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On 5th March 2026, the UK RAAC Campaign Group held what should have been a pivotal and constructive meeting with senior officials from Aberdeen City Council. Representing affected families were Wilson Chowdhry and Hannah Chowdhry, who met with Stephen Booth and Gail Beattie.
At the heart of the discussion were urgent and deeply practical concerns: how families forced from their homes due to RAAC structural risks can realistically relocate, access housing, and navigate a system that often appears disconnected from the lived reality of those affected.
The Core Issue: You Can’t Move Without Money
One of the most pressing issues raised was simple but critical—families cannot afford to move without upfront funds.
I made this clear during the meeting:
“Families are being asked to make life-altering decisions without the financial means to act. It’s not reluctance—it’s reality. You cannot relocate a household on goodwill alone.”
We proposed two straightforward, practical solutions:
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The early release of a portion of acquisition funds
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Or extending vacant possession deadlines to allow manageable transitions
“This is not a new problem—it’s been staring everyone in the face. The fact it hadn’t been formally recognised at that level is deeply concerning.”
A Delayed Response and Partial Progress
Following the meeting, homeowners did exactly what was asked of them—they raised these concerns formally. Multiple affected residents came forward, reinforcing the urgency of the issue.
On 16th March, Mr Booth responded. While the delay was noted, the content of the response suggested some movement:
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The Council is now considering early release of a percentage of funds
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Case-by-case flexibility continues
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Further details are expected “in coming days”
This is, on the surface, a step forward.
“It shouldn’t take collective pressure from distressed homeowners to trigger basic policy consideration—but at least we are now seeing movement in the right direction.”
Officers have now received a number of requests that have been made for early payments and are currently considering the practicalities and process to enable and advance payment of a percentage of the agreed offer on the conclusion of a formal missives. We hope to be in a position to provide more details in [the]coming days. In the meantime, we will continue to work with each homeowners on a case-by-case basis."
A Contradiction That Cannot Be Ignored
However, a significant inconsistency emerged in the Council’s position regarding legal and valuation support.
Mr Booth stated that:
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The Council covers reasonable solicitor and surveyor fees
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They are “not aware of any solicitors or surveyors requiring upfront fees”
This directly contradicts written evidence already shared with him.
A surveyor from Shepherd Surveyors clearly stated:
Fees are invoiced to the customer, and additional services—such as negotiations with the District Valuer—would incur hourly charges.
This communication was not hidden. In fact, I explicitly copied Mr Booth into correspondence on 12th March, inviting clarification and giving him the opportunity to engage directly with the surveyor.
He did not.
“It is unacceptable to claim a lack of awareness when the evidence was placed directly in front of you. This wasn’t an oversight—it was a missed opportunity to resolve a known issue.”
Even more concerning is that Shepherd Surveyors had been referenced as a firm that understood the process—yet their own communication suggests otherwise.
“There is a clear disconnect between policy assumptions and real-world practice. And it is homeowners who are paying the price for that gap.”
The Human Cost of Administrative Gaps
Behind every policy discussion is a family in limbo—people unable to plan their future, access their homes, or move forward with certainty.
The Council’s willingness to “consider” solutions is welcome, but it is not enough.
“RAAC families don’t need reassurances—they need workable solutions, delivered with urgency and grounded in reality.”
What Happens Next?
I have written again to Mr Booth seeking clarity—particularly on:
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The inconsistency regarding surveyor fees
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Why no direct engagement was made despite clear invitation
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When concrete proposals on early fund release will be delivered
This situation demands more than passive acknowledgment. It requires proactive leadership, transparency, and a willingness to confront uncomfortable gaps in understanding.
“We will continue to push—not because we want conflict, but because families deserve competence, honesty, and action.”
Final Thought
This episode highlights a broader issue: systems designed without fully understanding the lived experience of those they serve will always fall short.
The RAAC crisis is not just about concrete—it is about accountability.
And we are far from finished.
📧 Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
📢 Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry
#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence





