Portsmouth News

Council finally takes action over ‘eyesore' house

Angry residents pleased as ‘useless’ council acts over un-loved building

- By STEVE DEEKS The News steve.deeks@jpimedia.co.uk

ANGRY residents frustrated over the condition of a ‘dangerous eyesore’ house that has been plunged into disrepair have welcomed a formal notice being served by the council.

Exasperate­d homeowners in Kings Road, Cowplain, have been openly critical of the state of No.6 in the road, which has seen standards nosedive after it was bought at auction in 2014 by Indian restaurant owner Kaz Miah for £207,000.

Despite Havant Borough Council declaring it was ‘investigat­ing’ the condition of the house, locals have grown tired of not seeing any action — branding the authority ‘useless’.

Those living in the road say the state of the house has tarnished the image of the area and impacted on the quality of their lives.

Complaints have included a cracked bay window that has been boarded up with plywood for years, loose slates on the roof, a damaged front door that was left ajar and an overgrown garden.

Rubbish had been left dumped around the sides including a sofa, cooker and carpet while rats were seen scuttling around the property and nearby in the peaceful road where several pensioners live.

Gladys Pyle, 90, who lived at the house with her husband Jack for nearly 30 years before selling it to Mr Miah, told The News in July: ‘It is dreadful now. There was nothing wrong with the house when we had it.

‘I saw (Mr Miah) in the street and told him he “should be ashamed”.’

But the council has now confirmed action has been taken due to the ‘condition of land adversely affecting the amenity of the area’.

A letter, seen by The News, from the authority’s planning enforcemen­t officer Katie Howard, said: ‘I can confirm that formal action has now been taken by way of the service of a Section 215 Notice (under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990) on the owner of the above property. If an appeal is not lodged by the recipient (owner) to the magistrate­s court against the service of the notice, the notice will take effect on October 22 whereby the owner will have two months to comply with the requiremen­ts of the notice to improve the condition of the land.’

Long-suffering residents were pleased at the turn of events. One, Mike Groom, 66, said: ‘This is something we’ve wanted for a long time so it’s good to finally see things get going. The house has been badly dilapidate­d for six years.’

Mr Miah previously admitted to The News the house was in a ‘bad state’ and was ‘rotting’ but said he had good intentions when he purchased the house before ‘realising there was a lot more wrong with it’. He said: ‘I don’t think £50,000 will even cover all the work that has to be done. But work is being done and is at the first stage.’

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