NFCC Expresses It's Relief And Welcomes Budget’s Cladding Announcement
The National Fire Chiefs Council has welcomed the budget announcement of a new £1 billion Building Safety Fund to assist with the removal of unsafe combustible cladding from private and social residential buildings, over 18 metres in height.
Yesterday’s announcement is precisely what NFCC has been calling for since the Grenfell Tower fire. The previous £200 million fund to remove cladding from privately owned buildings was a step in the right direction, but it did not go far enough.
This new fund will help to ease and then finally remove the financial burden on leaseholders and ensure people feel safe in their homes.
This NFCC call was further endorsed by Sir Martin Moore Bick in the Phase 1 report of the Grenfell Tower Inquiry, in which he makes it clear that unsafe cladding must be removed as soon as possible and more quickly than had been the case thus far.
NFCC is also pleased to see the additional £20 million of funding for fire services, which will assist in carrying out vital inspection and enforcement work; an area consistently highlighted in the State of Fire report as needing improvement.
NFCC Chair Roy Wilsher said:
NFCC’s role in working with the Government and representing the views of fire services has been instrumental in bringing about the announcement. I am very pleased to see this funding announced, although I would have liked to have seen it made earlier.
Leaseholders have been living with uncertainty and anxiety, in part due to them facing very high costs to pay for temporary ‘waking watch’ and evacuation measures just to keep buildings safe while they are covered in dangerous cladding. This anxiety is having a terrible and detrimental impact on people’s lives through no fault of their own. We must now see the immediate and rapid development of a timetable for the removal of unsafe cladding.
I am disappointed that many building owners did not step up to their responsibilities and take steps to rectify this much earlier, instead choosing to place the burden on people living within buildings clad in dangerous material.
NFCC has been abundantly clear in all our work with government since the Grenfell Tower fire that fundamental reform of the building safety system is needed. NFCC will continue to call for change and work with government departments to ensure this becomes a reality.
Whilst this broader work will continue, this new funding must now see the immediate and rapid development of a timetable for the removal of unsafe cladding, which will start as soon as practicably possible.
- The government had previously announced £400m for social housing tower blocks with ACM in 2018 and £200m for the private sector in 2019.
- A guide published by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) indicated that the fund would cover timber, high-pressure laminate and other cladding materials with a Euro class fire rating of ‘C’ or below.