Showing posts with label Landau House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Landau House. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 June 2024

Brent Cabinet to approve draft Tenant and Leaseholder Strategy tomorrow. Does it do the job?

 In September 2023, in a public question, I asked Cllr Promise Knight about Brent Council's actions over safety in its tall buildings post Grenfell and in the light of the Building Safety Act. It was important given what was emerging at the Grenfell Inquiry that tenants and leaseholders be fully involved.

Cllr Knight's Answer: LINK


 Photo: SkyNews.com

A further issue that emerged is that of the health dangers of damp and mould following the death of two year-old Awaab Ishak. LINK  Wembley Matters has written about damp and mould in Brent Council properties on the South Kilburn Estate LINK and Landau House, Kilburn LINK.

Tomorrow the Brent Cabinet will consider a draft Tenant and Leaseholder Engagement Strategy aimed at enabling tenants and leaseholders to challenge the Council on these issues in order to prevent another disaster.

The full Cabinet papers can be found HERE and the meeting is at 10am on Monday morning. They set out a series of arrangements and commitments:

 

Every person who rents or owns a home from the Council is important and should have a say in how their home is managed. This document explains how the Council will listen to what you think about living in your home and make changes based on your feedback.

By talking to you and others, the Council will improve services like fixing your home, keeping shared spaces clean, managing your lease, collecting rent, and making sure you are safe.

This document doesn’t talk about every service the Council provides, but any useful feedback will always be shared with the right people.

Events like the fire at Grenfell Tower show that listening to you is the only way we can be a good landlord. Over the next four years, we will work to rebuild our relationship with you, so you feel heard. We will also show you how your feedback has been used to make decisions.

We will be honest and open with information and improve how we communicate with you. This document supports the Council's plan to help everyone in Brent move forward together.

 

OUR COMMITMENTS

1. Commitment One: We have a culture that respects engagement & make changes using your feedback.

How we will do this:

o We will offer various ways for you to get involved and share feedback. o Achieve the National Engagement Standard set by the tenant  engagement support organisation, TPAS.


o Make sure our contractors (repairs) also offer ways you can get involved.

o We will train all new housing staff on engagement and refresh this  training annually.


o We will establish a tenant and leaseholder committee to hold the  Council accountable.

 

2. Commitment 2 – We will learn from your feedback.

How we will do this:

o We will regularly review feedback and complaints to spot areas for improvement.

o Share learning with housing staff and change our practice using this information.

o Host events each year so you can meet with housing staff and report any issues.

o We will use data to identify neighbourhood priorities and engage with specific estates to understand issues.

 

3. Commitment 3 – We will challenge stigma and make sure you feel included.

How we will do this:

o We will work with you to address any stigma and raise awareness among staff and contractors.

o We will ensure communication is respectful and inclusive.


o Offer training to all housing staff on challenging stigma and stereotypes  about people who live in social housing.


o Make community spaces places you feel safe no matter your age,  gender, sexuality, religion, ability, race & ethnicity.

 

4. Commitment 4 – We will make sure you influence decisions about the service we provide.

How we will do this:

o We will involve you in decision-making at both the neighbourhood and strategic levels.

o We will compensate you for your time and ensure you are part of assessing bidders and renewing contracts.

o We will work with you if you live in a high-rise block, so you feel safe and have a say on any work we need to carry out.

o Make sure your housing officer regularly inspects your block or estate and invites you and your neighbours to join them.

o Provide you with regular updates on changes to our service and how your feedback has been used.

 

5. Commitment 5 - We will be transparent with you and provide information so you can challenge us.

How we will do this:

o We will regularly share information with you using various channels about our performance.

o We will share the results of any consultation or engagement activity we carry out.

o We will meet with Resident Association representatives every two months (minimum) and present how we have delivered this strategy.

o We will support you in scrutinizing services and presenting findings to senior managers.

 

6. Commitment 6 – We will work with you to make a positive contribution to where you live.

How we will do this:

o We will promote opportunities for you to get involved in community activities.

o We will review community spaces to ensure they are used effectively and safely.

o Help you and your neighbours to apply for funding to run events and activities on your estate or in your community.

o Work with you and our partners like the Police on problems like anti- social behaviour and crime.

By working together, we aim to create a better living environment for everyone.

 

Keeping Our Homes Safe: A Plan from Brent Council

 

What’s Our Plan?

 

We want to make sure everyone living in our tall buildings is safe. We have a new

safety plan to help with this. The plan follows new rules introduced by Government

under the Building Safety Act 2022.

 

Why Do We Need This Plan?

 

There’s a new rule that says we must keep tall buildings very safe. Tall buildings are buildings that are 18 metres OR seven floors high and taller. We need to talk to the

people living there to find out how to keep them safe and keep them updated with

our plans for the building.

 

What Will We Do?

 

1. Sharing Information: We will tell everyone about important safety information.

2. Listening to You: We will ask for your thoughts and make sure we listen.

3. Checking on Safety: We will see if what we’re doing is working well.

 

Who’s in Charge?

 

Brent Council is in charge of making sure that the tall buildings it owns is safe for the people who live in them. We have specific people in charge of doing this:

 

 Senior Managers

 Safety Officers

 Housing Officers

 People who talk to residents

 

If you have any worries about safety in your home, you can email us at

BHMBuildingSafety@brent.gov.uk

 

Knowing Who Lives in Our Buildings

 

We need to know everyone living in our tall buildings, especially if someone needs help during an emergency. We will ask everyone once a year who lives in their home and if anyone needs special help. This helps the firefighters know who to help first.

 

Some examples include:

 

 If you have trouble walking or climbing stairs by yourself

 If you have poor eyesight or hearing

 

How We Will Share Information With You

 

We will use different ways to give you information:

 

 Letters to your home

 Posters in your building

 Information on our website

 

Every year, we will have a meeting about your building to talk about safety. You can ask questions and learn about any changes we are making at this meeting. We will publish dates of meetings on our website and contact you beforehand so you know when and where the meeting will be.

 

Asking for Your Opinions

 

We will ask what you think about:

 Big changes to your building and how that can affect you.

 Safety checks and repairs.

 Telling us about any new problems you have noticed.

 New safety rules.

 

Checking Our Plan

 

We will look at our plan every year to make sure it’s working. We will ask for your help to make it better.

 



Monday, 15 January 2024

Should Brent Council designate itself as a 'bad landlord' ? Neglect and health hazards at Landau House, Kilburn

Landau House and Joules House are twin Brent council blocks close to the Jubilee line at Kilburn Station. I understand they were initially built as short-term (6 months) accommodation  for police cadets training at Hendon Police College but after the builders failed the block were purchased by Brent Council.  That initial intended use would explain why the flats are so very small,

 

I had heard concerning reports about the state of the blocks and was invited to see for myself.

 

Michael* has lived in a one-bedroom ground floor flat in Landau House for more than 22 years. He told me in that time he had never seen a housing officer although in regular contact over problems in his flat and on the estate.

 

The flat is approached along a corridor of industrial style pipework which hardly gives a welcoming or homely feel.

 


 

 

I had disturbed Michael when he was in the middle of sweeping up dust from the floor of his tiny flat. It was dust distributed, he said, by a noisy but inefficient air ventilator. Dust had to be swept up several times a day and aggravated his emphysema. So much so that he preferred not to be in his flat during the day.

 

 

 

The dust on floor

 

The pictures below show dust around the cover of the air vent and inside the air vent.

 

 


 


 

Michael was also concerned that asbestos had not been properly removed from his flat and removed a panel to show me:

 


 

 

There had been problems with sub-contractors not carrying our work properly on rewiring (not completed, gluing, rather that screwing fittings into the wall) and installation of new kitchens (poor quality and poorly fitted units). 

 

 

Michael said, ‘The council seem to think they are doing a good job but the whole place has been neglected for years.’ 

 

 

Adding to the nuisance from dust was noise from the flat above where the flooring had been replaced by laminate with no sound proofing. This was despite rules saying that this should not be done. The result was unbearable noise from people moving around above, noise from the ventilation system and a tremendous racket when a vacuum cleaner was used on the laminate flooring.

 

 

Regarding the block as a whole there were problems with anti-social behaviour, mainly at night. Keys had been copied so outsiders could get access to socialise, deal or sleep.  The council had taken action by issuing a ‘Closure Notice’ last summer which has now expired. The problem continues although I understand there are plans for increased security systems.

 

 


 

 

Another notice advertises a pest control company. The block is infested with bed bugs. Initially residents had to pay for treatment themselves, but I was told that the infestation is so bad that the Council is now footing the bill.  There is also a problem with cockroaches, and I heard about one flat that had been empty for a period and had to be entered through a window. There were so many cockroaches crawling over everything that the man who had crawled through the window shot back out double-quick. 

 

 

ASB in the past includes someone setting fires outside people’s front doors and the burn marks remain in places.

 

 

Along the corridor from Michael’s flat I met a family, a couple and their three children, who live in a flat the same size as Micchael’s – a kitchen/lounge and one bedroom. The flat also suffers from dust.

 

 


 

 

The family had painted over the walls in the kitchen and bedroom with thick paint to cover over damp and mould, but it was still evident in corners. 

 

 



 

They said the damp would come back through after a few weeks.


 

One of the children suffers from breathing problems and must use a respirator The father thought the conditions in the flat, despite all he had done to tackle the damp and mould, were making the condition worse.

 

 

Throughout the interview the smiling and welcoming mother, clearly trying to remain positive, had frequent bouts of coughing.

 

 

Adding to these problems was the unreliability of the common heating and hot water system with residents often left without heating, or without hot water, and sometimes without both.

 

 

I was told that workmen carry out work on what appeared to be a void flat found 10 sleeping places - presumably mattresses on the floor.

 

 

Outside the air of neglect continued. Michael said it was not just the council’s fault but that of the people who did the dumping.

 

 


 

 


 

I asked Michael what he wanted from the Council:

 

I would like the problems fixed and then just a bit of peace and quiet.

 

 

*Not the tenant’s real name name - changed for security and privacy