Weekend Herald

Village group push on with formal complaint

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A group of Waitakere Gardens retirement village residents have complained to a state organisati­on about Metlifecar­e’s handling of repairs to residences at a West Auckland site.

Dennis Brown, representi­ng the owners of 15 units, said he was waiting to hear back from staff at the Commission For Financial Capability on the complaint.

“I have put the residents’ formal complaints forward for a disputes panel hearing, which is happening shortly,” Brown said.

Glen Sowry, Metlifecar­e chief executive, said matters were being resolved and a meeting this week was “positive and constructi­ve”.

The commission’s Troy Churton confirmed the complaint was lodged.

Sowry indicated part of the residents’ building was dangerous.

“Some of the affected balconies are not safe to be used and we have been working closely with affected residents to manage health and safety risks,” he said.

Not all had gone well to start with, he said, but the situation had been turned around and was now positive.

“The initial proposal to remediate the Rosecourt building balconies was not effectivel­y communicat­ed to residents which caused uncertaint­y and concern. As soon as this was brought to my attention, we suspended that programme of work in order to engage with affected residents to come up with a less intrusive and more acceptable repair solution,” Sowry said.

Changes were planned to 16 Rosecourt Building apartments as part of a $ 44m, four- village repair programme in the next few years, he said.

“We are remediatin­g the balconies and walkways on 16 apartments. We are going to be doing repairs and design and build deficienci­es on balconies, walkways and we will reclad the Rosecourt building. Part of the proposed design solution includes creating conservato­ries around the existing balconies. To achieve council consent we will be required to upgrade the fire engineerin­g of the building,” Sowry said.

“When building work is conducted on the balconies we will be relocating residents from their apartments to other apartments within the Waitakere Gardens village. All costs associated with this activity will be borne by Metlifecar­e,” Sowry said.

The commission oversees the complaints process under the Retirement Villages Act.

Retirement village residents must first complain to a village owner, then if they remain unhappy, an independen­t dispute panel resolution procedure is establishe­d, the commission says.

The Waitakere Gardens residents complained about what they believed was Metlifecar­e’s lack of communicat­ion. Residents expressed fears about their living conditions during the remediatio­n process and the possibilit­y of noise and dust.

Brown said that Thursday’s meeting with Metlifecar­e had not resolved i ssues, the complaint stood and people remained extremely unhappy.

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