Housing
ombudsman for England warns of ‘simmering anger’ over living conditions
Richard
Blakeway says 474% increase in complaints to his office in last five years
points to risk of ‘social disquiet’
‘It feels like there’s no communication’: a
social tenant’s struggle for safe housing
Jessica
Murray Social affairs correspondent
Thu 29 May
2025 00.01 BST
The housing
ombudsman has warned “simmering anger at poor housing conditions” could boil
over into social tension as his office recorded a 474% increase in complaints
about substandard living conditions since 2019/20.
Richard
Blakeway, the housing ombudsman for England, said repairs were now the single
biggest driver of complaints his office deals with, accounting for 45% of its
workload.
“Without
change we effectively risk the managed decline of one of the largest provisions
of social housing in Europe,” he said. “To replace these homes would take more
than 60 years at recent building rates.”
He said it
was “neither fanciful nor alarmist” to suggest the growing anger at housing
conditions could become “social disquiet”, saying the “shock of Grenfell Tower
and Awaab Ishak’s death resonate still”.
“I travel
across the country to different public meetings and there is a sense of people
feeling invisible, of voices not being heard, their issues not being taken
seriously, a lack of respect and dignity in the way in which residents have
been treated. It is leading to a really serious fracturing of trust, which in
some cases is irreparable,” he said.
In a new
report on social housing repairs and maintenance, the Housing Ombudsman Service
reported a 474% increase in complaints about substandard living conditions
between 2019/20 and 2024/25, with 72% identified as stemming from poor
practice.
Despite
social landlords spending a record £9bn on repairs and maintenance in 2023/24,
the ombudsman – which resolves disputes between residents and social landlords
– ordered £3.4m in compensation for poor living conditions in 2024/25.
“We’ve seen
an unprecedented increase in complaints, which far exceeds the rising
complaints in other sectors. What we’re seeing is exponential in comparison to
other ombudsmen,” Blakeway said.
The report
is based on a review of hundreds of cases and more than 3,000 responses to a
call for evidence. It features dozens of examples of bad practice, including a
child’s bedroom window being boarded up for four years rather than replaced and
collapsed ceilings containing asbestos left unrepaired for two years.
Ageing,
poor-quality housing stock and the rising cost and complexity of repairs were
two of the key drivers behind the rise in complaints. Almost half (45%) of
social homes in England were built before 1964, and the percentage with damp
and mould has risen from 4% in 2019 to 7% in 2023.
Blakeway
said policies had not kept pace with living standards, and called rules that
say kitchens and bathrooms need only be replaced every 20 and 30 years
respectively “a statement absent of aspiration from the world’s sixth
wealthiest nation”.
He added:
“The baseline set for the quality of social housing is completely detached from
the reality of consumer experience elsewhere. It’s completely inadequate in the
21st century.”
The report
found that landlords were “effectively rationing repairs services”, with one
landlord’s policy referring to doing some repairs only when “resources are
available” and others saying they would deal with emergencies only.
It also
found incidents of cases being closed before hazards were resolved because of
“unevidenced claims that the resident had denied access”.
Blakeway
called for a “transformative overhaul” of the sector, including a national
tenant body to strengthen the rights of residents and increase landlord
accountability, as well as long-term funding for the sector.
“These homes
are only getting older, so we need a fundamental rethink on how we do
maintenance and the investment required to preserve the social housing legacy
which previous generations have worked hard to build,” he said.
He called
the model for maintaining existing social homes “unsustainable” and “a
significant risk to the government’s vital housebuilding ambitions”.
The
government has announced plans to build 1.5m homes to tackle the country’s
housing crisis, but there are reports of internal disputes over the level of
funding for social housing.
Awaab’s law,
named after two-year-old Awaab Ishak, who was killed by mould in a social
housing flat in Rochdale in 2020, is due to come into force from October, but
the government has been criticised for delaying its full implementation to
2027.
From
October, social landlords in England will have 24 hours to make emergency
repairs, including to damp and mould, but will have until 2027 to begin fixing
other hazards immediately, including asbestos and contaminated water supplies.
Blakeway
called the law “desperately needed” but still too reactive. “It improves the
response, but it doesn’t prevent the issues,” he said.
“Where is
our aspiration? Landlord systems just haven’t modernised to move from a
reactive approach to maintenance to a predictive approach, and that often
creates long delays to repairs,” he added.
A
spokesperson for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
said: “Everyone deserves to live in a safe, secure home and despite the dire
situation we have inherited, we are taking decisive action to make this a
reality.
“We will
clamp down on damp, mould and other hazards in social homes by bringing in
Awaab’s law for the social rented sector from October, while we will also
introduce a competence and conduct standard for the social rented sector to
ensure staff have the right skills, knowledge and experience to do their jobs
effectively.”
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