,
Labour’s Shadow Housing Secretary, responding to the Housing
Secretary’s statement to the House of Commons on cladding, said:
“Buying your first home is a dream come true, but for many it’s
now a nightmare.
“As a result of Government choices, three and a half years after
the Grenfell tragedy, hundreds of thousands of people are trapped
in unsafe homes.
Many more unable to move.
“Today’s announcement is a repeat of undelivered promises made a
year ago. The Chancellor said last March: “all unsafe combustible
cladding will be removed from every private and social
residential building above 18 metres high.” This has not
happened. Buildings haven’t been able to access the fund. 9
pounds out of 10 has not been paid out.
“At every stage, the Government under-estimated the problem.
Delays caused it to grow. The Government still doesn’t know how
many buildings are unsafe, where they are or what danger they
pose.
“Until we have answers to these basic questions, the Government
will continue to make mistakes. Offering piecemeal solutions that
have to be updated when they don’t deliver.
“Can the Minister guarantee the funding will cover all buildings
over 18m?
“What will the consequential be for the devolved administrations
including Wales?
“We can’t have a repeat of the ‘first come first served’ free for
all, where the most dangerous blocks risk being fixed last.
“Will the Government set up an independent taskforce, to
prioritise buildings according to risk, get these funds out the
door, and go after building owners who fail to get on with work?
“Government Ministers have now promised 17 times that
leaseholders will not bear the cost of fixing a problem they
didn’t cause.
“Many will be listening to the Housing Secretary’s remarks today.
The Government has betrayed their promise that leaseholders
wouldn’t pay for the building safety crisis.
“Three and a half years on from Grenfell, hundreds of thousands
can’t sleep at night because their homes are unsafe. The
Government has chosen to pile financial ruin on them. This is an
injustice.
“What does the Housing Secretary say to Julie in Runcorn, who
lives in a flat with dangerous HPL cladding? Her block is under
18m, so she has been unable to access any funding promised so far
by the Government. She lives in the same development as buildings
with the exact same cladding, but over 18m, who can access the
fund.
“Why should the arbitrary height limit mean the difference
between a safe home, and financial ruin?
“What are the terms of the loans? What will the interest rate be,
and will leaseholders be required to pay the interest as well as
the main cost?
“He says leaseholders won’t pay more than £50 per month - does
that stay with the current owners when they move or stay with
house for the new owners to pay? How long does it run for? Will
it go up by inflation each year?
“What will the Government do if those homes remain unsellable?
“How will they ensure freeholders take up these loans? How will
Government speed up remediation?
“The current stalemate cannot continue.
“There are others who don’t have cladding, but have been charged
£100,000 per flat to fix other fire safety issues. What does the
Housing Secretary say to them?
“The Government should focus on securing our economy and
rebuilding from Covid. Not saddling homeowners with further debt.
When they have further debt, that means less money for our
economic recovery. It’s taking money away from local shops.
Re-enforcing regional imbalances. And making young first-time
buyers and pensioners pay money they can’t afford.
“The Government should pursue those responsible, to prevent
leaseholders and taxpayers from carrying the can.
“The Minister has announced a levy and a tax. Those responsible
for this crisis should bear the cost.
“So, how much does the Government anticipate their levy will
raise?
“Will the Government pursue others in the industry, such as
cladding manufacturers, who are also responsible for putting
dangerous cladding on buildings?
“The Government has missed every target for removing dangerous
ACM cladding. There are still 50,000 people are living in flats
wrapped in this, the same cladding found on Grenfell Tower, and
thousands more with other dangerous cladding.
“Will the Minister commit to remove all dangerous cladding by
2022?
“As he will know, at least one first time homeowner, Hayley, has
already been made bankrupt before she was even asked to pay for
remediation. She asked government to think about her former
neighbours.
“When will leaseholders start receiving funding for round the
clock fire patrols?
“How will the Housing Secretary protect leaseholders from
sky-rocketing insurance?
“How will the Government get the market moving? Their last
announcement fell to pieces and the housing market in affected
homes is grinding to a halt.
“Government inaction and delay has caused the building safety
crisis to spiral. People cannot continue to live in unsafe homes.
Home-owners shouldn’t face bankruptcy to fix a problem they
didn’t cause.
“Unfortunately these proposals will leave too many people still
struggling and facing loans, instead of being given justice.”