logo
Brent Council: Resident offered £2k for housing delays

Brent Council: Resident offered £2k for housing delays

BBC News21-05-2025

Brent Council has offered £2,050 in compensation to a resident due to delays in completing housing and medical assessments.The woman, named as Miss X, complained she could not afford the north London property she was living in and it was "unsuitable for medical reasons".The Local Government Ombudsman (LGO) found the council was at fault for taking six months to process the housing application and three months to make a medical assessment, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.The local authority admitted the woman "might have missed out on a suitable property" due to the delays and said it had made improvements to its processes.
'Caused injustice'
Miss X applied for help with housing in the summer of 2023, however, it wasn't until March 2024, after she sent a complaint, that the council concluded she was eligible for help.Housing applications should be determined within eight weeks.The LGO's report said the "distress and uncertainty" to Miss X "caused injustice" and could have been avoided.The council said it would also assess the resident's medical records in April, which it did not do and failed to contact her or send out letters.In May, the local authority accepted these were mistakes and offered her £400 in compensation.The council later admitted it did not look at her medical information between May and October 2024, but had now decided that she should be in a higher housing band. The council said that, if it had not delayed, it "would have decided earlier that her property was not suitable for medical reasons", according to the report.The council offered Miss X an additional £1,650 because the delays meant she was "distressed and anxious".
Cabinet member for Housing and Residents Services, Fleur Donnelly-Jackson, said the council had "sincerely apologised" to Miss X for the "uncertainty and distress" caused.She added: "We have also reviewed our internal procedures and taken steps to strengthen them, to ensure that housing applications and medical assessments are handled promptly and in accordance with both legislation and council policy."The council has since offered Miss X a suitable property.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Oldham parenting group changed my life and made me a better person'
'Oldham parenting group changed my life and made me a better person'

BBC News

time28 minutes ago

  • BBC News

'Oldham parenting group changed my life and made me a better person'

A mother-of-four was in tears as she finished a parenting course as she praised it for helping to change her completed a 10-week programme designed to show parents how to manage feelings and behaviours to cope in difficult said the "insightful" sessions run by Oldham Council's parenting team had "made me a better person". "I used to cry all the time but now I don't cry all the time like I used to," said Louise. Louise said the Family Links Nurture Programme had provided the support and guidance she was looking for. "I've been going to so many different parenting groups and this one has actually helped and I'm a much better of a person for it," she said."I cried on the last day as it had been really insightful and really helpful. "It's helped changed my life and my family's life." 'Toolkit to cope' Eleven parents recently completed the course held at Oldham included Kamila, who said she was scared that she would be judged by taking part."That is the biggest thing," she said. "This just goes to show that there's nothing to be scared of."She added that she had already seen the benefit of the strategies she had learned and the friendships that she had made."This group makes you feel that you are never alone in your journey," she said."It has helped a lot in gaining strategies about how to manage my child's behaviour and how to self-regulate myself." Carli Keane, parenting officer at the council, said: "There's a big stigma attached with parents actually accessing these groups because they think it's kind of a negative."But they're actually all good parents as they're actually committing to two hours every week for 10 weeks."Councillor Shaid Mushtaq, cabinet member for children and young people, said the course helped "to give their children the best start in life"."It is providing our parents with a toolkit to cope, creating a calmer, nurturing household, while making friendships and forming bonds to continue an emotional support network," she said. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

Leeds medical museum launches 'choose your own price' admission
Leeds medical museum launches 'choose your own price' admission

BBC News

time33 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Leeds medical museum launches 'choose your own price' admission

Visitors to a museum in Leeds have been told they can pay a "choose your own price" entrance fee in a bid to make it more affordable and to The Thackray Museum of Medicine in Harehills usually costs £12, but tickets costing either £9 or £10 had also been made available, a spokesperson people living near the museum could buy an annual membership for just £5, instead of the standard £20, and visitors who were able to pay more could buy a "pay it forward" ticket costing £ Appleyard, from the museum, said: "This is about making meaningful experiences and learning about medicine, healthcare and well-being accessible to all." The new "pay-it-forward" option would "help support our vital work with schools, families and our local community", Mr Appleyard said."By making Thackray affordable for everyone, we can help shape a better tomorrow," he added. The changes in entrance fee at The Thackray come after Leeds City Council introduced "pay as you feel" admission charges at Leeds City Museum, Leeds Art Gallery and Leeds Discovery Centre. There is also a "pay as you feel" admission charge at Kirkstall Abbey for Leeds residents, while those living outside the city must pay an admission charge. The Thackray, which was opened in 1997, is set in a former workhouse which was opened 166 years building, which is now Grade II listed, later became part of the neighbouring St James's was awarded a special commendation at the 2023 European Museum of the Year Awards for its work with the local East Leeds community - the only UK organisation to be nominated. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Houghton heart donation recipient calls for change in rules
Houghton heart donation recipient calls for change in rules

BBC News

time33 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Houghton heart donation recipient calls for change in rules

A woman who was the first baby to have a heart transplant in the UK says families should not be able to overturn a loved one's decision to donate their donations have almost tripled from 255 in 2020/21 to 680 in 2023/24, according to official figures, leading to an estimated 2,040 "missed opportunities" last Davidson-Olley, from Houghton-le-Spring, who had transplant surgery at Newcastle's Freeman Hospital in 1987, said lives were continuing to be Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) said families were "always involved" in donation and they might have "important information" which was vital in understanding whether organs were safe for donation. Last year, families refusing donation gave reasons including not knowing what the patient wanted, feeling the donation process took too long, not wanting any further surgery to the body, or it was against religious and cultural research carried out by Bangor University found some families did not understand the soft opt-out laws, introduced in England in 2020, where patients are presumed to have given consent for donation unless they specifically opted out of the organ donation register. "The knock-on impact is lives won't be saved, it's as simple as that. Organs need to be used here, not in heaven," Ms Davidson-Olley, now 38, said."The figures [for organ donations] are extremely low, and we need to boost that up and we need public help to do that."Ms Davidson-Olley praised the NHS, but said the sole decision to remain opted-in to the Organ Donation Register should be honoured, where appropriate. According to the NHS, for every one donor, an average of three organs can be transplanted, potentially saving additional lives."You're giving a life, you're giving a gift, look at me 38 years post-transplant - I love my life and I couldn't be thankful enough to what I've been given," Ms Davidson-Olley said."Have the conversation [with your family] and share your wishes." Figures from 1 April 2023 to 31 March 2024 showed that 140 families overruled a patient's "opt-in decision". A further 540 families did not support "deemed consent", where there is no expressed decision and so the patient is assumed to support organ all those cases, no donation went ahead. Terry Archbold previously told the BBC he and his partner were split over organ donation after their daughter Isabel was his partner Cheryl agreed, Mr Archbold said he had initially refused organ donation as he had never given the subject consideration, and a "protective instinct kicked in" that "didn't want anyone to touch her".However, it was only after having a discussion he said he realised they would be "hopefully saving other parents from experiencing the same feelings we had". Families consulted A spokesperson for NHSBT said families were often aware of a patient's "medical, travel and social history" and which was "vital to understanding" whether their organs were "safe to transplant", or had more recent information than a decision recorded on the donor said while families were expected to support a patient's decision to donate, the circumstances in which a person died were "often very sudden and traumatic", and said it was encouraging people to be clear with family members about their wishes."Families are far more likely to support donation when they already know it was what their relative wanted," the spokesperson said."Almost 90% of people honoured their family members decision last year when they had either registered their decision to donate on the NHS Organ Donor Register or had spoken with their family about wanting to be an organ donor."The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said it was encouraging everybody to "register their decision" which "only takes two minutes and could save up to nine lives".A spokesperson added the DHSC was making it "as easy as possible" for those to record their preference on the register. Follow BBC Sunderland on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store