Latest News Tue, Apr 11, 2023 6:13 AM
The Housing Ombudsman has published casework relating to cladding and associated fire safety complaints as we look to share lessons with the wider sector.
It comes two years after our Spotlight report on dealing with cladding cases in which we highlighted three key lessons for the sector, including providing a clear roadmap of landlord actions for all residents, effective communication and addressing individual circumstances.
Since that report, responses from landlords on cladding cases has improved but common themes, such as communications with residents, remain problematic. We have also seen that landlords are not always effective in providing residents with information and explanation of their priorities in this area, with poorer communications in buildings classed as low risk, and continuing issues with sales.
The online casebook, published every two weeks, now totals more than 3,100 decisions and show the range of issues we can consider as well as the type of outcomes following an investigation. The landlord in each case is identified.
Among the decisions published featuring a cladding issue are:
Richard Blakeway, Housing Ombudsman, said: “This has been an exceptionally challenging period for both residents and landlords. While landlords will understandably feel swept up in a national crisis, the personal crisis this has created for residents effected, through no fault of their own, is profound and reflected across our casework.
“Landlords have handled cases best where the communication has been clear and crisp. This requires openness with residents, accurate information, and empathy. Too often, as in other complaint areas, poor communication has compounded other failings.
“Notably, poor communication can hamper sales processes, and undermine the ability of residents to make informed decisions during what has been, and still is, a stressful and complex situation.
“These cases reflect the changes some landlords have made over the past two years, where the scale of the challenge has been acute for some, but they also show in some areas landlords still have learning to do.
“I am pleased some of the learning from previous orders we have delivered are making a difference too, including one landlord introducing a reverse staircasing policy following our decision and then further strengthening that same policy when it was raised in a later investigation.
“I urge landlords to revisit the key learning from our Spotlight report last year and combine that with a renewed focus on the importance of proactive communication, effective knowledge and information management, and a real focus on individual resident concerns.”
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