![]() ![]() The landlord had noted a need for roof repairs, but no evidence about when these would be fixed or communication with the resident about it. There was little evidence of a proper inspection of the home being carried out, as repairs such as the boiler not working sufficiently, issues in the wet room and a broken toilet cistern among the works needed when the resident moved in. In Case C ( 202202664) there was a double severe maladministration finding for how the landlord handled repairs during the void stage and then how it handled its repairs obligations once the resident had moved in. The Ombudsman ordered the landlord’s Chief Executive to apologise to the resident, to pay £1,700 in compensation and carry out a full review of its training to staff on its ASB policy and procedure, with particular focus on the use of risk assessments and action plans. The severe maladministration finding for record keeping was due to the landlord failing to record the resident’s vulnerabilities and also failing to demonstrate all its interactions with the resident and put the onus on her to keep a written record of her contact. Added to this, the same mistakes were repeated causing more distress and time suffering for the resident. The Ombudsman also found severe maladministration how the landlord handled the complaint, including delays throughout and not issuing a stage two response. It failed to take a victim-centred approach which contributed to a breakdown of trust between the resident and her housing officer. The resident often had to chase the landlord for any updates and it took seven months after the initial reporting for the landlord to comment on the outcomes of the noise app recordings she had taken, only for it to tell her it did not meet ASB thresholds.ĭuring the complaint, the landlord’s correspondence towards the resident was often heavy-handed and unsympathetic. The landlord did not conduct a risk assessment or start an action plan, and despite the resident’s vulnerabilities, it was not proactive in offering support and monitoring the situation. But on the second reporting, despite the resident saying she knew it was not deliberate and simply seeking some soundproofing works, the landlord opened an ASB case. In Case B ( 202101087) the Ombudsman made three findings of severe maladministration for how it handled a noise nuisance case, the associated complaint handling and its record keeping.Īfter the Birmingham resident reported the noise to the landlord, it initially responded appropriately. We ordered the landlord to carry out the works and rid the home of rat infestation, apologise to the resident, pay £1,250 in compensation and review its staff’s training needs in respect of their application of its responsive repairs policy’s timescales in relation to pest infestations. When the resident came to the Ombudsman for investigation, the landlord had fitted the hatch in the ceiling but no works to deal with the infestation had taken place and works remained outstanding 31 months after they were first reported. It was unreasonable that the landlord did not follow up on the environmental health team’s recommendations for how to treat the issue. This was when she got in contact with the Ombudsman after hearing nothing back from her stage one complaint or queries from the local authorities environmental health team. ![]() When the landlord did inspect the home a month later, it did not know how to address the issue and therefore said it would come back to the resident. It never did and it took the resident to make contact again another four months later. The Chippenham resident had to chase after not hearing anything from the landlord for another four months, in which it said it would arrange an inspection. This was eight months after the resident reported the issue. The operative that came did not want to do the hatch installation due to the size of the roof space and potential fire safety implications. In Case A ( 202204859), we found severe maladministration after the landlord failed to deal effectively with a pest infestation, leaving the problem to be present for several years.įollowing reports of a rat infestation, the landlord inspected a drain pipe, which was found to be in good condition, and wanted to inspect the empty roof space above, which needed a new hatch installed. These failings in cases determined over a three month period, alongside an upheld complaint rate of 76% as well as nine open cases assessed as high or medium risk, has led the Ombudsman to use its powers under paragraph 49 of the Housing Ombudsman Scheme to launch a special investigation into the landlord. We have made six findings of severe maladministration in three different cases concerning GreenSquareAccord, with issues such as pest infestation, noise nuisance and repairs all featuring. ![]()
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