The Independent Review into the Care and Treatment of Mr Anthony Hardy - September 2005 [killed 3 women in his flat in LB of Camden]
Whether a whole life term was required for a man with mental disorder who admitted 3 murders
Borough of Camden, London, England, UK. Not endorsed or funded by Camden Council.
Whether a whole life term was required for a man with mental disorder who admitted 3 murders
work in progress
The Social Housing [Regulation] Act 2023 [SHRA2023] here puts in place legislation for Regulators about how social housing landlords must operate their complaints handling schemes - in order to improve service standards they provide to their tenants.
it is "An Act to make provision about the regulation of social housing; about the terms of approved schemes for the investigation of housing complaints; about the powers and duties of a housing ombudsman appointed under an approved scheme; about hazards affecting social housing; and for connected purposes."
https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/regulatory-standards-for-landlords
Standards for Landlords
"Our regulatory standards set the outcomes that social landlords in England must deliver for tenants" 2 April 2024
Consumer standards The outcomes of the consumer standards apply to all landlords registered with us, including local authorities.
Neighbourhood and Community Here
Safety and Quality Here
Tenancy Here
Tenancy, Influence and Accountability [including Tenant Satisfaction Measures] Here
Consumer standards Code of Practice Here
Economic standards
Governance and Financial Viability Standard and Code of Practice Here
Rent Standard and Guidance Here
Value for Money Standard and Code of Practice Here
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Housing and Regeneration Act 2008 [Here ] part 2 Regulation of Social Housing Here
The Housing Ombudsman [HO] is attached to The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government {MHCLG}HERE
work in progress Note: just as i clicked on link to the full report [on the HO website, my internet went down - 13:25 approx wednes 4 dec 24 - this also happen earlier on twitter when i started to have a look at Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government account ] Co-incidences, Timing. Reading the signs isn't always easy. A meaningful connection or not, I don't know. 13:35 signal is back now. 13.43 having other internet problems with reaching/loading pages now. no internet again 13.45. ill be back a little latter, im trying to fix the plumbing problem the landlord doesnt do anymore:blocked waste pipe. 14;09 internet back on
https://www.housing-ombudsman.org.uk/2024/11/28/special-investigation-into-camden-council/
" Ombudsman special investigation into Camden Council reveals defensive complaint handling culture
28 November 2024
The investigation was prompted by a significant volume of severe maladministration findings.
In the report, the Ombudsman investigated 57 individual complaints, making 124 findings of maladministration where obligations, policies or processes were not followed, with a detrimental impact on the residents involved. This represents a maladministration rate of 83% during 2023-24. The Ombudsman also made 275 orders on these cases to make things right for residents. "
Summary: 3 key area's of concerns Complaint Handling, Vulnerable tenants and Disrepair HERE
Full Report HERE
Key points: Complaints handling
* disrepair is the state of a property due to neglect or lack of maintenance. Repair is the process of fixing something that is broken - to its original state. [other definitions may apply]
Accessibility and awareness [of the complaints process]
vulnerable residents and reasonable adjustments
"The Equality Act 2010 sets out the landlord's responsibility to make sure it does not treat a resident less favourably because of a protected character.
As a local authority the landlord is also bound by The Public Sector Duty which aims to make sure local authorities think about things such as discrimination and the needs of people who are disadvantaged or suffer inequality, when they make decisions about how they provide their services and implement policies. [p19]
The 2020 Code states that landlords shall comply with the Equality Act and may need to adapt normal policies, procedures, or processes to accommodate an individuals needs.
Landlords should have a reasonable adjustments policy in place to address this.
Landlord said it did not have a formal reasonable adjustment in place - in relation to complaints handling. But did have accessibility policies for residents to access services and communications.
..... landlord considers it has 'an adequate approach to vulnerability'
the casework findings suggest the approach is far from adequate.
The landlord lacks awareness of how to respond to reasonable adjustments requests or adapt its approach to vulnerable residents." [p20]
List of Cases HERE [same page as Summary - scroll down the page]
work in progress
This post is for links to Home - Courts and Tribunals Judiciary
particularly the Coroners' courts which publishes Reports to Prevent Future Deaths [PFD]
The site says about the PFD's
" Paragraph 7 of Schedule 5, Coroners and Justice Act 2009, provides coroners with the duty to make reports to a person, organisation, local authority or government department or agency where the coroner believes that action should be taken to prevent future deaths."
Hospital
4 April 2014 Eric Matthews
7 May 2014 Peter Brookes
8 May 2014 Frank Pope
Noleen McPHARLANE (died 22.04.14)
30 July 2014 Monique Whitebread
11 Jan 2016 Efstratios Voukelatos
4 March 2021 Grazyna Walczak
17 March 2021 Ben O'Hara
23 April 2024 Emmanuel Ladapo
16 Aug 2024 Daniel Klosi
27 Sept 2024 Maria Kelly
Housing
20 April 2018 Magdalena Fink
26 Oct 2020 Daniel Coleman
4 March 2024 Sandra Senior
12 Feb 2021 Philippa Day
6 Nov 2023 Kevin Gale
13 Jan 2014 Michael O'Sullivan HERE
28 Jan 2021 DWP accused of ‘gross incompetence’ after benefit claimant’s inquest (civilserviceworld.com)
7 May 2024 Colin Waterhouse
14 August 2024 joanita-nalubowa
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X POSTS on bad living environments HERE
latest news from Camden Council twitter bot @CamdenCouncil about problems with their website and phones
some people have been having problems paying money to Camden Council - and the council is sorry about this.
Tuesday 12 Dec 2023
posted 6 Oct 2023
"Ombudsman opens consultation on Complaint Handling Code ahead of statutory requirements"
from 28 September 2023 to 23 November 2023.
"An Act to make provision about the regulation of social housing; about the terms of approved schemes for the investigation of housing complaints; about the powers and duties of a housing ombudsman appointed under an approved scheme; about hazards affecting social housing; and for connected purposes.
[20th July 2023]
Be it enacted by the King’s most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:—"
Published 21 July 2023
None
The regulator has concluded that:
a) London Borough of Camden Council (LB Camden) has breached part 1.2 of the Home Standard; and
b) As a consequence of this breach, there was actual and potential serious detriment to LB Camden’s tenants.
In May 2023 legal proceedings brought by London Fire Service against LB Camden concluded. The proceedings related to a fire at a large street property conversion in Hampstead in November 2017 where a tenant died. Fire risk assessments in January 2013 and May 2017 identified serious risks in the block, such as combustible wooden cladding on the internal staircase and a lack of proper fire doors on flat entrances. LB Camden had programmed but not yet implemented the required remedial actions. It pleaded guilty to two offences under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005[footnote 1] and was fined £500,000 plus costs by the court.
Following the conclusion of legal proceedings, the regulator engaged with LB Camden to understand whether the fire safety failings demonstrated by this case had been resolved and whether LB Camden was compliant with our regulatory standards.
As a registered provider, LB Camden is required to comply with the consumer standards, including the Home Standard. The Home Standard requires providers to meet all applicable statutory requirements that provide for the health and safety of tenants in their homes.
In respect of fire safety, LB Camden has a statutory duty[footnote 2] to regularly assess, and take precautions to prevent, the risk of fire. The Council has completed fire risk assessments for the 3,200 blocks that require one. However, our investigation found that over 9,000 fire remedial actions are currently overdue, with around 1,500 of them being overdue since 2020. We found that there are just under 400 high-risk actions overdue. Of these, a third should have been completed within 10 days and the remainder in 30 days.
As part of our investigation, LB Camden shared a 2019 internal audit of its approach to fire safety. At the time of the audit there were over 6,000 overdue fire remedial actions and issues relating to the quality and reporting of data were identified. LB Camden has since improved its ability to report on fire remedial actions, put in place new governance arrangements, including a resident fire safety panel, and has completed more than 40,000 actions generated by its current fire risk assessments. However, taking into account the outcome of the fire in 2017, the findings of the internal audit in 2019 and the current fire safety position, the evidence demonstrates a longstanding failure by LB Camden to complete all fire safety remedial actions in a timely manner and to mitigate the risks to tenants in the meantime. As a consequence, tenants have been, and continue to be, exposed to potential harm.
For smoke and carbon monoxide detectors,[footnote 3] LB Camden is required to ensure that at least one smoke alarm is equipped on each storey where there is a room used as living accommodation of a property and that a carbon monoxide detector is equipped in any room containing a fixed combustion appliance. LB Camden reports that more than 9,000 properties do not have a hard-wired smoke alarm installed and just under 4,000 properties do not have a carbon monoxide detector installed.
The regulator considered the case as a potential breach of part 1.2 of the Home Standard and has concluded that LB Camden does not have an effective system in place to allow it to meet its responsibilities in relation to its statutory fire safety responsibilities.
LB Camden has a plan in place to complete overdue fire remedial actions and has systems in place to monitor and report on the progress of its plans. It has also set out a programme to install smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors in all of the properties currently without them. The regulator will work with LB Camden while it continues to address the issues that have led to this situation, including monitoring how it delivers its programme to complete the outstanding overdue actions. We will continue to keep our use of statutory powers under regular review through our engagement with LB Camden.
Section 198A of the Housing and Regeneration Act 2008 (as amended) states that the regulator’s regulatory and enforcement powers may be used if a registered provider has failed to meet a consumer standard. In order to use regulatory or enforcement powers, as well as the failure to meet the standard, there should also be reasonable grounds to suspect that the failure has resulted in a serious detriment to the provider’s tenants (or potential tenants) or that there is a significant risk that, if no action is taken by the regulator, the failure will result in a serious detriment to the provider’s tenants (or potential tenants).
End note: I have corrected the reported and copied by many, that 31 Daleham Gardens NW3 is/was in the ward of Hampstead - when it wasn't/isn't.
At the time of the fire [and up until the boundary changes of May 2022] the above mentioned property was in ward of Frognal and Fitzjohns.
The ward has been changed to, [or incorporated into] the nearby Belize ward.
The below was recently sent to me - im guessing as a camden council tenant.I was under the impression [from an officers monthly report to the DMC's] that this group [in whatever name t is/was] called had already been set up, and that it was to be transparent, open ... my blog on it from May 2023 HERE
Then recently the below was sent out to tenants
NEW Resident Panel Opportunity: Complaints & Improvements in Housing & Repairs
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
My ad-ons
Fire Safety Works programme HERE
2 March 2024
apparently there are 2 different camden council tenants/residents panel/committee:
1 Camden Housing & Property Residents Panel
2.Complaints & Improvements in Housing & Repairs
The names of the members are being kept secret as well as the minutes of their meetings.
This makes me think that something is amiss here and that possibly only 1 or even 0 groups exist - except in the imagination of some camden council people.
27 June 2024
Taken from June/July round of DMC meetings https://democracy.camden.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?CId=167&MId=10847
agenda item 9. Action points https://democracy.camden.gov.uk/documents/s119077/
Camden Housing Property Residents Panel
https://www.camden.gov.uk/camden-housing-property-residents-panel
The below is from my landlord Camden Council.
Dated 26 Sept 2023
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pages 1&2 of 8 |
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pages 3&4 of 8 |
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pages 5&6 of8 |
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pages 7&8 of8 |
other fires in 2013 - Valeries Willis [street property] Here
Inside Housing - News - London borough fined for ‘unnecessary’ fire death of resident
Internet version of INSIDE HOUSING
NEWS 09/05/2023 3:45PM [Tuesday 9 May 2023] BY PETER APPS
Was at Westminster Mags this morning to see Camden Council sentenced £500k for a shocking case involving the death of a 35yo woman in a fire in November 2017. Report and some observations below:https://t.co/2JQ5NZgttH
— Peter Apps (@PeteApps) May 9, 2023
20 May 2023
9 March 2024
19 August 2021 Fires in Camden Dwellings posting
27 May 2024
LACORS - Fire Safety Guidance (hastings.gov.uk) LACORS aka Local Authority Co-ordinators of Regulatory Services Local Authority Co-ordinators of Regulatory Services
Some excerpts from the Guidance below:
5. What is a fire risk assessment?
" 5.3 The aims of the fire risk assessment are:
• to identify the fire hazards;• to reduce the risk of those hazards causing harm to as low as reasonably practicable; and• to decide what physical fire precautions and management arrangements are necessary to ensure the safety of people in the premises if a fire does start.
5.4 The terms ‘hazard’ and ‘risk’ should be understood in the context of this guidance:
• hazard: anything that has the potential to cause harm• risk: the chance of that harm occurring.
7. Introduction
7.3 This risk-based approach is enshrined in current fire safety legislation, in particular the housing health and safety rating system and the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 (see Appendix 1, paragraphs A.7 and A.51).
7.4 However, some basic fundamental principles apply to fire safety generally, and these must be applied flexibly to meet the needs of a particular property. These principles are outlined in this chapter and are brought to life in the case studies in Part D.
10. Habitable basements
"10.1 Consideration needs to be given to the fire risk presented to occupiers of any storey below the main entry/exit level of the house and the risk that storey poses to the remainder of the house.
10.2 Ideally, the fire separation between the basement and the ground floor (including the staircase soffit and spandrel) should be 30 minutes fire resisting, and a 30-minute fire resisting door should be fitted at the head of the basement stairs. "
10.5 The standard of fire resistance of individual room partitions and of doors to rooms should be the same as for the remainder of the house"
19. Fire separation and compartmentation
----------------------------------
• New policy and practice guidance produced for staff in Housing and Adult Social Care Department, including social workers and estate officers. This has been implemented and will be reviewed again in March 2008.
- Staff have been reminded of current procedures, particularly in relation to disposal or storage of goods.
- Current contractors were reminded of what our expectations of them are in respect of their disposing of goods from void clearances, and that no goods should be disposed of for personal gain
- Procedures for placing items into storage from voids have also been tightened.
• Spot checks on adherence to the voids policy and procedures are now being made as part of the District Office performance monitoring to ensure that these are being adhered to correctly.
• A review of the Personal Finances Team in Adult Social Care (which includes the protection of property function) has been completed and a revised structure for the team has been introduced.
• Alternative methods for disposal of goods were investigated and new arrangements for disposal via the use of a not-for-profit company are under consideration.
• GF was aware that Internal Audit had reviewed h prior to attending the interview. It is believed that he deduced this following Audit enquiries with the
• GF arranged for a washing to be provided to 5d as per the email XXXX stated that he did not obtain any financial benefit from this action, and that the £80 was a fee paid to, a BMD, for moving the machine to S. GF did not attend 5 Road in connection with the washing•
• GF stated that he had never sold any item he obtained from a void property.
• GF is paid a
• GF had not received any instruction from his manager about how to deal with items found in void properties prior to a letter that was issued by th of BMD in the first quarter of 2007, following the press reports concerning misappropriation of tenant’s belongings (Appendix D).