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Grenfell Tower: Government to pay £200m for safer cladding | Construction Buzz #216

09 May 2019

The £200m bill to replace Grenfell Tower-type cladding on about 150 private high-rise blocks in England is to be met by the government.

Housing Secretary James Brokenshire had previously said the bill should be footed by the owners, not the taxpayer.

But he said owners had been trying to offload the costs on to leaseholders and that the long wait for remedial work had caused anxiety for residents.

Leaseholder groups said the news would be a "relief" but more was needed.

Seventy-two people died when a fire destroyed Grenfell Tower, in west London, in June 2017, in one of the UK's worst modern disasters.

It took minutes for the fire to race up the exterior of the building, and spread to all four sides.

A public inquiry into the fire heard evidence to support the theory that the highly combustible material in the cladding was the primary cause of the fire's spread.

Latest government figures show that 166 private residential buildings out of the 176 identified with aluminium composite material (ACM) cladding - the same type used on Grenfell Tower - are yet to start work on removing and replacing it.

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  • The terrible speed with which the Grenfell fire spread

Mr Brokenshire admitted he had changed his mind on demanding that freeholders pay up for safety work.

He said some building owners had tried to pass on the costs to residents by threatening them with bills running to thousands of pounds.

"What has been striking to me over recent weeks is just the time it is taking and my concern over the leaseholders themselves - that anxiety, that stress, that strain, and seeing that we are getting on and making these buildings safe."

Alex Di Giuseppe, a leaseholder in a block with unsafe cladding in Manchester, said he has been dealing with the developer, freeholder and management agent but had got nowhere.

"It's taken its toll on myself and other leaseholders. We've been living in an unsafe building and we've had these huge costs placed upon our heads. The stress is insurmountable at the moment.

"If this was a car with an airbag issue, it would be recalled. We don't understand why it's taken so long for the government to get to this point."

Mr Brokenshire told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We've seen a number of building owners and developers coming forward and doing the right thing."

Pemberstone, Aberdeen Asset Management, Barratt Developments, Fraser Properties, Legal & General and Mace and Peabody were named as having fully borne the costs for their buildings.

Prime Minister Theresa May said: "It is of paramount importance that everybody is able to feel and be safe in their homes."

grenfall

Grenfell United, a group of survivors and the bereaved, said the news offered hope to people feeling at risk at home.

"This result is a testament to residents themselves, in social and private blocks, who refused to be ignored. The truth is we should never have had to fight for it," the group said.

It asked the government to consider financial support for residents as they continue night watches and wait for the remediation work to begin.

The UK Cladding Action Group said the news would be a relief for thousands trapped in buildings with ACM cladding, but pointed out that "many, many" leaseholders and social housing tenants living in blocks with other forms of unsafe cladding would be excluded from this help.

"Fire does not distinguish between the different types of failed cladding out there. This inadequate response will be looked back on in shame when the next Grenfell tragedy occurs," the group said.

Shadow housing secretary John Healey accused the government of being "frozen like a rabbit in the headlights" in its response to the Grenfell disaster.

"Too weak and too slow to act at every stage and on every front," he said.

Emma Dent Coad, Labour MP for Kensington, tweeted that it was "shameful" residents had to wait 23 months for action, adding that the £200m fund was "measly" when compared with the amounts awarded to ferry firms to run services in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

  • Grenfell cladding '14 times heat limit'
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  • Is my tower block safe?

Last year, Stormzy and Adele joined Grenfell survivors in an emotional video calling on the government to remove dangerous cladding from buildings.

The government has already committed to funding replacement cladding in the social sector. There are currently 23 blocks still covered in it.

Owners of private buildings will have three months to claim the funds, with one condition being that they take "reasonable steps" to recover the costs from those responsible for the use of the cladding.

Lord Porter, Conservative peer and chairman of the Local Government Association, said developers and contractors, who are responsible for this crisis, should eventually pay the full cost - not taxpayers.

Source: BBC News

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