Kremmen wrote:
I agree, search out illegal outbuildings street by street and get the owners to pay for demolition and fines for planning breach. Ealing council need to do the same in Southall by all accounts.
I worked a Southall fire station for many years and experienced many incidents involving beds-in-sheds as they are now known. Ealing council had the power but few resources to police planning laws. Some were very shoddily built with iffy electrics, gas supplies that could not be isolated and dont even get me started on sanitation arrangements.
The Council seemed impotent. One planner told me its not just a matter of not enough planning officers, it's the legal costs - including appeals. The LBE for example, were concerned that if they lost even a few per cent of cases per annum, the expense would be significant for the local hard up Council tax payers.
I saw a family of 8 living in what was effectively a double garage in which they ran a catering service making samosas and the like for local shops. A deep wok type pan cooked the fod until late into the night as kids slept in bunk beds around it. The fire was caused when the heat was accidentally left on the deep fryer as they all snuggled down to bed. They were very lucky to survive. Some locals weren't so fortunate. A man died in Park Rd Uxbridge in a storage shed behind some shops where he'd been living for ages.
But perhaps the worst example was an Asian businessman whose mum was living in his carpet warehouse in Alperton. There was a mezzanine storage platform in the warehouse. There was no access to the platform by stairs, as it was for pallet storage only. But that's where mum was lifted by fork lift truck every night and lifted out every morning. No way down until the morning. She had a light, a mattress, bottled water, a bucket and a mobile phone. Fortunately for her, the warehouse next door caught fire and shocked fire crews found the old girl when they broke in to check for fire spread.
Its a disgrace to allow vulnerable people to live like this. Often babies, toddlers and old people are dumped at the bottom of the garden away from the adults in the house, so and I am delighted that the enforcing authorities are at last beginning to enforce