion call to review the way in which inspection and
enforcement take place. I hope the Government will say that
this is not just about fire safety but about all the other
regulations we have passed, which should be enforced. I
suppose I ought to declare my interest as chairman of the
climate change committee. This is a real issue for us,
because we cannot get the enforcement we need for new
buildings.
-
I am grateful to my noble friend, himself a former Secretary
of State at the Department of the Environment with
responsibility for building regulations. The Hackitt review
has recommended what she calls “gateways”—steps that must be
fulfilled before the next stage in the construction process
can happen, from design, to planning, to completion. On
inspection, there is an interesting section in the report
about approved inspectors, where Dame Judith sees a perceived
conflict of interest and recommends some changes. On regular
inspection, there is a recommendation that high-rise
buildings should be inspected rigorously at least every five
years for safety. On resources for the planning regime, my
noble friend will know that we have recently increased the
fees that planning authorities may charge with the increase
being ring-fenced for actions such as enforcement.
I should have said in response to the noble Lord, , that I have the latest
figures from the royal borough on the rehousing of the
Grenfell survivors. As of 14 May, of the 210 households that
needed to be rehoused, 201—95%—have accepted offers of
temporary or permanent accommodation. Of those, 138 have
moved into temporary or permanent accommodation of which 64
are currently living in temporary accommodation and 74 have
moved into permanent accommodation. Kensington and Chelsea
Council is spending £235 million on providing the homes
needed and we know that the council plans to spend an
additional £83 million on top of the £152 million it has
already reported spending. It has reported that it has now
made over 300 permanent homes available to survivors to give
people as much choice as possible.
On the building regulations, Dame Judith’s point was that the
problem was not so much the regulations but a failure of the
system that supervises and enforces them.
-
(LD)
My Lords, I declare my interest as a member of the Fire
Safety and Rescue APPG. I welcome the report from Dame
Judith. It is time that the principle of a golden thread ran
right through the entire planning, delivery and maintenance
of buildings. I know that many others agree with that. I
endorse the comments made by my noble friend about the timing of
legislation coming through, and I hope that those things that
can be done swiftly will start to give confidence to the
various parts of the industry that changes need to happen.
Wearing my fire safety hat, I am slightly concerned that in
the Statement the Minister referred to working with industry
to clarify the building regulations fire safety guidance. I
hope that does not just mean with the private industry side
but includes the public sector, whether fire services or
local government—or indeed those people who act as approved
inspectors going in to have a look.
Five years ago, the Secretary of State promised a full review
of the approved document B regulations after the Lakanal
House fire inquest. We need an urgent review of those. My
concern is that Dame Judith Hackitt’s review is not explicit
about what will happen to them. If they are to be made part
and parcel of a general regulations review, please will the
Government assure us that the reasons behind the review
proposed five years ago remain and will be addressed as a
matter of urgency? Everybody agreed five years ago that we
should never let something like the Lakanal House tragedy
happen again, yet here we are.
Finally, I also endorse the comments made by my noble friend
. Please can we not
just have guarantees and hopes that private freeholders will
not pass on the costs? I completely accept the Minister’s
point that many leaseholders are also freeholders, but I am
afraid there are too many examples already of leaseholders
being faced with massive charges by freeholders who are
taking none of the risk and none of the liability. That is
unacceptable.
-
I am grateful to the noble Baroness. On legislation, I can
only repeat what I said: the Government place a high priority
on public safety. I know that the Bill managers will take on
board the points made by a number of noble Lords.
On consultation, it will not just be a review of the
industry. The noble Baroness is quite right. It will involve
the fire and rescue service, local authority building
standards people, approved inspectors and others.
On the building regulations, we agree that the building
regulations fire safety guidance needs clarification. Work
actually began before the Grenfell fire last year. When the
interim report was published, we promised to complete it. A
clarified version of the guidance will be published for
consultation in July. We want to ensure that there is no room
for doubt about compliance of materials with the building
regs. We will consult on Dame Judith’s recommendations, as I
said, including the proposal that only non-combustible
cladding can be used on high-rise buildings. Also in the
report are proposals for much more stringent testing of
materials, and other recommendations along those lines.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I refer to the joint competent authority that the
Minister has already mentioned and the implication that that
would require primary legislation. This recommendation is
extremely important and will help to build the infrastructure
around a new and higher-standard regime. Is there any chance
at all that a shadow authority could be established that
might make the whole thing a little speedier than primary
legislation?
I have had the pleasure of working with Dame Judith. She
refers in her report to the construction design and
management regulations because she chaired the Health and
Safety Commission. She reports that those regulations
produced good outcomes. She is wedded to these approaches
being repeated in relation to the safety and quality of
complex buildings and to the safety of those who live in
them. The Statement implies that there will be another set of
consultations, perhaps by the end of July, a Statement before
the Recess and another in the autumn. There will be
legislation. Can the Minister elaborate a little on the
Government’s thinking on precisely how quickly some of Dame
Judith’s really urgent and effective recommendations could be
implemented, short of primary legislation?
-
I am grateful to the noble Baroness. Some of the
recommendations can be done without legislation, and we
should start on those now—changing the culture within the
industry, for example. The joint competent authority proposed
by Dame Judith is quite a radical proposal. The powers are
set out in more detail on page 23. We agree that we need an
improved regulatory system with sharp teeth. It would make
sense to bring together the three disparate bodies—the HSE,
the fire and rescue service and local authority building
standards—together in one overarching body with these teeth.
The new body would process the applications for high-rise
buildings. We need to consult on that model, as I said. We
have a lot of support for her vision of an improved
regulatory system. We want to consult and then set out our
plans for implementation in the autumn. I note with interest
the suggestion of the noble Baroness that if we go down the
JCA route a shadow body should be set up to take over
responsibility; she asks whether that could be done without
legislation. We want to make progress and we recognise the
need for reform and the need for some overarching body to
make sure that we do not make the same mistakes again.
-
(LD)
My Lords, this is a good report and I am pleased that the
Government have welcomed it in the way that they have. In
order to give confidence to the many thousands of people who
have great anxiety about the future—the residents who live in
these buildings—I wonder whether the Government would be
prepared for instance to take immediate action to implement
some of the uncontroversial recommendations in this excellent
report. For instance, the residents’ voice recommendations
could be implemented almost without delay and would give
confidence to people out there that the Government are taking
not just the report but the actions from the report
seriously.
Secondly, I completely agree with the remarks of the noble
Lord, Lord Deben, about transparency and independence within
building control, and about giving it some teeth. That is
something I have been concerned with in my role as a
councillor for a number of years. I look forward to that new
system being independent of current construction companies
and completely transparent in how it operates, and having the
necessary teeth to implement action that it currently does
not. That will require funding and I notice in the report a
reference to that. I hope that the Government will be able to
commit to properly funding local authorities in order to
undertake new, strong measures to implement building control
standards.
-
I am grateful to the noble Baroness. She is quite right about
residents’ voices, and in many cases that is already
happening. In both the social and the private sectors there
are residents’ associations—or rather, tenant forums—whereby
there is a good dialogue between the freeholder, the owner
and those who live in the building, and Dame Judith’s report
has some suggestions as to how to take that forward. I agree
that we should do that without waiting for legislation: I
entirely endorse the point.
The JCA proposed by Dame Judith would indeed be independent.
It would not be dominated by the industry but would be
composed of the three components that I mentioned. On the
residents’ voice—there is some in-flight refuelling here—the
Government agree with the assessment and support the
principles behind the report’s recommendations. We will work
with partners to consider Dame Judith’s detailed
recommendations and, again, we will set out our
implementation plan in the autumn.
On resources for local authorities, some local authorities
have found it quite difficult to trace the owners of some
privately owned high-rise blocks. People are either not
answering or they are based overseas. We have therefore made
£1 million available to local authorities in order to help
them enforce their duties to identify and, where necessary,
take action against the owners of buildings with unsuitable
cladding. As I mentioned earlier, the increased fees for
planning applications should provide more resources for
planning departments.
-
(LD)
My Lords, the Minister mentioned an outcome-based safety
regime. My understanding of that process is that, rather than
enforce point-by-point compliance with regulations A, B and
C, while there has to be compliance, overall the system—the
building, that is—has to be safe. The person who is
accountable for the building has to underwrite its safety.
This is remarkably similar to the outcome of the inquiry
conducted by the noble and learned Lord, Lord Cullen, into
the Piper Alpha disaster, which talked about the safety case.
As noble Lords will remember, it was an appalling tragedy,
and the report wisely changed the philosophical approach to
safety. The Hackitt review makes the same philosophical
proposal.
As someone who worked in and commented on the oil industry, I
recognise this as being a positive suggestion. It means that
there are lessons that the Government can learn about the
rapid implementation of such a philosophical shift. So, as
well as consulting the industry, I suggest that the
Government should also consult the oil and gas industry, in
particular the people who were around when that change was
made, because it was a retrospective and ongoing change.
Existing facilities had to be brought up to the new standard
and new facilities had to be built in the new way. Can the
Minister take that advice and talk to some of the people who
have already made this philosophical shift?
-
The noble Lord is quite right: what Dame Judith is basically
saying is that we should rely less on looking in isolation at
individual elements within the construction industry, which
she argues leads to fragmentation, silo thinking and gaming
the system, and move towards an outcome-based approach, which
means standing back and making sure that the system as a
whole has integrity. She is worried that at the moment what
she describes as a prescriptive approach means relying on
people meeting minimum standards and not taking a broader
view of what is going on. In a quote that makes the point,
Dame Judith says:
“This is most definitely not just a question of the
specification of cladding systems but of an industry that has
not reflected and learned for itself, nor looked to other
sectors”.
She wants to promote what she calls a proactive and holistic
view of the system as a whole. So not only should we look at
the oil and gas industries, we should also look at what is
happening overseas where other countries are also moving
towards an outcome-based system. I shall certainly take on
board his point about a dialogue with other industries which
have moved in this direction.
-
(LD)
My Lords, perhaps I may remind the House that I am a
vice-president of the Local Government Association. I will
raise two issues which I do not think have come out fully in
our discussions so far. One relates to the fact that in the
future, and depending on the consultation, it might be
possible for combustible materials to be used on buildings.
The Government’s Statement says that people living in
buildings such as Grenfell Tower should be safe and should
feel safe. But no one who knows that their accommodation is
made of combustible materials is going to feel safe, and I
suspect that they will also face substantial increases in
their insurance premiums. So I hope that we will pay close
attention to what the ABI and RIBA are saying about the need
to make the use of combustible materials illegal.
My second question concerns the £400 million, because this
issue has not yet been made clear. Is this a fixed sum of
money which local authorities are to bid into or is it a
flexible sum that may actually be higher than £400 million
when all the costs of replacing the cladding are known?
Further, does it include payment to local housing authorities
for the fire watching that is currently being undertaken in a
large number of high-rise blocks? It goes on for 24 hours a
day, seven days a week and the costs are likely to have
substantial implications for the rents paid by those who are
in that accommodation. I hope very much that the £400 million
is a flexible sum that will include the amount that might be
loaded on to people’s rents.
-
I take the noble Lord’s point about the views of the ABI.
Under the recommendations made by Dame Judith, those living
in blocks of flats will have much more information about how
safe their building is. She talks about a “golden thread”,
which is a database relating to the building. It would be
kept up to date and would be accessible to residents.
On the £400 million, we want to allocate this funding for
remediation as soon as possible and we will announce more
details shortly, including how we will encourage landlords to
continue to pursue other parties for costs where they are
responsible or at fault. He asked whether it is a flexible
sum. As someone who was once a Minister in that department
and had negotiations with the Treasury, I suspect that it is
not a flexible sum: it is £400 million that is available for
local authorities to bid for to help them with the costs that
they have faced. We are trying to do all we can to ensure
that in the social housing sector, the costs of implementing
the recommendations do not fall on tenants’ rents. We have
made that position clear.
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