Maidenhead Advertiser

Council must pay for causing distress

- By James Bagley Local Democracy Reporter @Maidenhead­Ads

The council caused ‘injustice’ to a homeless mother of two after placing her in ‘unsuitable’ accommodat­ion outside the Royal Borough, a watchdog has found.

The Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman, which investigat­es complaints about maladminis­tration and service failure, has ordered the Royal Borough to apologise and pay £1,750 to a woman, known as Miss Y, for causing her ‘avoidable distress, time, and trouble’.

The council placed Miss Y and her two young children in temporary accommodat­ion outside the area in May 2019 after approachin­g the local authority with a homeless applicatio­n.

However, Miss Y complained to the council about the

standard and location of the one-bedroom property she was placed in – as she spends three hours a day driving to work and taking her children to and from school, incurring more petrol costs as the home was outside the borough.

She asked the council if she could move back into Maidenhead a few times and when they would finish their assessment of her homeless applicatio­n – but received no response.

After months of no communicat­ions from the council, they finally responded apologisin­g for the delay for determinin­g her applicatio­n – pinning it down to staff shortages.

Miss Y demanded an answer as to why she has been placed in temporary accommodat­ion outside the borough for seven months.

The council responded saying they didn’t have any available properties in Maidenhead.

In the Ombudsman’s findings, it found no evidence of the council completing a ‘suitabilit­y assessment’ for Miss Y or that they considered the location of her workplace and children’s schools before offering her the out-of-borough accommodat­ion.

The Ombudsman found the council at fault for taking nearly six months to complete its assessment of Miss Y’s homeless applicatio­n.

It also found the council at fault for ignoring Miss Y’s emails where she requested to move back to Maidenhead.

In its report, the Ombudsman states: “The council’s faults have caused Miss Y injustice.

“She and her children had to stay in accommodat­ion outside the borough with all the difficulti­es, additional travelling time and expenses this caused, for longer than they should have done.

“In addition, Miss Y had the avoidable time and trouble of chasing the progress of her homelessne­ss applicatio­n.”

A council spokespers­on said: “Significan­t improvemen­ts have been made to the service provided by the housing service since Miss Y’s initial complaint to the ombudsman and the council remains committed to continuall­y improving the service it provides to its residents.”

 ??  ?? The Town Hall. Ref:132704-8
The Town Hall. Ref:132704-8

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