Wednesday, 31 December 2025

Scottish Councils Must Finally Listen: Wilson Chowdhry's Petition on Fair Public Participation to Be Considered on 21 January 2026

Wilson Chowdhry Leads Online Deputation to Aberdeen City Council, Giving RAAC-Affected Residents a Voice in Local Decision-Makin

For years, local democracy in Scotland has been inconsistent and, in some cases, completely inaccessible to residents. Whether you want to ask a question, submit a petition, or speak at a council meeting, your ability to engage often depends on where you live, not your right to be heard. This is unacceptable.

That’s why I launched Petition PE2198, calling on the Scottish Parliament to establish standardised, fair public participation processes for all Scottish councils. The petition demands minimum national standards covering public questions, deputations, and petitions, and an independent body to oversee compliance.  Please sign the petition (here).

Unfortunately, the reality for many residents is stark. In Clackmannanshire, for example:

  • RAAC homeowners were evicted from their homes due to dangerous roofs built by councils years ago.

  • These homeowners are now facing financial ruin, paying rent and mortgages simultaneously.

  • The council does not allow deputations or public questions, even when RAAC is on the agenda.

  • The petition process is restrictive, often thwarted, and outdated by the time issues are considered, rendering it largely ineffective.

Despite COSLA’s assurances that it promotes good practice and shares guidance, there is no mandatory standard, meaning councils can continue to block meaningful participation and leave residents powerless. While local flexibility is important, core aspects of fairness should be non-negotiable, especially where residents’ safety, homes, and finances are at stake.

COSLA has indicated it may explore voluntary alignment and convene working groups to review best practices—but questions remain:

  • How will councils like Clackmannanshire be compelled to adopt meaningful participation mechanisms?

  • Will affected groups like the UK RAAC Campaign Group be invited to the working groups to represent those directly impacted?

  • When will mandatory minimum standards be introduced to ensure residents cannot be completely denied a voice in matters affecting their lives?


Next Step: Parliamentary Consideration

I am pleased to announce that PE2198 will be considered by the Citizen Participation and Public Petitions Committee on 21 January 2026.

This is a critical moment to highlight the experiences of residents who have been systematically denied a voice in local decision-making.

If you would like to follow the proceedings, you can:

  • Watch online via Parliament TV, or

  • Attend in person by booking tickets for the public gallery one week in advance.

Written submissions are also welcome before 7 January 2026, and I encourage anyone who supports fair and accessible local democracy to contribute.

This petition is about more than bureaucracy. It’s about ensuring that every Scottish resident—regardless of postcode—has a fair, transparent, and meaningful opportunity to engage with their local council. No one should be left powerless, particularly when safety, homes, and livelihoods are on the line.

I urge all supporters of local democracy to stay informed, engage, and share their experiences. Together, we can push for a system where councils are accountable, participation is meaningful, and residents are truly heard.

Wilson Chowdhry
Petitioner – PE2198
Chair, UK RAAC Campaign Group

The fight for justice continues—but today, we move one step closer.

JOIN OUR 'UK RAAC CAMPAIGN GROUP' FB PAGE (HERE)

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITIONS  (CLICK HERE), OFFICIAL SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT PETITION (CLICK HERE)  OFFICIAL UK GOVERNMENT PETITION: (CLICK HERE)

πŸ“§ Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
πŸ“’ Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence   

RAAC Crisis: Scottish Government Meeting Could Be a Turning Point

Wilson Chowdhry and Fiona Crichton following a previous RAAC meeting with Better Homes Department officials.

The Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC) crisis continues to cast a long shadow over homeowners across the UK. For years, thousands of families in Scotland, Wales, and England have lived with fear, uncertainty, and the financial strain of unsafe homes — a problem rooted not in recent decisions but in historic failures of oversight, regulation, and accountability.

Our campaign, the UK RAAC Campaign Group, has worked tirelessly to bring this national crisis into the public and political spotlight. Over the past months, we have engaged directly with ministers, officials, and housing associations to demand fairness, consistency, and urgent action. We have provided detailed evidence documenting the historic promotion of RAAC, repeated failures to act on early warnings, and ongoing risks to homeowners across the country.

Encouraging Signs: Engagement at Last

We have seen some progress. After multiple letters and persistent advocacy, the Scottish Government has confirmed a meeting with officials from the Better Homes Department on 13 January 2026. Our Co-Vice Chairs, Kerry Macintosh and Hannah Chowdhry, our Secretary, Fiona Crichton, and our Associate Member, Jodie Hillcoat, will attend, ensuring a strong committee presence. Housing Associations are now being engaged, following our request that they be included in discussions — a recognition that addressing RAAC requires collaboration across all sectors of housing provision.

It is clear that the Scottish Government, through officials like Louise Thompson and Deputy Director Matt Elsby, is beginning to take our campaign seriously. Their willingness to meet and discuss our evidence in detail is a step forward, and it is a platform from which we can push for a UK-wide National RAAC Fund and a fully resourced remediation strategy.

Mixed Signals from the UK Government

However, the response from the Secretary of State for Scotland, Douglas Alexander, to Mr Chowdhry’s most recent letter — which called for a UK-wide solution and was also sent to the Welsh and Scottish Housing Ministers and the Secretary of State for Wales — underscores ongoing challenges. While his letter acknowledges the serious nature of the RAAC crisis, it largely reiterates previous points on devolution and coordination with the Scottish Government, failing to address our central request for UK-level collaboration with Welsh counterparts or the establishment of a National RAAC Fund. There is no sign of proactive leadership or any expansion of scope beyond repeating established devolution principles.

The Welsh Ministers have, to date, not responded at all — a silence that contrasts sharply with the urgency expressed by homeowners across Wales. It is concerning that the devolved and UK Governments appear willing to shift responsibility rather than take decisive action for a crisis they all have a duty to resolve.

A Critical Moment for Action

Our campaign faces a pivotal moment. The confirmed meeting with Scottish Government officials is a key opportunity to advance the agenda, push for parity of support across the UK, and demand a public inquiry into the historic failings that have left thousands at risk. We will continue to press for:

  • Pre-RAAC property valuations to restore affected homeowners to their rightful financial position.

  • Fully funded roof replacement or remediation delivered promptly and without burdening households.

  • A coordinated UK-wide approach, ensuring no homeowner is left behind due to postcode or tenure.

While a UK-wide solution remains the ideal, it must be stressed that the Scottish Government retains a fundamental responsibility to its citizens. Failing timely support or intervention from the UK Government, it must act unilaterally to ensure homeowners in Scotland receive a fair and equitable outcome. Thousands of families are already facing financial strain and insecure housing — they cannot afford further delay. A clear, immediate, and practical pathway for remediation must be fashioned expediently.

The government cannot hide behind devolution or bureaucracy any longer. The RAAC crisis is national in origin, systemic in failure, and devastating in impact. Families need leadership, accountability, and action — not delay or deflection.

We remain committed to constructive engagement but will continue to hold ministers and officials to account. Thousands of homeowners are watching, and the time for decisive, coordinated, and funded action is now.

Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman, UK RAAC Campaign Group:
"This meeting is a crucial step, but it cannot replace decisive action. Homeowners across Scotland have waited far too long for fairness, security, and accountability. We will hold the government to its responsibility — delay is no longer acceptable."

Kerry Macintosh, Co-Vice Chair, UK RAAC Campaign Group:
"Families are living in fear of a material failure that is not their fault. We need urgent solutions and clear commitments — anything less leaves thousands at risk and in financial strain."

The fight for justice continues—but today, we move one step closer.

JOIN OUR 'UK RAAC CAMPAIGN GROUP' FB PAGE (HERE)

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITIONS  (CLICK HERE), OFFICIAL SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT PETITION (CLICK HERE)  OFFICIAL UK GOVERNMENT PETITION: (CLICK HERE)

πŸ“§ Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
πŸ“’ Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence   

Thursday, 18 December 2025

Residential RAAC Crisis Highlighted in Submission to UK and Devolved Ministers in Scotland and Wales

IMAGE: Wilson Chowdhry, with his daughters Willow, Hannah, and Naomi, submitting letters earlier this year to the Prime Minister, UK Housing Minister, and Secretary of State for Scotland, urging action to support RAAC victims

The UK RAAC Campaign Group has formally submitted a letter and supporting research on Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC) in residential buildings, calling for coordinated action to address what it describes as a national building safety failure affecting homeowners across the UK.

The correspondence was sent to the UK Secretary of State for Wales, Jo Stevens MP, and the UK Secretary of State for Scotland, Douglas Alexander MP, and copied to the Welsh Government’s Cabinet Secretary for Housing and Local Government, Jayne Bryant MS, and the Scottish Government’s Cabinet Secretary for Housing, MΓ iri McAllan MSP.

The submission includes a detailed letter and an accompanying research dossier focused specifically on the risks posed by RAAC in housing, rather than public sector estates alone. The Group is urging ministers in both devolved governments to press collectively for action at UK level.

In its letter, the UK RAAC Campaign Group argues that the widespread use of RAAC in residential housing represents a historic failure rooted in decisions taken before devolution and long before current homeowners had any involvement or knowledge. The Group maintains that devolved administrations should not be left to deal with the financial consequences of this legacy alone.

The Group highlights the growing impact on homeowners, many of whom face prolonged uncertainty, significant financial hardship, and the inability to sell, remortgage, or insure their homes. In some cases, residents have been displaced from their properties altogether, while others face remediation or roof replacement costs running into tens of thousands of pounds.

The supporting research submitted alongside the letter examines the historical promotion and use of RAAC and related building systems across the UK. It highlights warnings dating back to the 1980s and 1990s, missed opportunities to identify RAAC during housing surveys and stock transfers, and inconsistencies in inspection, identification, and reporting between England, Wales, and Scotland.

The UK RAAC Campaign Group also raises concerns about potential under-identification of RAAC in England compared with Wales and Scotland, suggesting that differences in regulatory oversight may be obscuring the true national scale of the problem.

In its submission, the Group calls for parity of support for affected homeowners regardless of where they live, and for a coordinated funding solution that prevents households from being forced into debt to make their homes safe.

Commenting on the submission, Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, said:

“This submission has been made to ensure that ministers in both the UK Government and the devolved administrations are formally presented with the evidence on residential RAAC and the lived reality facing homeowners.

Families are trapped in homes they cannot sell, cannot insure, and in some cases cannot safely occupy, through no fault of their own. These are the consequences of historic construction decisions taken decades ago, yet it is residents who are now expected to shoulder the financial and emotional burden.

Our aim is to ensure that responsibility is properly recognised at the appropriate level and that homeowners are not left paying the price for failures that were never theirs.”

The UK RAAC Campaign Group has requested acknowledgment of receipt and clarity on next steps from both UK and devolved ministers. The Group says it will continue to engage with government until fair, consistent, and adequately funded solutions are put in place for homeowners affected by RAAC in residential buildings.

JOIN OUR 'UK RAAC CAMPAIGN GROUP' FB PAGE (HERE)

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITIONS  (CLICK HERE), OFFICIAL SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT PETITION (CLICK HERE)  OFFICIAL UK GOVERNMENT PETITION: (CLICK HERE)

πŸ“§ Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
πŸ“’ Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence   

Friday, 12 December 2025

Senedd Reviews Wilson Chowdhry’s RAAC Petition, Campaign Gains Momentum in Wales

IMAGE: On Saturday 10 May 2025, Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, met with Hirwaun homeowners affected by RAAC to support them in advancing their campaign for safe and secure homes.

Watch video of the petition review

We are pleased to share an important update on our petition for urgent support for homeowners in Hirwaun and across Wales affected by Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC). Following the official petition hearing, the Senedd Petitions Committee has formally considered our campaign and agreed on concrete next steps.

The Committee acknowledged that previous grant schemes have funded the demolition and rebuilding of homes affected by precast reinforced concrete (PRC), suggesting that similar financial support could now be explored for RAAC remediation. Members agreed to write to the Cabinet Secretary for Housing and Local Government to:

  • Seek details of any interactions with the UK Government regarding a UK-wide approach to RAAC;

  • Request confirmation of the RAAC situation for homes across Wales.

The petition will remain open pending responses from the Welsh Government, allowing supporters to continue signing and demonstrating public demand for meaningful action. All correspondence, including our submissions, has now been published on the petition webpage under the “Documents” section: P-06-1549 Urgent Support for Hirwaun, Wales, Homeowners Affected by RAAC.

✍️ Statement from Chairman Wilson Chowdhry

“We are encouraged by the Committee’s recognition of the RAAC crisis and the possibility that grants similar to those used for PRC-affected homes could be made available. This represents a tangible step forward for homeowners who have been facing crippling repair costs and uncertainty for too long.

However, the petition remains open until 12 November 2025, and we urge everyone in Wales to continue supporting it. A larger number of signatures not only strengthens the case for debate in the Senedd but also demonstrates public demand for justice and a fair deal for RAAC-affected homeowners.”

The campaign continues, and every signature counts. RAAC homeowners deserve urgent financial support, transparency, and protection from future housing crises, and this petition is a key tool to make that happen.

JOIN OUR 'UK RAAC CAMPAIGN GROUP' FB PAGE (HERE)

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITIONS  (CLICK HERE), OFFICIAL WELSH GOVERNMENT PETITION (CLICK HERE)  OFFICIAL UK GOVERNMENT PETITION: (CLICK HERE)

πŸ“§ Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
πŸ“’ Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence   

UK RAAC Campaign Group Petition to Be Presented in Parliament by MP Brian Leishman

IMAGE: Wilson Chowdhry, with his daughters Willow, Hannah, and Naomi, submitting letters earlier this year to the Prime Minister, UK Housing Minister, and Secretary of State for Scotland, urging action to support RAAC victims

The UK RAAC Campaign Group is pleased to announce that our national petition calling for justice for RAAC-affected homeowners will be formally presented in Parliament. MP Brian Leishman has kindly agreed to present the petition during a parliamentary session, marking an important milestone in our fight for recognition, accountability, and action.

This follows communication from Matthew Lawson, Parliamentary Assistant to Brian Leishman MP, who confirmed on Wednesday 10th December that our petition is on track for presentation before the Christmas recess—provided all documents reached Westminster in time. His email stated:

*“Hi Wilson,

Thank you for organising this. Parliamentary recess starts at the end of next week. If we receive all of the pages beforehand, Brian will aim to present the petition before Christmas recess. If not, it will be early January. I'll keep you updated.

Best wishes,
Matt”*

All original signed petitions were immediately sent by recorded delivery and are confirmed to arrive at Westminster today.


Background: Parliamentary Requirements and Early Confirmation

On 27th November, Matthew Lawson wrote to Lynsey McQuater, Chair of the Tillicoultry RAAC Campaign Group, outlining the formal criteria required for any public petition to be accepted by the House of Commons:

*“Good morning Lynsey,

Thanks for your email. Yes, it would be great if the petition could be handed over to us at some point (or posted). I'm based down in Westminster, so perhaps this could be arranged with Julie.

There are a few specifications that need to be fulfilled for physical petitions to be handed into Parliament…

Once we have the petition and it fulfils all the conditions mentioned above, Brian will choose a day when he is available to stand in the House, read out a summary of your petition, and present it to the Clerk…

After it is presented, the petition will be sent to the relevant Government department, which will then need to provide a written response.”*

Fortunately, the UK RAAC Campaign Group had already drafted the petition in full compliance with parliamentary standards, using official guidelines published on the Government’s website. This ensured that no amendments or redrafting were necessary and that the petition was ready for immediate submission.


Why This Petition Matters

This petition—organised by Wilson Chowdhry on behalf of the UK RAAC Campaign Group—highlights the devastating impact RAAC has had on homeowners across the UK. These include former council tenants who purchased their homes under Right-to-Buy schemes and subsequent buyers who unknowingly inherited structurally compromised properties.

The petition calls on Parliament to:

  • Establish a national support and compensation fund

  • Launch a public inquiry into RAAC management failures

  • Introduce new legislation ensuring liability, transparency, and homeowner protection

  • Restore first-time buyer status for affected owners

  • Prevent mortgage interest accumulation on condemned properties

Once presented, the petition will become part of the official parliamentary record (Hansard), and the relevant Government department will be legally required to issue a formal response.


You Can Still Sign the Petition

Although the first batch of signed petitions has already been sent to Westminster, people anywhere in the UK can still sign. Additional physical petition sheets remain available and can be downloaded via this blog post using the link provided (here). Or email wilson@aasecurity.co.uk for a copy.

IMPORTANT:
Any further completed petition sheets must be posted directly to the MP as soon as possible:

Brian Leishman MP
House of Commons
London
SW1A 0AA

These additional signatures can still be included in future parliamentary actions and demonstrate growing public support for RAAC justice.

Make your voice heard—ask your local MPs to support this petition when it’s presented!


A Step Forward — But Our Work Continues

This is a significant moment for RAAC-affected homeowners nationwide. Securing parliamentary presentation ensures that the voices of affected families are formally placed before the Government and recorded for the nation.

We extend our thanks to MP Brian Leishman and his office for their cooperation and support, and to every homeowner and campaign member who signed, collected signatures, and helped spread awareness.

The fight for justice continues—but today, we move one step closer.

JOIN OUR 'UK RAAC CAMPAIGN GROUP' FB PAGE (HERE)

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITIONS  (CLICK HERE), OFFICIAL SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT PETITION (CLICK HERE)  OFFICIAL UK GOVERNMENT PETITION: (CLICK HERE)

πŸ“§ Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
πŸ“’ Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence   

Friday, 5 December 2025

Living in Danger: Scottish Housing Minister Hears West Lothian RAAC Concerns

Kerry Macintosh, Co-Vice Chair of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, with West Lothian homeowners at a protest ahead of their meeting with Housing Minister Mairi McAllan, highlighting their urgent call for support, accountability, and solutions for RAAC-affected properties.

West Lothian RAAC Homeowners Meet Housing Minister Mairi McAllan: Voices, Frustrations, and Urgent Appeals

Homeowners in West Lothian who have been living with the dangers of RAAC (Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete) recently met with Scottish Housing Minister Mairi McAllan to discuss the challenges they face daily in their homes. The meeting brought together residents from Craigshill, Bathgate, Broxburn, and Linlithgow alongside council representatives, campaigners, and officials from Safer Homes. For those affected, the gathering was a chance to be heard after years of uncertainty, frustration, and bureaucratic delays.

From the outset, Minister McAllan made it clear that her intention was to listen. She explained that while the Scottish Government does not have a specific RAAC funding pot due to current economic constraints, she remains committed to pressing the UK Government on financial support and exploring flexible solutions where possible. The meeting was framed around pressing issues such as mortgage access, remediation, demolition, and the wider financial impact on homeowners.

The situation in West Lothian is acute. Councillor George Paul highlighted that 337 private properties have been identified as containing RAAC, spread across several areas, with Craigshill alone accounting for nearly half. While the council has allocated funds to address RAAC within its own housing stock, homeowners are largely left to navigate a complex and uncoordinated system themselves.

For the residents, the human toll of living with RAAC is significant. Karen Chappell shared her distress at being unable to find a buyer for her property, despite multiple offers, because mortgage lenders will not finance RAAC-affected homes. one resident, described the very real risk of financial ruin and bankruptcy if she cannot resolve her property’s status. The sense of helplessness was palpable, with many homeowners frustrated by the lack of a clear framework to access support, whether through grants, loans, or coordinated remediation efforts.

The meeting also highlighted the practical difficulties faced by residents. another resident described the near-impossible challenge of finding surveyors willing to assess properties, having contacted over ten companies with little success. Ashleigh Mitchell emphasized that the homes in Chestnut Grove are entirely composed of RAAC, making remediation virtually impossible and likely pointing to future demolition, similar to the approach taken in Aberdeen. The financial, emotional, and logistical burdens on these communities were evident throughout the discussions.

Ashleigh Mitchell, stated:

"It's deeply saddened me as a first time buyer, buying a home to create a family and invest in my property. It meant everything to me and I was proud to become a home owner. 

The day I and residents received letters from Almond Housing, my heart sank... 

'due to the walls in your home also been constructed, utilised with RAAC this has raised concerns for us regarding the long term viability of the bungalows of chestnut Grove'.

The words" viability" frightened me. After that I then met kerry for support and contacted my MSP Angela constance". 

Safety and wellbeing were recurring themes. a resident spoke candidly about the anxiety of knowing her children were sleeping in defective homes, while other residents described the daily stress of living in properties whose structural integrity is uncertain. The historical knowledge of RAAC risks only added to the frustration. Kerry Macintosh highlighted that councils and housing providers had been aware of the dangers for decades, yet structurally compromised homes were still sold to the public. Kerry called for a public inquiry and insisted that homeowners deserve meaningful solutions, whether through demolition, removal, or “home-for-a-home” arrangements.

During the meeting Kerry Macintosh, said:  "The true and real story of Deans south..... 18 years of pure trauma, PTSD, heart attacks, mental health, suicidal, dirty water, no basic council services, anxiety attacks, collapsing roofs, waterfalls that turned to ice,.... A ghost town.... feeling like we were drowning, and no support was given by West lothian council. My journey like that of many others in West Lothian and around Scotland has been one marked by distress and disillusionment. When our homes were condemned we found ourself thrust into a nightmare of uncertainty and fear. The promises of fair compensation and adequate support quickly evaporated leaving us stranded as a sea of despair."

Minister McAllan acknowledged these concerns, noting the lack of coordinated support from local authorities and the emotional and financial strain faced by residents. She committed to creating a leadership group within the Scottish Government to address RAAC comprehensively, engaging with mortgage lenders and insurers to facilitate property sales and financial stability. She also encouraged councils to take a more proactive role in coordinating surveys, remediation, and access to trusted service providers, drawing on examples from other regions in Scotland.

The meeting also underscored the frustration of homeowners with communication and governance. Many spoke of how the RAAC government group had not convened since May 2025, leaving residents without a forum to raise concerns or find guidance. Ashleigh Mitchell highlighted the desperate situation in Chestnut Grove, while Karen Chappell emphasized that key stakeholders, such as Almond Housing, had not been part of meaningful discussions, further compounding residents’ sense of powerlessness.

Reflecting on the meeting after the event, Wilson Chowdhry, Chair of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, thanked Housing Minister Mairi McAllan for taking the time to meet with homeowners but expressed deep disappointment at Almond Housing’s absence. “We appreciate Minister McAllan’s visit and her willingness to listen, but it is frustrating that Almond Housing, who hold critical responsibility for many RAAC-affected properties, did not participate. I personally wrote to the Minister and to Almond Housing—specifically to Iona Taylor, their Asset Manager, and John Davidson, the CEO—requesting their attendance so residents could have their thousands of questions addressed. Yet no commitment or response was provided. Without their engagement, homeowners continue to be left without the answers or support they desperately need.”

Ultimately, the meeting with Minister McAllan reflected both the severity of the RAAC crisis and the determination of homeowners to seek justice and practical solutions. While the challenges are significant, there is hope that with greater coordination, transparency, and proactive engagement, the experiences of West Lothian residents can inform more effective policies and protections for all those affected by RAAC across Scotland.

The voices of these homeowners are clear: they need more than promises—they need support, accountability, and tangible solutions that safeguard their homes, finances, and wellbeing. This meeting was a step toward that, but the road ahead remains long and urgent.


Kerry Macintosh, Co-Vice Chair of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, reflected on the meeting with cautious optimism. “I was pleased that Housing Minister Mairi McAllan was respectful and genuinely listened to homeowners’ concerns. She even had to castigate the Chair of the meeting, Councillor George Paul, when he repeatedly tried to shut down community voices. Ashleigh and I have submitted extensive evidence directly to Minister McAllan regarding RAAC properties, and we are very hopeful this will lead to a public inquiry. I would also like to thank Wilson Chowdhry, Chair of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, who was instrumental in making this meeting with the Housing Minister happen. If a public inquiry does not occur, I will continue to pursue justice for the residents affected. Homeowners deserve accountability and real solutions, and we will not stop fighting until they get it.”

Join the Fight

If you or someone you know is affected by RAAC, or if you want to support our campaign, follow us on social media and get in touch. Together, we can make sure no one is left to face this crisis alone.

Sign our petitions: 

JOIN OUR 'UK RAAC CAMPAIGN GROUP' FB PAGE (HERE)

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITIONS  (CLICK HERE), OFFICIAL SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT PETITION (CLICK HERE)  OFFICIAL UK GOVERNMENT PETITION: (CLICK HERE)

πŸ“§ Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
πŸ“’ Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence   

Hirwaun’s RAAC Crisis Reaches the Senedd: What the Latest Petition Review Reveals

IMAGE: On Saturday 10 May 2025, Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, met with Hirwaun homeowners affected by RAAC to support them in advancing their campaign for safe and secure homes.

On 12 June 2025, a powerful petition calling for urgent support for homeowners affected by Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC) in Hirwaun’s Gower Estate went live on the Welsh Parliament’s website. The petition — P-06-1549 — highlights the financial and safety crisis facing 77 homes identified with dangerous RAAC construction, including 14 privately owned properties sold through the Right to Buy scheme.

Now, the petition has reached a critical stage: the Senedd’s Petitions Committee will formally review it on Monday 8 December 2025 at 14:00, with a live broadcast on Senedd.tv.
Just days before the session, Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group and lead petitioner, received a confirmation email: “Your petition will be considered at our next meeting…” — a long-awaited opportunity to present the truth about the escalating housing scandal.

What follows is a breakdown of the petition, the Welsh Government’s official stance, and why this issue is rapidly becoming a national test of political responsibility.


A Community in Crisis: The Petition at a Glance

In February 2024, RAAC was confirmed in 77 homes in the Gower Estate. RAAC, a lightweight bubbly concrete used between the 1950s and 1990s, has recently become a national byword for structural failure after sudden roof collapses in schools and hospitals across the UK.

The situation in Hirwaun is especially dire:

  • Homeowners face average costs of £23,000 for what experts often describe as only a temporary fix.

  • Many are mortgage prisoners, trapped with lenders unwilling to refinance RAAC homes.

  • Insurance policies exclude RAAC-related issues, leaving families financially exposed.

  • Properties were originally built cheaply by the local council, then moved through Trivallis and sold to unsuspecting residents — without any disclosure of structural risks.

The petition calls on the Welsh Government to:

  • Create a national RAAC remediation fund (or seek UK Government support)

  • Launch a public inquiry into historic failings

  • Reform building regulations to mandate 50-year guarantees on high-risk materials

  • Establish a Welsh high-risk property register to prevent repeat scandals

It also rightly references long-ignored warnings, including 400+ RAAC demolitions in Basildon in the 1990s and 86 condemned homes in West Lothian in 2004.

RAAC has been a known structural hazard for decades. Governments simply did not act.


What the Senedd Knows: Summary of the Petitions Committee Briefing

The official Senedd research briefing released for the 8 December session confirms:

  • RAAC was found in 77 homes in the Gower Estate — the only Trivallis housing of that type in Wales.

  • Trivallis’s remediation programme for its social homes runs from October 2024 to April 2027.

  • Trivallis has offered private homeowners access to its contractors, a gesture that may reduce costs but does not address affordability for severely low-income residents.

  • RCT Council offers grants up to £6,500, but only two households on the estate currently qualify.

  • The Council also offers loans and has assigned a Support Worker and Public Health team to assist.

However, this support does not come close to covering the real cost of making these homes safe.

Wales is not alone. Scotland is grappling with over 3,000 RAAC-affected homes and has formed a new RAAC in Housing Leadership Group — while also negotiating funding flexibilities with local authorities. Aberdeen, for example, has already secured £10 million in support enabling pre-RAAC-value buybacks.

No such support has been offered in Wales.


The Welsh Government’s Response: Correct, Concerned… but Not Committed

The Cabinet Secretary for Housing and Local Government, Jayne Bryant MS, responded to the petition on 14 November 2025. Her letter deserves careful attention.

What she acknowledges

  • She thanks Wilson Chowdhry for raising the issue.

  • She recognises that some homeowners will need support.

  • She confirms the Welsh Government is “working with UK and devolved governments” on RAAC.

  • She notes that Trivallis has begun remediation works and is offering contractor access to private owners.

What she does not commit to

  • No new funding for homeowners

  • No Welsh remediation scheme, even though remediation funding is already being explored in Scotland and has been standard in England for schools

  • No interest-free loans through Welsh Government

  • No move to amend building regulations to mandate material guarantees

  • No public inquiry into historic failures

  • No high-risk property register

Her key statement is revealing:

“Building maintenance is ultimately the responsibility of property owners.”

This line may be technically true in ordinary circumstances — but not when residents are living in homes built by the public sector with structurally defective materials, then sold through a government policy (Right to Buy) with zero disclosure of known risks.

The Welsh Government’s position effectively leaves the poorest households facing a structural disaster alone.


What Happens Next?

The petition will be debated publicly on 8 December 2025, and the Committee could recommend:

  • Further evidence sessions

  • A debate in the Senedd chamber

  • A formal request that the Welsh Government reconsider its position

  • Calls for a funding mechanism

  • Referral to other scrutiny committees

This meeting will be a key moment for residents, the RAAC Campaign Group, and policymakers.


Why This Matters Beyond Hirwaun

RAAC in housing is not a localised anomaly. It is emerging as a nationwide crisis, with:

  • 2,445 RAAC-affected social homes in Scotland

  • Nearly 700 privately owned homes confirmed

  • Hundreds more under review across the UK

  • Complete demolitions on record since the 1990s

The truth is simple:
RAAC is a UK-wide structural scandal whose consequences were foreseeable, avoidable, and ignored for decades.

What happens in Hirwaun could set a precedent for every other affected community.


A Community That Deserves Better

The people of Hirwaun are not asking for luxury. They are asking for:

  • Safe homes

  • A fair chance to repair their properties

  • Recognition of historic failings

  • Protection from financial ruin

These are the basic expectations any government should meet.

As the petition comes before the Committee, the Welsh Government is faced with a choice:
continue to pass the burden onto low-income homeowners, or take meaningful steps toward justice and remediation.

The families of Hirwaun — and those across the UK — deserve more than sympathy.
They deserve structural solutions to a structural failure.

Wilson Chowdhry stated:

"It is important to note that the Welsh Government’s email regarding the response deadline unfortunately went to my junk email folder, meaning I only became aware of it recently. A formal response has been submitted today, 5 December 2025, and I will be seeking and pleading with the relevant officials to ensure that it is shared with all participants and properly considered in the Petitions Committee process ahead of the 8 December meeting."

Join the Fight

If you or someone you know is affected by RAAC, or if you want to support our campaign, follow us on social media and get in touch. Together, we can make sure no one is left to face this crisis alone.

Sign our petitions: 

JOIN OUR 'UK RAAC CAMPAIGN GROUP' FB PAGE (HERE)

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITIONS  (CLICK HERE), OFFICIAL WELSH GOVERNMENT PETITION (CLICK HERE)  OFFICIAL UK GOVERNMENT PETITION: (CLICK HERE)

πŸ“§ Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
πŸ“’ Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence