Expert comment: Grenfell Tower – the part of Right to Buy and lessons not learned

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Gary Ullah : Seventies tower block, Bow, East London, by Gary Ullah by Gary Ullah } <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/">License</a>

Commenting on the fire at the Grenfell Tower in West London, the University’s Dr Ed Kirton-Darling, an expert in housing and inquest law, says recommendations made after a previous inquest (the Lakanal House fire in 2009) received little attention, but highlight how focus can be diverted to the tenure of the residents as it was in that case

‘The jury charged with hearing evidence on the deaths of the 6 people who died in Lakanal House returned damning narrative verdicts, finding that opportunities to do fire risk assessments were missed, and some refurbishment which had been done had not provided adequate resistance to fire.

‘For example, and amongst numerous failings identified, the jury found that internal modifications to Flat 79 made more than a minimal contribution to Ms Catherine Hickman’s death. Ms Hickman was a private tenant in a flat which has been bought under the Right to Buy (RTB) scheme, so her property was not directly managed by the local authority – it was owned by a private leaseholder, who then rented it to Ms Hickman.

‘The modifications had been undertaken by the leaseholder, and had been approved by Southwark as the freeholder, but with a recommendation that they be checked for fire safety by Southwark’s Building Design Services. This check did not take place.

‘The Coroner, Frances Kirkham CBE, sent letters to those who might be able to prevent similar deaths in future, including Southwark, the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG), and the London Fire Service.

‘In these letters, she made a series of recommendations to prevent future deaths, including that sprinkler systems be installed and advice on Building Regulations be reviewed. As has been widely reported, with little available funding, many of these recommendations have not been taken up.

‘However, less attention has been given to some of her other recommendations, including a recommendation that flats should be inspected for modifications. The flats bought from Southwark under RTB did not include a specific right of access to check for modifications in the lease, and Southwark responded to state that this meant they could not check for modifications.

‘In this response RTB leaseholders are framed as a barrier to the Council’s responsibility to manage the risk of fire in all their properties – and because their flats cannot be checked, they increase the risk for all flats and residents in the same block.

‘Southwark called for a national approach, while DCLG ignored this request, and reaffirmed guidance on fire inspections which emphasises the autonomy of RTB lessees. The responses thus fail to engage with each other, and in their refusal to hear each other, they re-expose the long-standing conflict between a central government which has sought to promote RTB and lessen risks and obligations for leaseholders, and local government, who have sought to shift risk onto the shoulders of those who have exercised the right to buy.

‘In this context, the response from the Leader of RB Kensington & Chelsea to questions about the responsibility of the Council in relation to the fire at Grenfell Tower is particularly telling. When asked on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, he stated that the Council would always ensure its own properties (my emphasis) are inspected by the fire service and that there are national regulations about fire safety.

‘He concluded that normally a fire in a flat is contained, but that hasn’t happened in this case and there needs to be a thorough investigation, including looking at the guidance. Just as with Southwark, Kensington & Chelsea’s immediate response is to differentiate between residents based on tenure.

‘In such discussions, the often marginal ownership of RTB leaseholders, particularly in high rise flats, is entirely ignored, while the even more vulnerable (legally, and potentially financially and physically) private tenants of RTB leaseholders entirely disappear. Instead, ideological arguments about a property owning citizenry vie with frustration over the headaches caused by leaseholders keen to avoid spending on major works.

‘These tensions underlie the absence of an effective response to the Coroner’s recommendation after Lakanal House, and the failure to do anything exposes the potential weakness of a Coroner’s recommendation – if no-one wants to act on it, nobody needs to. And nobody has.

‘The Prime Minister has announced a public inquiry but as Phil Scraton’s groundbreaking work over many years has shown, such inquiries (and indeed inquests) have the capacity to represent failings as temporary and technical, to ignore the structures of power and inequality which create the conditions for such fatalities, and to focus on medical and technical discourses.

‘In so doing, they can decontextualize deaths, and fail to hear the voices of those – the bereaved, the survivors, the tenant activists – who experienced the horror of the fire at first hand.

‘One way this tendency might be partially reversed is if the inquiry chose to follow the advice of the Select Committee which reviewed the Inquiries Act. It recommended that victims should be involved in setting terms of reference, and chairs of inquiries should meet victims and families as early as possible in the inquiry process.

‘It is also going to be essential for survivors and the bereaved to have legal aid for lawyers to assist them. This provision should also extend to the tenant activists who raised concerns about the tower, to make sure they can play a full role in the inquiry (and it should go without saying that they should have interested person status to make sure they can set out their concerns in detail).

‘The concern is that, without such moves, the investigation will provide a space for the assertion of official discourses about safety and responsibility, disconnecting the fire from the underlying politics which are part of the explanation why so many died. As with the Lakanal House fire – and suggested by the response of the Leader of Kensington & Chelsea – it means discussion about compartmentalisation, modification and refurbishment will end up mired in ideological and institutional conflict.

‘It might be that RTB played no part in the Grenfell Tower fire, but it is telling that the first instinct of the freeholder is to allude to the differential tenure of the residents – and the potential issues caused by differential tenure – and which recalls the ineffectual outcome of the Lakanal House inquests.

‘In so doing, the response lays down markers for the eventual inquiry – one in which it appears unlikely that social injustice and inequality will be central considerations.’

 

Dr Ed Kirton-Darling is a Lecturer in Law at Kent Law School, University of Kent. His research interests include the law relating to inquests and inquiries, and housing/homelessness law.