Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Welsh Government Raises Hirwaun RAAC Crisis with UK Housing Minister

Wilson Chowdhry meeting RAAC-affected residents in Hirwaun as families seek accountability and support, 2025

By Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman – UK RAAC Campaign Group

We have received a significant update regarding our petition (P-06-1549) calling for urgent support for homeowners in Hirwaun affected by Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC).

In a formal response to Carolyn Thomas MS, Chair of the Senedd Petitions Committee, the Cabinet Secretary for Housing and Local Government, Jayne Bryant MS, has confirmed that she has written directly to the UK Housing Minister, Samantha Dixon MP, to seek support for Welsh residents impacted by RAAC.

This marks an important escalation of our campaign.

Welsh Government Engages UK Government

In her letter, Jayne Bryant MS confirmed:

  • Wilson Chowdhry had contacted her directly requesting that the matter be raised with the UK Government.

  • She has now written to the UK Housing Minister to seek support for Welsh residents affected by RAAC.

  • The Hirwaun estate is currently the only residential estate in Wales that the Welsh Government is aware of as being impacted by RAAC.

This development is significant for two reasons.

First, it demonstrates that the Welsh Government recognises the seriousness of the issue and accepts that UK Government engagement may be necessary to secure meaningful financial assistance.

Second, it places the Hirwaun crisis firmly on the intergovernmental agenda — moving the issue beyond correspondence and into formal dialogue between Cardiff Bay and Westminster.

What This Means for Homeowners

While this letter does not yet provide funding commitments, it represents tangible political movement.

Our petition specifically called for:

  • Exploration of financial support mechanisms similar to previous PRC housing grant schemes.

  • Clarification of the extent of RAAC in Welsh homes.

  • Engagement with the UK Government on a coordinated response.

The Cabinet Secretary’s action directly addresses the second and third of these objectives. For the first time, there is now formal Welsh Government communication with the UK Housing Minister regarding support for Welsh RAAC homeowners.

This is not the end of the process — but it is progress.

The Importance of the “Only Estate in Wales” Statement

The letter also states that the Hirwaun estate is the only one in Wales currently known to be affected by RAAC.

This makes the situation both more urgent and more manageable:

  • Urgent — because a small number of affected households should make targeted intervention more feasible.

  • Manageable — because the scale of the issue in Wales is limited compared to other parts of the UK.

If Wales has only one confirmed RAAC estate, there can be no justification for inaction.

The Petition Remains Open

Our petition remains open until 12 November 2025.

The Senedd Petitions Committee is awaiting further responses, and continued public support strengthens the case for:

  • A full Senedd debate;

  • Clear funding pathways;

  • A fair and consistent approach aligned with support offered elsewhere in the UK.

Every additional signature reinforces the message that homeowners should not be left to shoulder the burden of systemic construction failures alone.

A Message from Wilson Chowdhry

“We welcome the Cabinet Secretary’s decision to raise this matter directly with the UK Housing Minister. This is a positive and necessary step forward.

However, letters must now lead to action. Homeowners in Hirwaun continue to face uncertainty and potentially devastating repair costs. The fact that this appears to be the only affected estate in Wales should make a targeted support package both achievable and urgent.

We will continue to press both the Welsh and UK Governments until a fair solution is secured.”

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

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

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

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence   

Sunday, 8 February 2026

When Rent Support Becomes Rent Arrears: A Landlord’s Story

How This Tenancy Actually Began

This tenancy did not begin in the straightforward way people might assume.

I had paid a finder’s fee to Apex Dwellings to secure a private tenant. One was initially found, but just as matters were due to be finalised, the agent went on pilgrimage to Mecca, assuring me that a colleague would complete the process in his absence. That never happened. A month passed with no progress, and the original private tenant was lost.

When the agent eventually returned, he told me he had found an alternative tenant. This time, however, the tenant would be partly supported by Universal Credit, through a deal he secured with REdbridge Council. I initially rejected this outright, but was told that finding another tenant could take months and that leaving the property empty would be financially damaging. Under pressure, I reluctantly agreed.

At that point, the tenancy agreement itself was clear and unambiguous.
The rent was set at £1,700 per month, payable on the 4th day of each month.

On that basis, the tenancy went ahead.  

It sounded straightforward.

For a while, I trusted that arrangement. I shouldn’t have.

What I did not know at the time was that the agent had retained an undisclosed £5,000 incentive from the local council, despite having already taken a finder’s fee from me. I was also assured that the rent would be protected by insurance, something I later discovered was entirely untrue.

When I raised these assurances directly with Redbridge Council, I was informed that the incentive payment had been retained by the agent and that, although the council had advised the agent to arrange rent protection insurance, he had failed to do so, leaving me unprotected. I subsequently lodged a formal complaint with the Property Redress Scheme, which—almost a year later—resulted in £3,400 in compensation in recognition of the agent’s misconduct (click here)

Missed Payments and Familiar Excuses

Almost immediately, rent payments became irregular. Sometimes late. Sometimes missing altogether.

Each time I chased the arrears, I was told the same thing:
Universal Credit delays. Outstanding checks. Third-party paperwork. Nothing I could do until they paid.

I gave the benefit of the doubt. Anyone who has dealt with the benefits system knows delays happen.

But the arrears kept growing.

Sometime later, I was informed by Apex Dwellings that most of the rent would be covered by Universal Credit, which would be paid to the tenant and then passed on to me. Universal Credit was expected to contribute £1,250 per month, with the tenant responsible for topping this up with £450 of her own money.

The estate agent also sent me a Household Income summary prepared by Redbridge Council for the tenant, which showed the following benefits:

Average Monthly Income

  • Income SourceAmount (£)Status
    Universal Credit1,403.27Claimed
    Child Benefit110.93Claimed
    Total Benefits1,514.20Claimed
    Net Earnings1,364.18Received
    Total Income2,878.38

The council even provided a monthly budget breakdown for her regular spending:

Monthly Budget

Category£
Take-home income2,878.38
Rent1,850.00
Home & contents insurance1,951.59
Council Tax101.59
Utilities (Gas, Elec, Water)238.94
Transport34.00
Communication & leisure24.99
Mobile phone24.99
Food & housekeeping173.56
Total costs2,322.61

After costs555.77

Given these numbers, there should not have been any problem paying the rent. The tenant clearly had sufficient income to cover her obligations, making the later arrears and delays all the more frustrating and inexplicable.

In September, with rent arrears mounting, I began speaking directly with Redbridge Council about the tenant. Initially, they had refused to engage, as their relationship was solely with Apex Dwellings, the estate agent. However, the decision from the Property Redress Scheme opened the door for me to communicate with the council directly. Even then, their correspondence was always very limited, offering little clarity or support.

In October 2025, an officer from Redbridge Council emailed me to say that two council officers were actively assisting the tenant and that it was hoped this support would resolve the growing rent arrears. During numerous phone calls around this time, I was repeatedly told that council officers were working with the tenant and would help address what were described as delays with Universal Credit. These reassurances directly influenced my decision not to begin eviction proceedings earlier, as I was led to believe the arrears were about to be resolved.

In November 2025, despite the ongoing arrears, we agreed to increase the rent to £1,800 per month, raising the tenant’s personal contribution to £550. This decision was not taken lightly. At the time, the tenant was repeatedly assuring me that Universal Credit was about to release a lump-sum payment of around £5,000, which would clear the outstanding arrears.

I was given dates.
First 15 November 2025, following what I was told was a phone call confirming payment was imminent.
When that date passed, I was told to wait until the 20th.
When nothing arrived, the story shifted again — this time to the 31st, supposedly her normal payment date.

None of those payments ever arrived.

What made these claims seem credible at the time was a strange and unexpected call I received in October from a Redbridge Council officer, who told me that a payment of £3,200 would be made to me from a Discretionary Housing Fund. That payment was never received, and despite repeated attempts to follow up, I never heard from him again.

Separately, another council officer advised me on several occasions in November that the tenant’s Universal Credit housing element had been delayed but would be paid shortly. What was particularly concerning was that the dates mentioned repeatedly mirrored the same 31st-of-the-month deadline the tenant herself was giving me. At the time, it appeared that both the council and I were being told — and repeating — the same story.

It was only when no payment was made by 30 November that Redbridge Council finally informed me that I could apply for rent to be paid directly from Universal Credit. By that point, the tenant was already four months in arrears, even though this arrangement could have been put in place after just two months.

When I attempted to apply through the government website, I was unable to proceed because I did not have the tenant’s date of birth, and Redbridge Council did not respond to a request for it. I then contacted the Property Redress Scheme, explaining that I had requested the identification documents that the estate agent was required to check at the start of the tenancy as part of my earlier complaint. They responded to say they did not hold the information themselves and advised me to request it directly from the agent, and to open a further complaint if he failed to comply.

I forwarded that correspondence to Apex Dwellings, and only then did the agent finally provide a copy of the tenant’s EU pre-Settlement Visa as proof of ID, confirming her date of birth. This allowed me, at last, to complete the application for rent to be paid directly. 

However, the first payment still did not arrive on 30 December, the date the tenant had repeatedly told me was her normal payment day. This continued delay made it clear that, despite finally setting up direct payments, the arrears situation was far from resolved.

The Truth Comes Out

Eventually, exhausted by the repeated delays and contradictions, I contacted Universal Credit directly by telephone — despite having previously been told by Redbridge Council that I would not be able to speak to them myself. This call changed everything. Using the tenant’s date of birth, the property address, and her name, I was finally able to navigate the automated systems and take control of the situation.

I hope this information is useful to other landlords reading this post — sometimes, persistence and having the right information can make all the difference.

What I learned from Universal Credit over three separate calls was shocking. There had been no delays in payments. The tenant had been receiving the housing element from the very start of the tenancy, and the money had been paid to her every month.

The reason I did not receive payment in December, I was told, was that the tenant had not provided certain required information — specifically, details about her childcare costs. As a result, Universal Credit could only pay £40 per month toward the £6,900 arrears, since the tenant could not afford to pay more. At that rate, it would take nearly 15 years to recover the debt — a stark illustration of how mismanagement and withheld information can create an almost impossible situation for landlords. To make matters worse, a Universal Credit officer informed me that these arrears payments would stop once the tenant was evicted, meaning the longer the process dragged on, the more I risked losing the chance to recover what was owed.

It became clear that the arrears were not due to government delays, as I had repeatedly been told, but because the tenant had been withholding funds she had received all along.

It wasn’t a systems failure. It was a breach of trust.

Formal Action Begins

With that confirmation, I had no realistic option left. In January 2026, I served a Section 21 notice to regain possession of the property. The situation was further complicated by the tenant’s status as an international student on a European settlement visa, receiving Universal Credit while caring for a newborn child born in the UK. I made it clear that if the arrears were not settled, I would pursue a County Court Judgment, which could affect her access to benefits. Despite the personal circumstances, the ongoing delays and unpaid rent left me no choice but to take formal action to protect my property and finances.

Only then did the tone change.

The tenant eventually contacted me, proposing a payment plan to clear the arrears. Around the same time, arrangements were finally made for Universal Credit to pay the rent directly to me, rather than via the tenant. Universal Credit also began to deduct an additional £40 per month from the tenants benefits to go toward the arrears.

During a subsequent phone call, a Universal Credit officer confirmed that I could apply for a third-party deduction to continue collecting that £40 even after the tenant was evicted. However, he could not explain the process and suggested I email the Basildon office, which had recently begun communicating with me by email. Despite this, the office has never responded to my question.

Helpful—but very late.

The Damage Done

By this point, the numbers told their own story:

  • Rent arrears: £6,900

  • Interest on late rent (as allowed under the tenancy and the Tenant Fees Act): £258.90

  • Legal fees incurred: £1,440

  • Damage costs: £150

That last figure relates to a separate incident where the tenant failed to turn off a bathroom tap, causing flooding—not only in my property, but in the shop below. Despite agreeing to cover the cost, they never paid.

The total outstanding balance now stands at £8,748.90.

Where Things Stand Now

I did not inform the tenant that Universal Credit had confirmed she had been receiving all her housing element payments from the start of the tenancy. I simply asked her how much she thought she owed toward the outstanding arrears. She estimated around £2,000 and agreed to pay an additional £500 per month on top of her regular contribution of £450, which should have been paid directly from the outset.

This made it clear that she had surplus funds, especially as she had told me she was working additional jobs to make ends meet. My wife had also regularly seen her carrying large shopping bags, and I had long suspected that the £3,200 discretionary fund from Redbridge Council had been pocketed.

Finally, Universal Credit paid £1,250 directly into my account on 15 January, once the tenant submitted her childcare costs — apparently unaware of what I already knew. In addition, £40 per month was deducted to go toward the arrears.

In an email to my solicitors, the tenant has confirmed that she intends to vacate the property by the deadline stated in the Section 21 notice, which is 16 March 2026. She is also seeking advice on a payment plan to settle the remaining arrears and has expressed a desire to resolve the matter. I will continue to receive direct payments from Universal Credit until that date, and the tenant is expected to continue paying her regular rental amounts in the meantime.

Given the scale of the arrears, my solicitors had proposed that any initial payment should be no less than £2,200, in addition to the regular rent and a meaningful overpayment, rather than the mere £40 previously offered. The tenant has not yet agreed to this amount but is scheduled to speak with my solicitors, during which she will outline how much she believes she can pay. I have made it clear that if her offer is insufficient, I will pursue a County Court Judgment (CCJ) to recover the debt.

Let there be no confusion: this sudden willingness to engage only emerged after it was made clear that continued non-payment could result in formal legal action, including a County Court Judgment, and that such action could have wider consequences for her immigration and settlement status. Until that point, despite repeated assurances and third-party interventions, no meaningful progress had been made toward repaying what was owed.

In addition to the action taken against the tenant, my solicitors are also reviewing a potential claim against the estate agents, Apex Dwellings, who initiated the tenancy. This includes examining the original assurances given to me that the rent would be insured for up to three months, an assurance that later proved to be untrue, as well as the failure to provide any tenant references and failing to inform me the tenant was an international student, despite both verbal assurances and statutory requirements. These matters are now being actively considered as part of further legal action.

This situation didn’t arise overnight. It built slowly—through missed payments, repeated assurances, and a reliance on explanations that turned out not to be true.

It’s a reminder that even when you try to act reasonably, patiently, and in good faith, there comes a point where facts matter more than excuses.

And sometimes, the paperwork tells a very different story from the one you’ve been hearing all along.

Comment from Wilson Chowdhry, Landlord:

“I am deeply concerned about how the UK is increasingly being viewed as an easy target for benefits fraud, particularly by individuals from abroad who seek to take advantage of our government’s generosity and the hard work of struggling taxpayers. To address this, I have started a UK Government petition calling for automatic visa revocation in cases of proven or reasonably suspected benefits fraud, even without a criminal conviction. I hope people will sign it to support stronger measures to protect public funds and maintain trust in our immigration and benefits systems.”

You can view and sign the petition here: Automatic Visa Revocation Triggered by Any Evidence of Benefits Fraud

Friday, 6 February 2026

RAAC and the Scottish Government: A Turning Point for Homeowners

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

After months of sustained pressure, unanswered correspondence, and tireless advocacy, there are finally signs that our campaign is being taken seriously. This shift matters — not just symbolically, but strategically. The confirmation of a meeting with Scottish Government officials on 19 February 2026 represents a real opportunity, and one that must be fully seized.

The meeting, with officials from the Better Homes Department, will be attended by our Co-Vice Chairs, Kerry Macintosh and Hannah Chowdhry, and our Secretary, Fiona Crichton, ensuring strong, informed representation from the UK RAAC Campaign Group. Crucially, the discussions will now include a dedicated focus on homeowners in Housing Association estates and the Associations' responsibilities to support them, reflecting our continued insistence that all housing sectors must be part of any credible solution.This is a clear acknowledgement that RAAC is not a niche or isolated issue — it cuts across tenure, geography, and governance.

Engagement at Last — But Not an End Point

Officials including Louise Thompson and Deputy Director Matt Elsby have shown a willingness to engage directly with our evidence and concerns. This is welcome progress, but it is only a platform — not an outcome. For the first time, there is space to press substantively for:

  • A UK-wide National RAAC Fund

  • A fully resourced remediation strategy

  • Structural solutions, rather than short-term mitigation

This meeting follows an earlier session scheduled for 13 January, which had to be postponed due to an injury sustained by our Chairman, Wilson Chowdhry. The fact that engagement has continued despite that delay is significant in itself and underlines a simple truth: the RAAC crisis cannot be parked or ignored.

What Must Be on the Table

This meeting must deliver more than discussion. Among the critical issues that must be addressed are:

  • The creation of a National RAAC Fund capable of restoring homeowners to their pre-RAAC financial position

  • The case for a public inquiry into historic regulatory and policy failures

  • Progress on legislative changes to remove barriers facing affected homeowners

  • How Affordable Housing Supply Programme budgets could support councils in assisting homeowners

  • The role of Housing Associations in coordinated remediation and funding solutions

These are not abstract policy questions. They go to the heart of whether families can remain safely housed, financially solvent, and treated fairly after a crisis not of their making.

Mixed Signals from the UK Government

While engagement from the Scottish Government is encouraging, the wider UK response remains deeply concerning.

The recent reply from the Secretary of State for Scotland, Douglas Alexander, to Mr Chowdhry’s letter — also copied to the Scottish and Welsh Housing Ministers and the Secretary of State for Wales — acknowledges the seriousness of the RAAC crisis but offers little new. The response largely reiterates familiar arguments around devolution and coordination, while failing to address our central demands for:

  • UK-level collaboration with Wales

  • The establishment of a National RAAC Fund

  • Strategic leadership proportionate to a crisis of national origin

Even more troubling is the continued silence from Welsh Ministers, despite the growing distress of homeowners across Wales. Responsibility appears to be endlessly passed between governments while families remain trapped — caught between jurisdictions, delay, and deflection.

A Critical Moment for Action

This is a pivotal moment for the campaign.

The upcoming meeting provides an opportunity to push hard for parity of support across the UK, to insist on accountability, and to demand tangible outcomes. We will continue to press for:

  • Pre-RAAC property valuations, so homeowners are not permanently financially ruined

  • Fully funded roof replacement or remediation, delivered swiftly and without burdening households

  • A coordinated UK-wide approach, ensuring support is not determined by postcode or tenure

While a UK-wide solution remains the gold standard, it must be stated plainly: the Scottish Government has a direct responsibility to its citizens. If the UK Government continues to delay or deflect, Scotland must act decisively and unilaterally to protect homeowners. Thousands of families are already living with financial strain, uncertainty, and fear. Further delay is simply not acceptable.

Devolution cannot be used as a shield against action. The RAAC crisis is national in origin, systemic in failure, and devastating in impact. What families need now is leadership, accountability, and properly funded solutions — not procedural deflection.

Our Commitment

We remain committed to constructive engagement, but we will also continue to hold ministers and officials to account. Thousands of homeowners are watching closely, and the stakes could not be higher.

As Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, states:

“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. Delay is no longer acceptable.  

“We must also ensure that homeowners in Housing Association estates receive the answers and support they have been denied for too long. Housing Associations cannot be allowed to remain opaque or unresponsive, and local councils must actively steer the Associations and provide the support that families need while facing uncertainty and risk.”

And Kerry Macintosh, Co-Vice Chair, adds:

“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 opportunity is now. What happens next will determine whether governments rise to this challenge — or are remembered for failing those who needed them most.

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

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

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

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

When Valuations Stop Making Sense: A RAAC Homeowner’s Concern in Balnagask

Image: Wilson Chowdhry and his daughter Hannah Chowdhry taking the lead in the first meeting with senior Aberdeen council officers, advocating for residents and demanding a fair deal. Photo taken outside Marischal College on 26th July 2024, before meeting with Stephen Booth, Chief Officer – Corporate Landlord, and John Wilson, Chief Officer – Capital. The meeting revealed that unfair voluntary acquisitions were being offered, while homeowners still held the expectation that the council would provide a fair deal (click here).

As Aberdeen City Council progresses its programme to acquire and demolish RAAC-affected homes in Balnagask, many homeowners have accepted that difficult decisions lie ahead. What should not be difficult, however, is ensuring that valuations are transparent, consistent, and fair.

Recent correspondence regarding the proposed purchase of 219 Farquhar Road has raised serious questions about whether that standard is being met.

A Four-Bedroom Home Valued Like a Three-Bedroom One

Through conversations with local residents, it has become apparent that three-bedroom RAAC-affected properties in the area are being valued at between £72,000 and £78,000. Against that background, it is troubling that a four-bedroom property has been valued at £76,000, a figure that appears indistinguishable from valuations applied to smaller homes.

Independent RICS surveyors have confirmed that, as a general principle, an additional bedroom would normally add at least £10,000 to the value of a residential property. This is not a controversial view. Property professionals and housing analysts consistently note that additional habitable space typically contributes more to value than cosmetic finish, because space offers choice and flexibility that décor cannot.

A larger home can accommodate growing families, allow for home working, provide storage without compromising living areas, and adapt to changing needs over time. These advantages exist regardless of personal taste in decoration and are a core component of how homes are valued.

Improvements That Appear to Have Been Overlooked

There is also concern that significant remedial works undertaken at the property may not have been reflected in the valuation.

Following issues identified in a HomeBuyer Report, the basement was professionally retanked, a damp-proof course installed, and surface pavement repairs completed to prevent water ingress — works costing over £5,000. These were not cosmetic upgrades but essential remedial measures addressing structural and moisture-related concerns.

Subsequently, further investment of approximately £3,000 was made to transform the basement into a practical, daily-use storage area. This included the installation of stairs and a handrail, plasterboarding and painting of walls, and the addition of shelving. As a result, usable space was significantly increased, freeing up living areas elsewhere in the home.

In any normal market context, such works would be expected to have a material impact on value.

Questions About the Valuation Process

The valuation outcome naturally leads to questions about how the figure was reached.

Was the valuation based on a full physical inspection, and if so, when did that take place? The homeowner is not aware of any recent inspection. Alternatively, was the assessment carried out as a desktop valuation, relying on assumptions rather than a detailed understanding of the property’s layout, condition, and improvements?

There is also a need for reassurance about the independence of the valuation process. While it is hoped that no specific directions or assumptions were provided by the local authority, transparency on this point is essential to maintaining confidence — not just for one household, but for all affected homeowners.

Why Comparisons Matter

Without breaching GDPR or disclosing personal data, there is a strong public interest in understanding how valuations differ between three-bedroom and four-bedroom RAAC-affected properties, and whether those differences are being applied consistently.

Such comparisons would help determine whether this valuation is an anomaly or part of a broader pattern. This is particularly important given the evolving nature of the RAAC programme and the introduction of fixed additional payments, which may unintentionally influence base valuations.

A Wider Issue Than One Home

This is not simply about one property or one family. It goes to the heart of how fairness is delivered in a situation where homeowners did not choose to live with RAAC, did not cause the problem, and now face life-changing disruption as a result of it.

If valuations are perceived as inconsistent, opaque, or politically influenced, trust in the entire process erodes. Transparency, clarity, and a willingness to explain methodology are therefore not optional extras — they are essential.

Homeowners deserve to understand how figures are reached, to see that like is being compared with like, and to feel confident that their homes are not being undervalued simply because circumstances have left them with little bargaining power.

In a crisis not of their making, fair valuation should be the minimum standard, not a point of contention.

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

"I was already incensed that several homeowners, who had waited in the hope of a better deal than what was initially offered, were compelled to accept Aberdeen City Council’s new fixed payment offer before valuations had even been undertaken. This situation seems even more concerning now, as there is a growing perception among affected residents that valuations may be intentionally low, potentially to limit costs following the agreement of the fixed payment.

Given the seriousness of the situation facing RAAC homeowners in Balnagask, I have written formally to the Scottish Government and Aberdeen City Council seeking clarity and reassurance about the valuation and acquisition process. This includes correspondence to the Housing Minister for Scotland, Màiri McAllan, Stephen Booth, Deputy Director for Better Homes and Chief Officer – Corporate Landlord at Aberdeen City Council, Eleanor Sheppard, Executive Director of Families and Communities, and the Senior Surveyor at District Valuer Services that wrote the report.

To date, only Stephen Booth has responded. He has confirmed that Aberdeen City Council has instructed the Valuation Office Agency to act on its behalf in relation to voluntary acquisitions and has advised that valuation queries should be taken up directly with the VOA, noting that the Council has agreed to meet reasonable professional fees should homeowners seek independent valuation advice.

While I welcome this response, the lack of engagement from others is disappointing given the scale of disruption homeowners are facing. I have now requested a meeting with Mr Booth and Ms Sheppard to discuss what happens next for affected households, so that I can clearly and accurately set out the process for all remaining Balnagask RAAC homeowners. Transparency and consistency are essential if confidence in this programme is to be maintained.”

IIn a post in October 2025, following the Council’s decision to introduce a fixed payment, I raised concerns that homeowners who engaged later in the process should not be penalised with lower offers than those made to early participants. It is crucial that the Council maintains transparency and consistency, so that all affected residents can have confidence in the process. You can read more about this in my earlier post here: Aberdeen’s breakthrough on RAAC is just the start.

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

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

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

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 

Wednesday, 28 January 2026

RAAC Homeowners’ Petition Presented to Parliament: What Happened and What Comes Next

Wilson Chowdhry and Brian Leishman

On Tuesday 27 January 2026, at approximately 7:54 pm, a petition on behalf of RAAC-affected homeowners across the UK was formally presented to the House of Commons by Brian Leishman MP.

The petition was originally written by Wilson Chowdhry of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, reflecting the growing distress faced by families forced from their homes due to Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC)—a known structural defect now leaving thousands at risk of homelessness, bankruptcy, and long-term trauma.

Why the Petition Was Amended

The original petition called explicitly for a national compensation fund for RAAC homeowners, alongside a public inquiry and legislative reform. However, under parliamentary rules, paper petitions presented to Parliament cannot directly request funding.

As a result, the wording was amended to comply with regulations, while still clearly setting out the injustice faced by homeowners and the urgent need for accountability, reform, and redress.

The Petition Read in the House of Commons

The petition read into the parliamentary record was as follows:

To the House of Commons.

The petition of residents of the United Kingdom,

Declares that many families across the UK face homelessness, bankruptcy and trauma after being forced from homes made unsafe by RAAC (reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete), particularly in former council homes purchased under the right to buy scheme.

The petitioners therefore request that the House of Commons urge the Government to hold a public inquiry into the handling of RAAC by national and local government; to introduce legislation to require the maintenance of a high-risk building register; to mandate reporting of building defects by surveyors and other professionals; and to introduce sixty-year liability for developers for building defects; and to consider compensation measures such as a ban on levying interest on mortgages on homes condemned after the discovery of RAAC, and the restoration of first-time buyer status for affected homeowners.

And the petitioners remain, etc.

While the language was necessarily constrained, the message was unmistakable: homeowners who did nothing wrong are paying the price for decades of institutional failure.

What Happens After a Petition Is Presented?

Once a paper petition is presented to Parliament—whether spoken aloud in the chamber or placed in the petition bag—it enters a formal parliamentary process:

1. Official Recording

The petition is:

  • Published in Hansard (the official parliamentary record)

  • Listed in the Votes and Proceedings of the House of Commons

This ensures the issue is permanently recorded as a matter formally raised before Parliament.

2. Government Response

A copy of the petition is sent to the relevant Government department, which is expected to provide a written response—known as an “observation”—within two months.
This response is also printed in Hansard.

While the Government is not legally required to act, it must respond publicly.

3. Petitions Committee Oversight

The Petitions Committee monitors all presented petitions and may choose to:

  • Refer the issue to a relevant select committee

  • Schedule a Westminster Hall debate (rare for paper petitions, but possible)

  • Tag the petition to future debates on RAAC or building safety, alerting MPs that the public has formally petitioned on the matter

What This Petition Does — and Does Not — Do

It is important to be clear:

  • It does not trigger a vote

  • It does not compel the Government to change policy

  • It forces a formal Government response

  • It raises the political profile of RAAC

  • It strengthens the case for further parliamentary action

Unlike e-petitions, paper petitions do not require a minimum number of signatures to receive a response. Their power lies in formal parliamentary recognition and persistence.

Why This Still Matters

For RAAC homeowners—particularly those trapped in former council homes bought under Right to Buy—this petition represents more than procedure. It is:

  • A formal acknowledgment of injustice

  • A demand for accountability

  • A building block toward systemic reform

What the UK RAAC Campaign Group Will Continue to Fight For

The UK RAAC Campaign Group will continue pressing for:

  • A full public inquiry into the handling of RAAC by national and local government

  • Mandatory defect reporting and the creation of a national high-risk building register

  • Long-term (60-year) developer liability for serious building defects

  • Protection for homeowners from financial ruin, including mortgage and lending safeguards

  • A national RAAC remediation and compensation fund, despite this not being permitted within the formal wording of the parliamentary petition

  • And ultimately, justice for those abandoned by the system

This petition is not the end of the fight — but it is now on the official record of Parliament, where it belongs.

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

“The petition being read into the House of Commons is an important milestone for homeowners affected by unsafe housing. It ensures their struggles are formally acknowledged and forces a government response. I want to be transparent that the part of the petition calling for legislative change was always intended to cover all homeowners of condemned or unsafe homes, not just those affected by RAAC. That focus didn’t come across in the amended wording, and I take responsibility for not reviewing it closely enough, when sent to me prior to submission. Even so, I remain hopeful that the wider legislative reforms will be considered in future debates, and that this petition will help drive lasting justice and protection for all homeowners at risk. I would also like to thank Brian Leishman and his team for their support in presenting the petition and helping raise these critical issues in Parliament.”

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)

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

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 


Thursday, 22 January 2026

Historic Milestone: Wilson Chowdhry's UK RAAC Campaign Group Petition to be Presented in Parliament

Wilson Chowdhry met Brian Leishman at his first consultation meeting with affected homeowners in Tilicoultry in January 2024

By Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman – UK RAAC Campaign Group

The UK RAAC Campaign Group is delighted 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 on Tuesday at approximately 19:00, marking an important milestone in our fight for recognition, accountability, and action.

Parliamentary Presentation Confirmed
Matthew Lawson, Parliamentary Assistant to Brian Leishman MP, confirmed that the petition has been scheduled for presentation in the House of Commons. All original signed petitions have been submitted in accordance with parliamentary procedures, ensuring the petition is ready for formal consideration.

Why This Petition Matters
RAAC (Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete) has left thousands of UK homeowners facing unsafe homes and financial uncertainty. Many affected residents are former council tenants who purchased homes through Right-to-Buy schemes, or subsequent buyers unaware of the structural risks.

The petition calls on Parliament to:

  • Establish a national support and compensation fund

  • Launch a public inquiry into RAAC management failures

  • Introduce 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 is legally required to provide a formal response.

You'll be able to watch the petition presentation live on Parliament TV:  https://www.parliamentlive.tv/Commons

A Step Forward—But Our Work Continues
The presentation of this petition is a historic milestone for RAAC-affected homeowners across the UK. It ensures their voices are formally placed before Parliament and permanently recorded.

We extend our thanks to MP Brian Leishman and his team for their support, and to every campaign member and homeowner who collected signatures and helped raise awareness. Together, we continue the fight for justice, safety, and accountability.

Kerry Macintosh, Co-Vice Chair of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, said:
“The presentation of this petition in Parliament is a vital step forward for homeowners who have been living in fear, uncertainty, and financial distress through no fault of their own. RAAC is not just a construction issue—it is a national failure that has left families trapped in unsafe homes and financial limbo. This petition ensures our voices are formally heard and places a clear responsibility on Government to act, not delay.”

Wilson Chowdhry, Founder of the UK RAAC Campaign Group, said:
“This petition represents the voices of RAAC-affected homeowners across the UK who have been left trapped in unsafe homes and financial ruin through no fault of their own. Having our petition formally presented in Parliament is a critical step towards national recognition and real accountability. We are calling for urgent Government action, including a national compensation and support scheme, a full public inquiry, and legal protections to ensure homeowners are not abandoned again.”

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)

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

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence 


Wednesday, 21 January 2026

When “Community Empowerment” Fails the Community

By Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman – UK RAAC Campaign Group

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 not on your right to be heard, but on where you live.

That is unacceptable in a modern democracy.

Click video above to hear Scottish Parliamentary Committee debate Wilson Chowdhry's Public Participation Petition – PE2198

This is why I launched Petition PE2198, calling on the Scottish Parliament to establish standardised, fair public participation processes across all Scottish councils. The petition sought minimum national standards for public questions, deputations, and petitions, alongside independent oversight to ensure councils actually comply.

The need for this reform is not theoretical. It is painfully real.

The lived reality for RAAC homeowners

In places like Clackmannanshire, RAAC homeowners have experienced first-hand what happens when councils are allowed to control participation without meaningful safeguards.

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

  • Many are now facing financial ruin, forced to pay rent and mortgages at the same time.

  • Despite RAAC being a life-altering issue, the council does not permit deputations or public questions, even when RAAC appears on the agenda.

  • The council petition process is restrictive, slow, and easily thwarted, meaning issues are often considered long after decisions are effectively settled.

In short, residents whose homes, safety, and finances are at risk are being shut out of the very forums where those decisions are made.

The Scottish Government’s response: permissive, not protective

The Scottish Government points to the Community Empowerment (Scotland) Act 2015 and existing guidance as evidence that participation is already supported. However, as the Scottish Parliament Information Centre (SPICe) briefing makes clear, it is left to individual local authorities to interpret and apply this legislation.

That is the heart of the problem.

Because there are no mandatory national standards, councils can – and do – choose how much scrutiny, challenge, and public involvement they allow. The Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (COSLA) may promote good practice, but it cannot enforce it. The result is a postcode lottery of democracy.

While local flexibility has value, basic fairness should not be optional. No council should be able to entirely deny residents the right to speak, question, or formally challenge decisions that affect their homes and livelihoods.

A petition closed, but the problem unresolved

The Scottish Parliamentary Petitions Committee ultimately closed PE2198, noting that while legislative change might be feasible, there is currently insufficient evidence to mandate a single participation model across all councils. The Government also pointed to future work under the Open Government Action Plan 2026–2030, where a national participation strategy may be explored.

This response effectively kicks the issue into the long grass.

Residents suffering today cannot wait until 2030 for councils to consider whether participation should be strengthened. For RAAC homeowners, the consequences of exclusion are immediate and devastating.

COSLA’s assurances raise serious questions

COSLA has indicated (click here) it may explore voluntary alignment and convene working groups to review best practice. But voluntary measures are precisely what have failed residents so far (read response).

Critical questions remain unanswered:

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

  • Will affected groups, such as the UK RAAC Campaign Group, be invited to the table to represent those directly impacted?

  • When will mandatory minimum standards be introduced, so residents can never again be completely denied a voice in matters affecting their safety, homes, and financial futures?

Democracy must work when it matters most

Public participation is not a “nice to have”. It is essential, especially when councils are dealing with crises of their own making, such as RAAC. When residents are excluded, trust collapses, decisions go unchallenged, and injustice festers.

Petition PE2198 may be closed, but the issue it exposed is far from resolved. Until Scotland guarantees minimum, enforceable standards of public participation, local democracy will continue to fail the very people it is meant to serve.

“For RAAC homeowners, this isn’t about abstract ideas of participation – it’s about being shut out while decisions are made that destroy our homes and finances. When councils can refuse questions, deputations, or meaningful engagement, residents are left powerless at the very moment they most need to be heard.”
Kerry Macintosh, Co-Vice-Chair, UK RAAC Campaign Group

“Councils created the RAAC crisis, yet many now block the very residents affected from speaking or even asking questions. Without mandatory participation standards, councils can manage dissent rather than face accountability. Voluntary guidance has failed RAAC homeowners. What’s needed are enforceable minimum standards so no council can silence residents whose safety, homes, and livelihoods are on the line. Local flexibility should never mean residents losing their fundamental right to be heard. The RAAC crisis has shown exactly why Scotland needs consistent, fair participation standards across all councils.”
Wilson Chowdhry, Chairman, 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)

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

#RAACScandal #Petition2113 #ScottishParliament #SupportRAACVictims #EndTheSilence