Debates between Alison McGovern and Emma Dent Coad during the 2017-2019 Parliament

Wed 16th May 2018

Grenfell Tower

Debate between Alison McGovern and Emma Dent Coad
Wednesday 16th May 2018

(6 years, 6 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Emma Dent Coad Portrait Emma Dent Coad
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I absolutely concur; they have been failed.

Secondly, the more pernicious sections of the media have berated families for not accepting so-called interim housing, implying that they love living in the luxury of hotels. I have visited those hotels. A Premier Inn is not a luxury. Some have called it a prison. Many have refused the so-called interim housing because they know what it means. A “temporary” placement that I know of lasted 13 years.

As for offers of permanent accommodation, the problems are manifold. Some are heartbreaking. One family was offered a flat in the so-called luxury of Kensington Row, but could not accept it because they needed adaptations to live independently. That work cannot be done for two years because the block is still under guarantee. The proposed solution was to offer home care. A family who were able to live independently were told to accept care from strangers, and another were offered accommodation in an older building needing adaptations.

Alison McGovern Portrait Alison McGovern (Wirral South) (Lab)
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Does my hon. Friend agree that the situation she describes is intolerable and must be changed?

Emma Dent Coad Portrait Emma Dent Coad
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Yes. I thank my hon. Friend.

The council has refused to pay for those adaptations because the property is owned by a housing association, and the family are so desperate to move that they have offered to fund the adaptations themselves from their compensation payment. Worst of all to date is a self-sufficient family, whom I know very well, who care for their older disabled family member and are proud to do so, but whose housing needs cannot be met. The council suggested they put that older family member in a care home so that they could be rehoused separately.

The pledges, commitments and guarantees of the Prime Minister, the Secretary of State or this week’s Housing Minister are not rehousing people. We ask the Government once again to send in commissioners to take control of this shameful process. If the Government continue to sit on their hands while tutting their disapproval, they should think about this: some Grenfell-affected people may not make it.