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Grenfell campaigners say government must commit to deadline for removing flammable cladding

All dangerous material was meant to have been removed by this month

Caitlin Doherty
Wednesday 10 June 2020 08:23 EDT
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40,000 people still living in deadly Grenfell-style tower blocks

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Grenfell campaigners are calling on the government to commit to a deadline to remove all flammable cladding from homes, three years after the fire killed 72 people.

The Justice4Grenfell group is asking people to write to their MP demanding a time limit and a detailed plan on how and when cladding will be removed.

Last year, then-communities secretary James Brokenshire said he expected the all unsafe cladding to be removed by this month, but thousands of homes are still covered in aluminium composite material (ACM) deemed to be dangerous.

The new campaign comes days before the third anniversary of the disaster, and plays on the government's coronavirus public messaging campaign with a graphic that reads “Safe homes. Protect residents. Save lives”.

Justice4Grenfell spokesperson Yvette Williams said: “For the people affected there is still no clear understanding of the time frame to have these panels removed.

“We believe the government needs to act with urgency and set clear timings for completion and take accountability for an expedient removal.

“At a time when people are urged to stay in their homes more, safety is paramount.

“Over 23,000 households are still covered in Grenfell-style flammable cladding three years after the disaster.

“The fight for change and justice must continue as many thousands of people's lives are at risk.”

Sunday 14 June will mark three years since the west London tower block fire, and churches across the city will ring their bells 72 times in remembrance of the victims.

St Paul's Cathedral, Westminster Abbey and Southwark Cathedral will join Grenfell's parish church, St Clement Notting Dale, at 6pm at the invitation of the Bishop of Kensington, Graham Tomlin.

Dr Tomlin said: “Nearly three years ago, the tragedy at Grenfell Tower left us wondering how this could happen in a 21st-century city like London.

“We are now facing a very different tragedy in the form of coronavirus, but we continue to ask similar questions.

“As we try to make sense of what we are living through today, let's not forget that hundreds of families are still trying to make sense of what happened on that day in June 2017.”

A government spokesperson said: “The safety of residents is our top priority and since the Grenfell Tower fire we have worked tirelessly with councils to identify buildings at risk and ensure they are made safe.

“We are providing £1.6bn for the removal and replacement of unsafe cladding from high-rise buildings and are bringing forward the biggest legislative changes in a generation to provide further enforcement powers against those who do not comply with the law, and ensuring that residents' safety is at the heart of the construction process.”

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