Source · Select Committees · Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee

Seventh Report: Cladding Remediation—Follow-up

Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee HC 1249 Published 29 April 2021
Report Status
Government responded
Conclusions & Recommendations
16 items (9 recs)

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2

We reiterate our recommendation from our June 2020 report that in the same way as...

Recommendation
We reiterate our recommendation from our June 2020 report that in the same way as it has done for buildings with ACM cladding, the Government should publish a monthly data release on the number of buildings with non-ACM cladding and … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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4
Para 19

The Government should establish a Comprehensive Building Safety Fund for full remediation works of affected...

Recommendation
The Government should establish a Comprehensive Building Safety Fund for full remediation works of affected buildings. In allocating funds from the Comprehensive Building Safety Fund, the Government should move away from the current height- and product-based approach and should instead … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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6
Para 21

The Comprehensive Building Safety Fund should be fully funded by Government and industry, and the...

Recommendation
The Comprehensive Building Safety Fund should be fully funded by Government and industry, and the Government should establish clear principles regarding how the costs should be split between the two. Total contributions should not be capped, given that, as we … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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9
Para 29

The Government should abolish the loan scheme.

Recommendation
The Government should abolish the loan scheme. We reiterate our call on the Government to re-establish the principle that leaseholders should not pay anything towards the cost of remediating historical building safety defects. Instead, as we have stated, costs should … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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10

The Committee welcomes the introduction of a new developer levy and tax to ensure that...

Recommendation
The Committee welcomes the introduction of a new developer levy and tax to ensure that developers contribute towards the costs of remediation. We recognise and welcome the fact that some developers have already committed millions towards remediation funds. We also … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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13

We are concerned by the lack of progress on keeping residents’ building insurance costs reasonable...

Recommendation
We are concerned by the lack of progress on keeping residents’ building insurance costs reasonable during the period when their buildings are being remediated. The Government has been engaging with the insurance industry for months, and all the while leaseholders … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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14
Para 44

The new guidance on EWS1 forms alone is not sufficient to mitigate the short-term and...

Recommendation
The new guidance on EWS1 forms alone is not sufficient to mitigate the short-term and long-term impacts that the underlying uncertainty around building safety is having and will have on the wider housing market. We ask the Government to report … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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15

We are concerned that the exclusion of social landlords from the Building Safety Fund and...

Recommendation
We are concerned that the exclusion of social landlords from the Building Safety Fund and waking watch relief fund except in specific circumstances is having negative consequences for the wider social housing sector. While the £12 billion Affordable Homes Programme … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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16

We do not think the Government is doing everything it can to support the physical...

Recommendation
We do not think the Government is doing everything it can to support the physical and mental health of residents of affected buildings. The Government should work with local authorities to ensure that affected residents have access to the physical … Read more
Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
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Conclusions (7)

Observations and findings
1 Conclusion
Para 9
We are concerned that, despite our previous recommendation on this issue, the Government still lacks data on the full scale and extent of remediation needed for buildings both below and above 18m. In order to know how much it will cost to remove unsafe cladding from multi-storey buildings once and …
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3 Conclusion
Para 18
We welcome the additional £3.5 billion funding towards cladding remediation for buildings 18m and above in height, which is a significant increase on the £1.6 billion already committed. However, we are concerned about perceived and real restrictions to the Building Safety Fund which affect residents’ safety, and the approach to …
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5 Conclusion
A building that is half-safe is a building that is unsafe. Leaseholders are no more responsible for non-cladding fire safety defects than they are for the presence of combustible cladding on their homes. The costs of non-cladding related remediation could be just as high as the costs of cladding remediation. …
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7 Conclusion
Para 22
Social housing providers should have full and equal access to government funds for remediation, whether through the existing Building Safety Fund or our proposed Comprehensive Building Safety Fund. Our proposed Comprehensive Building Safety Fund would cover all necessary remediation, including relating to non-cladding fire safety defects, but if the Government …
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8 Conclusion
Para 28
It is disappointing that the Government’s proposed loan scheme, whereby leaseholders contribute up to £50 a month to pay for cladding remediation works on buildings between 11m and 18m high, does not satisfy the previously agreed principle that leaseholders should not pay. Leaseholders of buildings below 18m are no more …
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11 Conclusion
Para 33
We also ask the Government to consider how others, including product manufacturers and suppliers, can contribute to the costs of fire safety remediation, in line with principles set out by the Government about the proportion of costs to be met by industry.
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12 Conclusion
Para 36
We welcome the introduction of the waking watch relief fund, which shows the Government recognises that intervention is needed to support leaseholders with interim fire safety costs. However, the scheme does not go far enough. It does not cover the costs of installing alarms in all affected buildings, and there …
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