Monday, 25 May 2026

Request for Meeting with Housing Minister Shirley-Anne Somerville on Immediate Funding for Clackmannanshire

Fiona Crichton, Kerry Mackintosh, and Wilson Chowdhry following a meeting with Scottish Government officials in February.

Support our campaign crowdfund  (click here)  Or donate direct to the UK RAAC Campaign Group using these details: SC: 20-29-24 ACCT No: 03355349   


For months, homeowners affected by the RAAC crisis in Scotland have been told that the Scottish Government is “considering matters,” “preparing responses,” or “working through processes.” Yet when residents ask for something as basic as official meeting minutes, written commitments, or updates on emergency funding requests, they are met not with action, but delay after delay.

The latest correspondence from Scottish Government officials perfectly illustrates a growing pattern: assurances are given, deadlines are missed, and excuses are substituted for accountability.

A Meeting Without Transparency

On 19 February 2026, members of the UK RAAC Campaign Group met Scottish Government officials at Atlantic Quay in Glasgow to discuss the ongoing RAAC crisis affecting homeowners across Scotland.

The meeting covered major issues including:

  • Clackmannanshire Council’s urgent funding request;
  • The absence of a national remediation fund;
  • Mortgage and insurance barriers;
  • Potential governance failings surrounding historic RAAC oversight;
  • Calls for a Public Inquiry;
  • Legal protections for displaced homeowners.

Following the meeting, a formal open letter was submitted requesting:

  1. Official meeting minutes;
  2. A written summary of agreed actions;
  3. Clarification of promised follow-up responses.

That letter made clear the urgency facing affected residents:

“The issues raised concern homeowners facing catastrophic structural failure, financial displacement, and prolonged uncertainty. It is therefore essential that a clear and accurate public record exists.”

Yet more than three months later, no substantive response has been delivered.

Promise After Promise

On 11 March 2026, Scottish Government official Louise Thompson acknowledged the delay and assured campaigners a response was imminent:

"Dear Mr Chowdhry

I wanted to send a quick note to say we are preparing a response to your letter and will also share the note of the meeting at the same time. This has taken a little longer than expected due to staff illness but I will try and get a full response to you next week.

Best wishes,

Louise"

That “next week” response never arrived.

After waiting almost two more months, a follow-up email was sent on 1 May 2026 asking why the promised response from November 2025 had still not materialised.

Only then did another explanation emerge — this time blaming election restrictions:

"Hello,

I hope this email finds you well, and thank you for your patience as I was unable to respond last week.

There are limitations on the civil service during the pre-election period which began on 26 March 2026. Now that the Scottish Parliament election has taken place, new Ministers will be appointed. At that stage we will be able to resume correspondence. New Ministers are expected to be in post within the next few weeks although may be slightly quicker.

Best wishes,

Louise

This explanation raises serious questions.

If civil service restrictions began on 26 March, why was the promised response — due “next week” after 11 March — not issued before purdah started?

Why did officials wait until after another chasing email before citing the election period?

And most importantly: why are homeowners facing displacement, financial devastation, and structural crisis continually expected to accept indefinite delay as normal?

Moreover, homeowners’ frustration has only deepened following yet another ministerial reshuffle within the Scottish Government. Mairi McAllan is no longer responsible for housing, having now taken on the role of Education, Culture and Gaelic Secretary, while Shirley-Anne Somerville has become the new Cabinet Secretary for Social Justice and Housing. For RAAC residents, this marks the third change of Housing Minister in just two years. Many homeowners now fear that months of engagement, correspondence, and campaigning risk being reset once again, forcing residents to repeatedly brief incoming ministers while urgent decisions affecting their homes, finances, and futures remain unresolved.

In response, Wilson Chowdhry has written an open letter to the new Housing Minister requesting urgent meetings with affected homeowners in Tillicoultry and Renfrewshire, while also seeking immediate clarity regarding ongoing delays to Clackmannanshire Council’s funding application. Mr Chowdhry has additionally been attempting to obtain updates directly from Clackmannanshire Council for over two months, but says repeated emails and telephone calls have gone unanswered. This includes correspondence with the Strategic Director for Place, Kevin Wells, who informed Mr Chowdhry in March that the grant application was in its finalisation stage before subsequently ceasing communication altogether. An additional open letter has now been issued to Mr Wells seeking answers on behalf of displaced residents.

Clackmannanshire Council Left Waiting

One of the most concerning elements of the February meeting involved Clackmannanshire Council’s funding request submitted on 23 January 2026 under the Affordable Housing Supply Programme.

During the meeting, officials explicitly stated that Clackmannanshire Council’s funding application would be “expedited” and acknowledged the impending Scottish Parliament election, indicating they hoped to conclude matters before pre-election restrictions began. Despite this, no meaningful update or decision was issued before purdah commenced — raising serious concerns that the election is now being used as justification for delays officials were already aware were approaching.

UKRCG's formal letter requested clarification on:

  • when a decision would be made;
  • whether additional information had been requested;
  • whether interim support was being considered.

No answer was ever provided.

For residents in Tillicoultry and elsewhere who remain displaced from their homes, this silence is not administrative inconvenience — it directly prolongs uncertainty, hardship, and fear about their future.

Accountability Continues to Be Avoided

The February letter also raised deeply uncomfortable issues for government:

  • allegations of prior knowledge of RAAC risks;
  • failures in oversight;
  • councils allegedly losing track of affected properties;
  • calls for a Public Inquiry;
  • lack of equivalent protections to those available under the Building Safety Act 2022 in England.

Campaigners requested transparency about who reviewed evidence, what thresholds were applied, and what escalation mechanisms existed.

Again, there has been no substantive response.

Instead, homeowners are being trapped in a cycle of acknowledgement without action.

A Government That Responds Only When Pressured

What is becoming increasingly apparent is that responses tend to emerge only after repeated chasing by residents, campaigners, or the media.

Even then, those responses frequently contain:

  • vague assurances;
  • references to internal processes;
  • staff shortages;
  • election restrictions;
  • or promises of future updates that never materialise.

At no stage has the Scottish Government publicly demonstrated the urgency that homeowners themselves are living with every single day.

The lack of published minutes is itself telling. If the meeting was constructive and meaningful, why has it taken months to release even a summary note?

Why are campaigners still asking basic questions about actions and timelines?

Residents Deserve Better

RAAC homeowners are not asking for special treatment.

They are asking for:

  • transparency;
  • timely communication;
  • meaningful engagement;
  • and evidence that government is actively fighting for solutions rather than managing political inconvenience.

The Scottish Government repeatedly states that it understands the seriousness of the RAAC crisis. But understanding means little without action.

At present, many affected residents see only delay, avoidance, and broken promises.

The RAAC crisis is not just about concrete—it is about accountability.

And we are far from finished.

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

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITION  (CLICK HERE)

📧 Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
📢 Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 


Wednesday, 6 May 2026

A National Injustice: RAAC and the Cost of UK Government Inaction

Support our campaign crowdfund  (click here)  Or donate direct to the UK RAAC Campaign Group using these details: SC: 20-29-24 ACCT No: 03355349   

The Government’s recent response to the petition “RAAC Homeowners Justice: National Fund, Legislative Reform & Public Inquiry Now!” is deeply disappointing—not just for what it says, but for what it fails to address.

At a time when hundreds of homeowners across the UK remain trapped in unsafe properties, facing financial ruin through no fault of their own, the Government has effectively chosen to do nothing.

Instead of acknowledging the scale of the crisis, the response downplays it. By stating that the “prevalence of RAAC in housing is low” and that the “risk of injury… is low,” the Government sidesteps the real issue: people are losing their homes, their financial security, and their futures. This is not simply a question of statistical risk—it is a human crisis affecting real families.

A Policy Vacuum

The petition called for meaningful, practical solutions:

  • A public inquiry into how RAAC has been handled
  • A national high-risk building register
  • Mandatory defect reporting
  • A 60-year developer liability period
  • Compensation measures for affected homeowners

Yet the Government has rejected new measures outright, relying instead on existing frameworks that have already proven inadequate. The claim that current guidance is sufficient rings hollow when councils such as West Lothian and Dundee are offering little or no meaningful support to affected residents.

Homeowners are being left in limbo—unable to sell, unable to remortgage, and in many cases, still paying mortgages on properties deemed unsafe or uninhabitable.

Silence on First-Time Buyer Status

Perhaps most concerning is the continued failure to address one of the most critical and reasonable requests: restoring first-time buyer status to those who lose their homes due to RAAC.

I have raised this issue directly with the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, including in correspondence with Minister Samantha Dixon MBE MP. Despite assurances that this matter would be considered, no clear or substantive response has been provided.

This silence is not acceptable.

Many of the homeowners affected by RAAC come from areas identified in indices of deprivation. These are not wealthy property investors—they are ordinary people who followed the rules, bought homes in good faith, and are now facing devastating consequences due to systemic failures in construction and regulation.

To deny them the opportunity to rebuild their lives through restored first-time buyer status is not just an oversight—it is a profound injustice.

A Pattern of Neglect

The Government’s response reflects a broader pattern: acknowledge the issue, minimise its significance, and avoid taking responsibility.

Meanwhile, local authorities pass the burden onto residents, citing limited resources or devolved responsibilities. The result is a fragmented and ineffective response that leaves homeowners abandoned.

What Happens Next

This is not the end of the matter.

I will be writing again directly to Minister Samantha Dixon to demand a clear and detailed response specifically on the issue of first-time buyer status. This is a fundamental part of restoring fairness for those who have lost everything through no fault of their own.

The fight for justice for RAAC homeowners continues. We will not accept silence, inaction, or half-measures while families are left to bear the cost of failures they did not create.

The Government must do better—and we will continue to hold them to account until they do.

The RAAC crisis is not just about concrete—it is about accountability.

And we are far from finished.

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

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITION  (CLICK HERE)

📧 Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
📢 Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 


Friday, 1 May 2026

“I Can’t Keep Waiting”: A RAAC Homeowner’s Plea for Answers in Tillicoultry

Fiona Crichton, Secretary of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, presents a report to Mairi McAllan.

Support our campaign crowdfund  (click here)  Or donate direct to the UK RAAC Campaign Group using these details: SC: 20-29-24 ACCT No: 03355349   

Nearly three years after being forced from their homes due to Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC), homeowners in Tillicoultry are still trapped in uncertainty—paying mortgages on properties they cannot live in, while waiting for decisions that never seem to come.

For Fiona, one of the affected residents, the situation is becoming critical:

“I am worried. My current mortgage fixed rate is ending… what this means is my mortgage payments are going to increase considerably. The only option I can see is staying on the Standard Variable Rate and trying to meet the payments.”

Like many others, she faces a sharp rise in monthly costs at a time when she is already financially stretched.

“The costs of living are so high right now and costs of everything are increasing and increasing… it’s very disheartening.”


Almost Three Years of Displacement and Delay

The crisis in Tillicoultry began when RAAC—now widely recognised as a structural risk—was identified in residential properties, leading to homeowners being effectively ousted from their homes for safety reasons.

Since then:

  • Many properties have remained empty and uninhabitable
  • Homeowners have continued paying mortgages and insurance
  • Families have had to secure alternative accommodation, often at additional cost

Despite the severity of the situation, a long-term resolution has yet to be finalised.


Engagement Without Outcome

There has been no shortage of discussions.

  • In October 2025, a meeting took place involving residents, council officers, councillors, and the Scottish Government. At that meeting, government representatives stated they would provide as much assistance as possible and explore financial flexibility, including through the Affordable Homes Supply Programme.
  • Prior to that meeting, the council confirmed it would pursue funding through this programme, which could support redevelopment and help deliver new council housing.
  • In November 2025, during a further meeting with campaign representatives, a senior government housing official indicated that any application for assistance would be expedited.

More recently, council officials suggested that discussions with the Scottish Government were at an advanced stage, with indications that a grant agreement could be close.

And yet—no confirmation has been provided.


The Grant That Could Change Everything

At the centre of the impasse is a potential government grant.

If approved, it could:

  • Enable the council to renovate or redevelop affected properties
  • Convert former private homes into council housing stock
  • Crucially, allow the council to offer fairer acquisition prices to homeowners

Without this funding, current voluntary acquisition offers remain significantly below what many homeowners owe on their mortgages.

This is why residents have been reluctant to proceed.

Fiona explains the dilemma clearly:

“I feel stuck because I can’t accept what they are offering me as it doesn’t cover my mortgage but I can’t just keep waiting indefinitely either.”


A Good Faith Effort—Met With Silence

In an effort to move things forward, campaigners encouraged homeowners to confirm whether they would be willing to sell under an acquisition scheme—something seen as necessary to unlock government funding tied to increasing council housing supply.

Residents engaged with that process in good faith.

Council representatives also indicated that homeowners could proceed with sales immediately and potentially benefit from additional funding later if a grant materialised.

But for many, that is simply too risky. Accepting a below-market offer without certainty of further support could leave them in long-term debt.

Meanwhile, attempts to obtain clear updates have stalled. Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, reports that repeated calls and emails to the council have gone unanswered. He has been seeking a definitive update from Kevin Wells, the Strategic Director responsible for the process. Council officers have stated that only Mr Wells can provide clarity; however, no response has been forthcoming, leaving homeowners without the answers they urgently need.


Financial Pressure Is Mounting

The delay is not just administrative—it is actively worsening people’s financial situations.

Homeowners are:

  • Paying mortgages on empty homes
  • Covering insurance and other property-related costs
  • Facing rising interest rates and expiring fixed-term deals

For Fiona, the situation is reaching a tipping point:

“There must be something we can do?”


A Simple Question That Still Has No Answer

After months of engagement and nearly two years of disruption, homeowners are asking a straightforward question:

Will the grant be approved—yes or no?

They are not asking for vague assurances or ongoing discussions. They are asking for clarity that will allow them to make informed decisions about their futures.

Because without that clarity, they remain trapped:

  • Unable to sell without incurring losses
  • Unable to wait without facing escalating costs

Time for Transparency

The situation in Tillicoultry highlights the human cost of delay in public decision-making.

Processes take time—but when that time stretches into years, the burden falls on those least able to carry it.

Fiona’s words are not just an expression of personal distress—they are a call for accountability:

“I can’t just keep waiting indefinitely.”

After everything these homeowners have endured, that is not an unreasonable position.

What they need now is not another meeting, or another update that leads nowhere.

They need a clear answer—and they need it now.

Wilson Chowdhry said:

“After months of waiting and repeated attempts to get answers, I have now informed long-standing supporters of these homeowners, including Central FM, and have written an open letter to Clackmannanshire Council and the Scottish Government. We are simply asking for an immediate yes or no on whether this grant will be provided.

These families have been left in limbo for far too long—paying mortgages on homes they cannot live in. They deserve clarity, and they deserve it now.”

The RAAC crisis is not just about concrete—it is about accountability.

And we are far from finished.

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

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITION  (CLICK HERE)

📧 Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
📢 Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 


 

Sunday, 19 April 2026

When “We’ll Update You in a Few Days” Becomes Weeks of Silence: A RAAC Case Study in Communication Breakdown

Wilson Chowdhry attending an on-line meeting with Aberdeen City Council

Support our campaign crowdfund  (click here)  Or donate direct to the UK RAAC Campaign Group using these details: SC: 20-29-24 ACCT No: 03355349   

In public sector housing crises such as those involving RAAC-affected properties, communication is not a courtesy—it is part of the system that holds everything together. When residents are dealing with displacement, financial uncertainty, and the loss of their homes, clarity and follow-through are not optional extras. They are essential.

Two recent strands of correspondence illustrate a growing concern among affected homeowners: not only delays in updates, but a widening gap between reassurance, expectation, and delivery.


A Reassuring Start on Advance Payments

In an initial response to homeowners, Stephen Booth, Chief Officer – Corporate Landlord at Aberdeen City Council, stated:

“Officers have however now received a number of requests for early payments and are currently considering the practicalities and process to enable an advance payment of a percentage of the agreed offer on the conclusion of formal missives. We hope to be in a position to provide more details in coming days. In the meantime we will continue to work with each homeowner on a case-by-case basis.”

For many residents, this was a significant moment. The idea that advance payments were being actively considered offered genuine relief at a time of intense financial pressure.

However, that reassurance came with a clear expectation: further details would follow within “coming days.”


Four Weeks Later: No Update

When no further communication was received, a follow-up email sent by Wilson Chowdhry, Chair of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, noted:

“I have now allowed four weeks for an update, but have yet to receive any further information.”

This is not an unreasonable concern. Where a timeframe is given—especially in relation to financial processes affecting displaced households—it becomes part of the expectation set. When that timeframe passes without explanation or update, it naturally begins to erode confidence in the process.

The follow-up also requested clarity on whether the issue would be taken to a Council meeting, and asked for information on deputation arrangements so that homeowners could engage directly in decision-making.


Professional Fees: Policy Assurance vs Practice

A second issue raises a deeper concern around the consistency between policy assurances and operational reality.

In earlier correspondence, Stephen Booth stated:

“The Council can meet the costs of solicitors and surveyors reasonable fees direct, or provide assurance to solicitors and surveyors that fees will be covered. We are not aware of any solicitors or surveyors requiring up front fees.”

On paper, this suggests a clear safeguard: homeowners should not be required to fund professional fees upfront.

However, correspondence from a surveyor at a council-recommended firm appears to describe a different practical experience:

“So far, we have not required to meet or negotiate with the DV. They have accepted our report format and figures.

If we are also required to meet with the DV we would require to charge an hourly rate of £250 + VAT. We however hope this is not required.

In terms of fee we have always invoiced the customer however you may be able to recover these fees from ACC.”

This highlights an important distinction between principle and practice. While the Council’s position suggests fees are covered or guaranteed, the operational reality described here indicates that homeowners may still be receiving invoices directly, with reimbursement expected later.

For families already dealing with displacement, mortgage pressures, and uncertainty over their housing future, this gap is not simply administrative. It is financial exposure at a time when many are least able to absorb it.

This raises a further question about how clearly these arrangements are communicated to homeowners in practice, and whether the intended process is consistently understood by all parties involved.


Tone, Engagement, and Follow-Through

The communication issue is further complicated by the tone of engagement in follow-up correspondence.

After a recent meeting, Stephen Booth wrote:

“Thank you both very much for taking the time to meet with me recently. I really appreciate your input and the valuable discussion we had. Please accept my apologies for the delay in getting back to you.

I’ve attached a summary of the main points we covered during our conversation for your reference. If there’s anything you’d like to add or clarify, please do let me know.”

On the surface, this is courteous and collaborative. It signals openness and continued dialogue.

However, when placed alongside unanswered follow-up questions on advance payments, timelines, Council meeting scheduling, and professional fee arrangements, a different picture emerges: one where engagement is acknowledged in tone, but not consistently followed through in substance.

The concern is not about politeness. It is about whether detailed questions raised in response to these invitations for clarification are receiving timely and substantive answers.


The Communication Gap

Taken together, these issues point to a broader pattern:

  • Promised updates given within short timeframes that are not met
  • Policy assurances that do not always align clearly with operational practice
  • Invitations for further clarification that are not consistently followed by detailed responses

Individually, each issue might be explained as delay or administrative pressure. But collectively, they create a growing gap between expectation and experience.


Why This Matters

For RAAC-affected homeowners, uncertainty is not theoretical. It affects where they live, how they pay for accommodation, how they plan their futures, and whether they can move forward at all.

In that context, communication is not just about providing information—it is about maintaining trust in a process that directly shapes people’s lives.

Where reassurance is given, but not followed by timely detail, uncertainty expands. Where policy assurances are not clearly reflected in practice, confidence weakens. And where follow-up questions remain unanswered, the sense of distance between decision-makers and affected residents inevitably grows.


Closing Reflection

The issue at the heart of these exchanges is not simply speed of response or tone of communication. It is the alignment between what is said, what is promised, and what is delivered.

In crises like RAAC remediation, that alignment is everything. Without it, even well-intentioned engagement risks feeling incomplete.

The RAAC crisis is not just about concrete—it is about accountability.

And we are far from finished.

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

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITION  (CLICK HERE)

📧 Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
📢 Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 


Wednesday, 15 April 2026

When the System Gets It Wrong: How I Fought (and Won) a False Speeding Allegation

A Honda PCX

By Wilson Chowdhry

I never expected a routine ride through London traffic to end in a courtroom battle—but that’s exactly what happened. I would normally be driving my Tesla Model X, but with congestion at a standstill, I opted for the moped in my garage to save time.

What began as a brief roadside stop spiralled into months of confusion: a court conviction in my absence, six points added to my licence, and a bailiff at my door demanding more than £1,200.

It all culminated in a courtroom showdown—where the truth finally came to light.

This is the story of how a flawed speeding allegation unravelled—and why it should concern every driver.


The Stop That Didn’t Make Sense

It was an ordinary morning. I was riding my Honda PCX through a typically congested London road—hardly the setting for high-speed driving. Suddenly, I was pulled over by two police officers.

They told me I had been recorded travelling at nearly 60 mph in a 30 mph zone.

I knew immediately something was wrong.

My speedometer had shown around 30 mph. I challenged them on the spot and even asked whether their speed detection equipment had been properly calibrated and certified. They assured me it had, took my details, and told me to expect a summons in the post.

It never arrived.


A Conviction Without My Knowledge

Months later, I got a shock: a bailiff turned up at my home demanding £1,286.

That’s when I discovered I had already been convicted—without ever knowing the case had gone to court.

Due to ongoing postal issues in my area, I never received the court notice and was unaware that proceedings had taken place. Faced with enforcement action, I paid the amount under pressure. However, once I understood the situation, I filed a statutory declaration to have the case reopened. As a result, the fine was fully refunded and the unwarranted six penalty points were removed from my licence.

That decision changed everything.


The Evidence That Fell Apart

Once I finally gained access to the case details, I was stunned.

The speed camera evidence didn’t match my vehicle.

According to the official record, the alleged speeding offence involved a “Tippin Delta” three-wheeler vehicle—not my Honda PCX scooter.

The discrepancy was glaring. These are completely different vehicles, visually and mechanically. Yet somehow, the case had still been pursued.

Even more concerning:

  • No video evidence was provided
  • The documentation appeared inconsistent
  • The case relied heavily on a single reading from a speed device

It became clear that something had gone seriously wrong.

A Tippin Delta

The Courtroom Moment

When the case finally reached Romford Magistrates Court on 14th April 2026, the hearing lasted no more than 10 minutes—but it was enough.

Without the benefit of legal representation, I confidently presented the evidence myself:

  • Images of the Tippin Delta referenced in the report
  • Images of my Honda PCX
  • A clear explanation of why the alleged speed was unrealistic given the road layout and my vehicle’s capabilities

The contrast was almost absurd.

Even the magistrates appeared taken aback—at one point, they visibly reacted when comparing the two vehicles.

Then came the turning point.

The prosecutor requested an adjournment because the officer who issued the allegation was unavailable, having moved away.

I objected.

The magistrates agreed.

Without the officer present and with inconsistent evidence on record, the prosecution had no case left to stand on. They withdrew the charge, and the case was dismissed.


The Real Issue: Confidence in the System

While I’m relieved the truth prevailed, the experience raises serious concerns.

How did a case with such obvious inconsistencies:

  • Proceed to court
  • Result in a conviction
  • Lead to enforcement action

All without basic verification?

Speed detection technology, when used correctly, is an important tool for road safety. But when errors occur—whether through faulty equipment, misidentification, or administrative oversight—the consequences for innocent drivers can be severe.

This isn’t just about one case. It’s about trust in the system.


What Needs to Change

My experience highlights a few key areas that deserve attention:

1. Verification of Evidence
Cases should not proceed where vehicle identification is clearly inconsistent.

2. Accountability in Enforcement
Errors—whether human or technical—must be acknowledged and addressed quickly.

3. Reliable Communication
Legal notices must reach defendants. When they don’t, the system needs stronger safeguards.

4. Transparency in Speed Detection
Drivers should have timely access to evidence, including video or photographic proof.


Final Thoughts

I lost time, money, and peace of mind over an allegation that should never have gone this far.

But I also saw something important: when challenged properly, the system can correct itself.

Still, it shouldn’t take this much effort to prove your innocence.

If there’s one lesson here, it’s this—don’t assume the system is always right. Ask questions. Demand evidence. And if something doesn’t add up, don’t be afraid to stand your ground.

Because sometimes, the difference between a conviction and justice is simply refusing to accept what doesn’t make sense.

Monday, 13 April 2026

UK Government Confirms Consideration of RAAC Petition Ahead of Formal Response

MP Brian Leishman and Wilson Chowdhry after his first meeting with RAAC Homeowners in Tillicoultry.

Support our campaign crowdfund  (click here)  Or donate direct to the UK RAAC Campaign Group using these details: SC: 20-29-24 ACCT No: 03355349   

I have received a response from the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government following my correspondence of 4th February 2026 regarding the petition presented in Parliament on 27 January 2026.

The Minister, Samantha Dixon MBE MP, has confirmed that MHCLG will take both the petition and the wider context I have set out into full consideration as it prepares its formal observations for publication in Hansard.

I welcome this confirmation and look forward to the Government’s formal response in due course.

A Petition Now Under Consideration

The petition presented in the House of Commons by Brian Leishman MP focuses on the impact of Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC) on homeowners across the UK.

A key element of the petition is its proposal to restore First Time Buyer status for homeowners affected by RAAC.

Clarifying the Wider Context

The “wider context” referred to in the Minister’s response relates specifically to an important distinction in scope.

The original petition I submitted sought to extend the restoration of First Time Buyer status not only to RAAC-affected homeowners, but more broadly to all homeowners who have lost their property through no fault of their own due to serious structural or latent defects.

This broader framing reflects a wider policy concern: that homeowners who are displaced as a result of systemic building failures should not be treated differently depending on the specific defect affecting their property.

A Constructive Step Forward

The Government has confirmed in a letter that it will take this wider context into account when preparing its formal observations. This is a welcome and constructive development.

It ensures that the Department is aware of both the specific RAAC-related issues raised in the presented petition, and the broader principle originally intended — namely fair treatment for all homeowners affected by catastrophic building defects outside of their control.

Looking Ahead

I look forward to the Government’s formal response and the observations that will be published in Hansard.

This remains an important opportunity to consider how policy can better support homeowners who find themselves displaced through no fault of their own, and to ensure that fairness is applied consistently across all categories of structural defect.

The RAAC crisis is not just about concrete—it is about accountability.

And we are far from finished.

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

PLEASE SIGN OUR PETITION  (CLICK HERE)

📧 Email: wilson@aasecurity.co.uk
📢 Twitter/X: https://x.com/WilsonChowdhry

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 


Clackmannanshire RAAC Homeowners Deliver Consensus — Institutions Must Now Deliver Action

Homeowners protested outside Clackmannashire Council Kingraigs Building last summer.

Support our campaign crowdfund  (click here)  Or donate direct to the UK RAAC Campaign Group using these details: SC: 20-29-24 ACCT No: 03355349   

Following recent discussions between the Council’s Strategic Director -Place, Kevin Wells, and Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, Mr Chowdhry was asked to engage with remaining homeowners to establish how many would be willing to proceed with voluntary acquisitions. This request was made in the context of the Council’s wider need to create new social housing units in order to secure funding through the Affordable Housing Supply Programme (AHSP) from the Scottish Government.

This marked an important development in the ongoing RAAC housing situation, as it linked the resolution of affected homeowners directly to a potential funding mechanism capable of both compensating residents and supporting the delivery of replacement social housing.


Recognition of the AHSP Link

Mr Chowdhry had previously raised this approach in a formal meeting attended by Council representatives and the Scottish Housing Minister. In that meeting, he highlighted the importance of aligning voluntary acquisitions with the creation of new social housing stock as a practical route to unlocking Scottish Government grant support.

In light of this, Mr Chowdhry expressed surprise that it had taken a considerable period for this connection to be fully recognised and incorporated into the Council’s developing approach. Given the urgency of the RAAC crisis and the extended displacement experienced by residents, earlier acknowledgement of this mechanism may have helped accelerate progress.

Nevertheless, the current engagement now provides a clearer and more structured pathway forward, and homeowners have responded constructively.


Ongoing Engagement and the Wider Context

Mr Chowdhry regularly engages with both the Scottish Government and Clackmannanshire Council seeking updates on progress and decision-making. He has been informed on several occasions by Kevin Wells, including in recent communications, that the cost of remedial works continues to increase as time passes.

However, it is important to emphasise that at this stage the decision-making responsibility sits firmly with Clackmannanshire Council and the Scottish Government, particularly in relation to funding approval, acquisition strategy, and long-term housing solutions.

Mr Chowdhry’s role remains one of representation, communication, and ensuring that homeowner concerns are consistently brought to the attention of all relevant authorities.

It is also recognised that a significant number of staff within the Council’s Housing Team have moved on to alternative employment in recent periods. Recruitment has not kept pace with this level of attrition, and this has contributed to delays in capacity and delivery. While this is not the sole cause of the current situation, it is acknowledged as a significant contributing factor to the pace of progress.


Summary of Homeowner Positions

Following consultation with the remaining affected households, and in continuation of a full response submitted to Kevin Wells on 20 March, the current positions are as follows:

Homeowner AC

AC has indicated that he would consider selling his property. However, he is seeking a figure significantly above what is likely to be considered reasonable by the Council, with expectations around £70,000. He remains the only homeowner still expressing a preference for remedial works as an alternative to sale.

Lynsey McQuater

Ms McQuater an NHS Nurse, is willing to proceed with voluntary acquisition but has requested to be rehoused in a Council property rather than enter the private rental sector.

She has identified a flat in  Alloa, near where her mother resides, as a suitable option.

Although this request falls outside the original scope of the Council’s offer, it is respectfully submitted that flexibility and discretion be considered. Ms McQuater has endured significant emotional distress following the loss of her home due to RAAC, including periods of deep depression. Additionally, her mother’s declining health means proximity and mutual support are essential to their wellbeing.

A similar arrangement was previously accommodated for another RAAC family, and it is therefore requested that this precedent be taken into account.

Homeowners Agree to Proceed with Voluntary Acquisition Subject to Enhanced AHSP-Linked Payment

Several homeowners have confirmed their willingness to proceed with voluntary acquisition, subject to the inclusion of a proposed additional £15,000 payment linked to AHSP-related funding. This position reflects a conditional agreement across multiple households, with residents indicating that the enhanced financial provision is a key factor in their readiness to move forward.

Remaining Homeowners

All other homeowners have either already completed the sale of their properties or are in the process of doing so.


Emerging Consensus

The responses received indicate a clear overall direction:

  • The overwhelming majority of homeowners are willing to proceed with voluntary acquisition
  • This willingness is strengthened where an enhanced financial offer linked to AHSP funding is available
  • A small number of outstanding issues remain, particularly regarding enhanced payments and exceptional housing needs

Despite the prolonged nature of the process, this represents a significant opportunity for resolution, with most residents now aligned with a structured way forward.


Clarification Required on AHSP-Linked Payments

Homeowners have also sought clarity regarding the proposed £10,000–£15,000 variation in additional payments.

In particular, clarification is requested on whether this variation is:

  • Based on property size or valuation banding
  • Dependent on the level of AHSP funding secured from the Scottish Government
  • Or subject to discretionary Council decision-making

Clear guidance on this matter is considered essential to maintaining transparency and confidence among residents at this stage.


Next Steps

To sustain progress and convert current willingness into delivery, the following matters require urgent attention:

  • The Council’s formal position on securing AHSP funding
  • Whether enhanced payments can be formally guaranteed
  • A clear timetable for progressing voluntary acquisitions
  • Consideration of exceptional rehousing requests, particularly in relation to Ms McQuater

Conclusion

The situation now presents a genuine opportunity to bring long-awaited resolution to homeowners affected by RAAC.

Mr Chowdhry continues to actively engage with both the Council and the Scottish Government to ensure momentum is maintained and that homeowner concerns remain fully represented. While costs for remedial works have been reported to be increasing over time, the critical responsibility for decisions now rests with Clackmannanshire Council and the Scottish Government.

The ongoing challenges faced by the Council’s Housing Team, including staff turnover and recruitment delays, are also recognised as factors impacting pace of delivery.

Nevertheless, homeowners are now largely aligned in their willingness to proceed, and with clear decisions and coordinated action, a fair and workable resolution remains within reach. It is further noted that a response is still awaited to several queries raised in the letter submitted on 20 March, and there is ongoing concern that on Wednesday 8 April, a Council officer, Kim Grieve of Clackmannanshire Council, asked Lynsey McQuater to restate her preference regarding sale or remedial works, without providing any update on her request for a potential Council flat.

In addition, it is important to highlight that Wilson Chowdhry has secured an agreement in principle from the Council that homeowners could proceed with selling their properties immediately to the Council, thereby avoiding ongoing mortgage charges and insurance costs, with the Council guaranteeing that any further payment due would be made at a later stage following a decision from the Scottish Government regarding funding. However, some homeowners have opted to defer sale at this stage, on the basis that any later fixed payment may be treated differently for tax purposes and could potentially be considered taxable income rather than part of the original purchase price structure.

Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, said:  “Homeowners have shown extraordinary patience and resilience throughout this process, and while we are now finally seeing a workable pathway emerge through voluntary acquisition and AHSP-linked support, it is essential that both the Council and Scottish Government move with urgency and clarity. Every delay adds further uncertainty and cost, and the responsibility now lies firmly with decision-makers to turn this emerging consensus into real, timely action for affected families.”

The RAAC crisis is not just about concrete—it is about accountability.

And we are far from finished.

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