'Serious failings' in council homes say inspectors
A judgement on a council's social housing has said there are "serious failings" in standards and "significant improvement" is needed.
Swindon Borough Council - which owns and manages more than 10,000 social and affordable rent homes - self-referred to the social housing regulator.
Leader of the council Jim Robbins said he wanted to "work really positively with the regulator" and it had not raised any issues they were not already aware of.
Problems included fire safety, electrical safety and the repair service.
"We knew there were some challenges in our housing departments and we didn't think there had been enough investment" said Mr Robbins, who explained they already had plans to sort all the issues.
He said that the council has already planned to spend £250m on its homes.
"We are committed to doing everything we can to sort that out as quickly as possible. We also want to build new council housing to get down the amount of people on our waiting list" he added.
More news stories for Wiltshire
Listen to the latest news for Wiltshire
Maggie Hathaway-Mills has lived in a sheltered housing tower block in Swindon for 13 years which has lots of communal facilities and likes it: "I wouldn't leave. You would have to drag me out."
There are wardens, which she said were "fantastic" and she had "no complaints" about council workers.
However, she was concerned about repairs and felt there was not the same level of checks in place that there used to be.
"There is no real oversight and that's what causing problems."
Recently, her bathroom was being re-done and she was left without a toilet. She was told to use one several floors down, when she uses a walking frame.
Ms Hathaway-Mills said: "It's the system that's got hiccups. They've always had hiccups but the hiccups are getting bigger."
Mr Robbins put the lack of investment in the housing down to low local authority funding over time.
"It's a really tricky situation. I think there haven't been the right levels of investment in the past. We are doing everything we can."
He said they had already been working on the fire safety issues and had hired new management in the housing department.
Mr Robbins has asked residents to come along to the council's engagement sessions.
Follow BBC Wiltshire on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630.
Council to spend £250m on improving housing
Regulator of Social Housing - Swindon Borough Council
Swindon Borough Council
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Grenade launchers, guns, explosives seized from white nationalist extremists in WA
The Brief Two suspects linked to Nazi White Nationalist efforts were arrested for allegedly robbing military weaponry. An FBI SWAT team seized over 35 firearms, explosives, and body armor from a Lacey residence. The suspects are being held on $500,000 bail, with potential federal charges pending. LACEY, Wash. - Two suspects involved in Nazi White Nationalist efforts were arrested in connection to a violent robbery of military weaponry on Monday. The backstory An FBI SWAT team raided an address in Lacey and seized over 35 firearms, armor and other weapons surrounded by Nazi paraphernalia. In total, authorities recovered: Short barrel rifles An MG42 machine gun Grenade launchers Explosives Body armor Ballistic helmets Ammunition The Thurston County Sheriff's Office said multiple rifles were staged at windows throughout the residence. Two suspects, both in the military, were booked into jail on multiple firearm-related offenses. Each are being held on $500,000 bail, and will likely face additional federal charges. The Source Information in this story came from a Facebook post from Sheriff Derek Sanderson of the Thurston County Sheriff's Office. Bodies of 3 missing Wenatchee, WA girls found, father wanted for murder Who is Travis Decker? What to know about the Wenatchee, WA father wanted for murder What we know about Decker girls, 3 missing WA sisters found dead 'I am in a lot of pain': Lakewood, WA mass shooting survivors being released from hospitals 'Belltown Hellcat' Miles Hudson back in court WATCH: TikTok video of woman digging for geoduck in WA goes viral 'Shut your legs' comment, rating female staff: Snoqualmie Police Chief fired after probe Washington state named 'sanctuary jurisdiction' by Trump admin, 35 of 39 counties listed WA beekeeper working to save millions of bees involved in crash in Whatcom County FBI scrutiny puts pressure on Seattle mayor after protest clash To get the best local news, weather and sports in Seattle for free, sign up for the daily FOX Seattle Newsletter. Download the free FOX LOCAL app for mobile in the Apple App Store or Google Play Store for live Seattle news, top stories, weather updates and more local and national news.
Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Northport, WA superintendent dies attempting to save student lost in ocean
This story was originally published on A Northport High School (NHS) baseball player went missing while swimming off the shore of Long Beach on May 24. Coach and Northport School District (NSD) Superintendent Don Baribault attempted to save the student, but was not able to. Baribault later died from hypothermia in a Portland hospital on May 26. Noah Heberling, 15, was on a baseball trip for the state playoffs, and the team was on the way to pick up pizzas that the team had ordered. The team decided to take a detour and visit the Washington coast, where Heberling got swept away by large waves, according toThe Spokesman-Review. Erik Stark, the NHS athletic director, was not at the scene but detailed the events that occurred. 'He kind of got tossed around. A couple of the other kids went out to get him,' Stark said, according to The Spokesman-Review. Two of the baseball team's coaches, including Baribault, along with Heberling's father, went into the water to save Heberling. 'Don went out, and I think he made contact with Noah. But both of them had succumbed to hypothermia and weren't functioning,' Stark said, according to The Spokesman-Review. The U.S. Coast Guard crew members reported to the scene around 8 p.m., according to The Seattle Times. The Coast Guard was able to pull Baribault and his father to shore, but Heberling's body has yet to be found, according to The Spokesman-Review. The Northport Mustangs Athletics Facebook account confirmed the passing of Baribault in a post on Facebook. 'Don was struggling on the beach. They took him to the hospital. Then he was flown to a Portland hospital, that's where he succumbed,' Stark said, according to The Spokesman-Review. Follow Jason Sutich on X. Send news tips here.

Business Insider
17 minutes ago
- Business Insider
I left office culture for freelance solitude. Now I work alone, wear activewear, and earn triple.
Before I went freelance, I remember sitting in my office every Friday afternoon with nothing to do because I finished all my work by 11 a.m. For the rest of the day, I had to pretend to work. I mindlessly added color-coded highlighting to a Microsoft spreadsheet. Meanwhile, beyond the fluorescent lights, scratchy carpets, and drywall confines lay an entire Friday afternoon of freedom. However, because I was a full-time employee, it only started at 4:30 p.m. Well, 4:35 p.m., to be exact, because I didn't want to look like I was clock-watching and hurrying out. Earlier, I probably had a good laugh with a colleague, the highlight of my day. Was it enough to make up for an entire afternoon aimlessly clicking at a screen? Not for me. Fast forward to today, and I can do whatever I want with my Fridays because I'm a full-time freelancer and work alone. I can take the day off and spend it with my actual friends, or I can work until 5:30 p.m. because I'm in the zone and I want to. "Don't you get lonely?" It's the question I've heard roughly once a week for the past eight years. People seem to think it's the price of admission for escaping corporate office life to work freelance. Yes, I work alone and at home every day. Yet I've never been happier or more successful. From side hustle to solopreneur Like most good millennial freelancer origin stories, mine began in a content sweatshop. I'd clock out from my marketing job and clock in to $5 listicles that evening. It wasn't glamorous, but it funded my social life and taught me to write 800 words about used cars on a Tuesday night. Then came the listing: a well-paying, part-time freelance writing gig. I applied, mostly for fun. I got the job and then did the math; this new side gig paid more than my full-time salary. That was all I needed to go full-time freelance. Now, I work alone, wear activewear exclusively, and easily earn three times what I did in my old corporate life. The truth about working solo Working alone isn't for everyone. You have to enjoy your own company and be OK commenting on the banal details of the weather in your head instead of out loud. But there's no one to eat boiled eggs and tuna next to me, no clock-watching, and no boss to ask if I have "a sec?" When I'm in my focus zone, I can put my head down, get into full productivity mode, deliver my best work, and smash my deadlines. It turns out I'm not a team player and never have been. Group projects were a drag in school, and in the workplace, they just made me inefficient. I'm here to get the job done, possibly even enjoy it, and then spend guilt-free time doing other things that fill my cup. Do I ever get lonely? Nope. However, I do have communities, just not the kind that involve office parties, forced fun, or passive-aggressive Post-it notes. I've got two freelancer Facebook groups: one local, one global. I have WhatsApp threads that are equal parts client rants and dog memes. I'm a member of the Southern African Freelancers' Association. And I meet up with a few business owners to caffeinate, commiserate, and occasionally co-work. Is it a replacement for office culture? Hopefully not, because I left that behind for a reason. Working alone is the ultimate productivity hack When I'm at my desk, there's no one to impress but myself, no one to interrupt the flow, and no one to schedule a "quick touch base" during my lunch break. Instead, I get autonomy, solitude, and the ability to eat as many snacks as I feel like without any judgment. Best of all, I actually get to choose to work with people I respect, on projects I enjoy, and in clothes I've had since the early 2000s. For me, that's the real success story.