
Bradford scam warning over government energy-saving grant
People hoping to get free energy-saving upgrades to their homes as part of a government scheme could be targeted by scammers, councillors have warned.Bradford Council has been awarded more than £7m as part of the Warm Homes fund to improve energy efficiency in some of the district's poorest insulated homes.However, concerns have been raised that householders could fall victim to rogue companies posing as official council contractors.Kamran Hussain, the council's spokesman for neighbourhoods and community safety, urged the council officers to "make sure safeguarding is put in place so that these companies are not scamming customers".
"Over the years, we have found that many people have been stung through grants that have been implied as coming through the council," Hussain said at a meeting.He said work had in fact been carried out by private companies that were not part of government funding, leading to a "very large bill".
Susan Hinchcliffe, leader of the council, said: "If a householder is asked to pay something, it is not a council scheme."She said the council should give out clear information about the programme to ensure residents are not misled.Council officers said the local authority would directly manage the scheme, selecting a single contractor to do the work through official processes.Bradford Council had applied for £27 million from the Government's new Warm Homes scheme but, despite receiving less than requested, it still secured the largest grant awarded to any single council.The authority hopes the project will mirror the success of a previous scheme, which upgraded 635 homes in Bradford with roof and underfloor insulation in 2022 and 2023, and was praised by government officials as a model project.Sarah Ferriby, the council's executive member for healthy people and places, said: "The work will make these homes a lot more comfortable, reduce their fuel bills, and assist in reducing carbon emissions."The scheme will roll out over the next three years, with additional funding potentially available if Bradford exceeds its delivery targets.The funding comes from a £500m national pot for energy performance upgrades and better heating for people living in some of the worst quality privately owned and rented homes. The free work could include new insulation, solar panels or an air source heat pump if suitable.
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
an hour ago
- The Herald Scotland
Supreme Court lets DOGE access Social Security data for now
The court's three liberal justices - Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson - disagreed with that decision. "The Government wants to give DOGE unfettered access to this personal, non-anonymized information right now --before the courts have time to assess whether DOGE's access is lawful," Jackson wrote in a dissent joined by Sotomayor. In March, U.S. District Judge Ellen Lipton Hollander of Maryland said DOGE was intruding on "the personal affairs of millions of Americans" in a fishing expedition that's based on little more than suspicion." Hollander limited DOGE's access to the information while the courts assess the legality of the Trump administration's actions. The administration argued the judge overstepped, viewing DOGE staffers as the equivalent of intruders breaking into hotel rooms rather than as employees trying to modernize the agency's technology and root out waste - as DOGE officials said they intended to do. "District courts should not be able to wield the Privacy Act to substitute their own view of the government's 'needs' for that of the President and agency heads," Solicitor General John Sauer told the Supreme Court in an emergency appeal. DOGE has sought access to multiple agencies as part of its mission to hunt for wasteful spending and dramatically overhaul the federal government. Musk has falsely claimed that millions of Americans who are deceased are still receiving Social Security checks. Two labor unions and an advocacy group sued the SSA after DOGE began digging into personal data. They told the Supreme Court justices they shouldn't intervene because the administration hadn't shown an emergency need to access data beyond what the district judge allowed. In addition to overseeing Social Security benefits for retirees and disabled people, the Social Security Administration helps administer programs run by other agencies, including Medicare and Medicaid. A divided federal appeals court on April 30 rejected the Trump administration's request to block the district judge's order. U.S. Circuit Judge Robert King of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, based in Richmond, Virginia, said the government hadn't shown a need for unfettered access to the highly sensitive personal information that the American people had every reason to believe would be "fiercely protected." DOGE's mission can be largely accomplished through anonymized and redacted data, which is the usual way the agency has handled technology upgrades and fraud detection, he wrote.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Sixth formers criticise general election candidate openness
Teenagers at Guernsey's Sixth Form Centre have said political candidates "avoided their questions" at a meet and greet event at the school. The session was attended by more than 60 candidates, and 17 year-old Freya said "candidates weren't giving clear information, they're giving typical politicians answers."17 year-old Bailey agreed: "I think it's been a mixed bag, some are engaging with us and others are tiptoeing around things we are saying, which is quite telling."Officials said 1,186 people aged between 15 and 19 were added to the electoral roll this year, as well as 1,198 people aged between 20 and 24. Polly, 17, spoke about the inaccessibility of local politics when there was not an election being said: "I find with Guernsey and how small the States is, it's quite hard to engage normally."To be able to meet them in person and see how they are as people is really good. "We can get to know who they are." During the election campaign, some candidates have set up their own hustings sessions to meet voters, while the BBC has hosted its Your Voice, Your Vote events to help people meet potential said she appreciated the BBC events as it was "good to hear the candidates knowledge" while she described the sixth form event as "better to find out people's characters."Harrison, 16, was more positive about the meet and greet session,He said: "Being able to speak to these candidates at the Sixth Form Centre has really helped me make a decision on who I should vote for."This is 10 times better than a manifesto booklet." Some of the students said they were hopeful after what they heard from 16, said: "I'd say I'm optimistic about the candidates I've approached, definitely some of them have sparked up my hope a bit. "It makes them feel more like they care that they came and spoke to us, it's improved my view." Climate change, housing and education At the event Freya said climate change and the impact of building new houses on the environment were her most pressing election issues. 17 year-old Joe said for him the priorities for the new States were "cutting the deficit, housing and creating an effective taxation system."He said the interactions he had with candidates had been good, and he wanted to see a clear-out of some longer-serving deputies to make room for new ones.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Residents' appeal against Lancashire 'super prison' plan fails
A high court judge has refused to allow campaigners to appeal against the development of a "super prison" near their Ulnes Walton Action Group opposed the building of the 1,715-inmate Category C prison in Ulnes Walton, on a site between Chorley and Leyland in their four-year battle to block the project ended with the judge delivering an oral verdict which has yet to be published in said their efforts had ended in "frustration and disappointment". The new jail, which will sit alongside neighbouring jails HMP Garth and HMP Wymott, will mean a combined total of 3,700 prisoners will reside in the area, outnumbering the population of Ulnes of the campaigners, Paul Parker, said: "There was a better alternative which the Ministry of Justice could have chosen alongside an industrial estate in Oldham." He added: "We are naturally disappointed as a group but I'm sure local residents will be devastated over the next few years with the construction traffic followed by operational traffic which everyone agrees is not sufficient."South Ribble MP Paul Foster told Local Democracy Reporting Service he was also disappointed and there remained "a number of substantial issues" in connection with the roads."There are now no further legal challenges permitted and so it is my job – along with the local planning authority – to work closely with the MoJ to ensure the outstanding issues are resolved and we make the best of a bad situation," he Prime Minister and local government secretary Angela Rayner gave the green light to the prison back in move went against the recommendation of a planning inspector, who had chaired two public inquiries into the inspector had concluded local roads would not be able to cope with the volume of construction traffic required to build the jail. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.