'Wait for the squirrels to die' pensioners in Ealing retirement home facing 'an army' of the rodents told by Ealing Council
By Isabel Millett 23rd Mar 2022
Pensioners at an Ealing retirement home claim they were left without working fire or emergency alarms for eight months after pesky squirrels kept breaking them.
Residents at the Garden Court retirement home in Chiswick said that an army of squirrels chewed through the wiring for the fire and emergency alarms in July 2021, but the council refused to fix anything until the squirrels had died.
According to resident Bill Allison the retirement home alerted Ealing Council to the broken alarm systems when they first broke but they were ignored. Bill said: "[The council] were warned about that. Our housing officer told them there would be big trouble but they wouldn't listen. Eventually someone from the council came and said we needed to wait for the squirrels to die before the wires could be fixed in case it happened again."
Garden Court is home to 33 elderly residents of varying vulnerability, some of whom are ill or use wheelchairs. As a result of the broken emergency alarms, residents in nineteen flats were unable to alert the home's warden if they needed help.
Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS), Bill said he was concerned about the risks to residents' safety that the lack of working fire or emergency alarms for eight months posed. He said the council were very fortunate that no emergencies or fires had happened while the systems were broken.
Handheld alarms were handed out by the council, but Bill says they're too complicated for most of the elderly residents to use. He said: "Our oldest resident is 95 and he would struggle to do things like that, and a lot of the residents do. They're too old for them. They don't understand them."
According to Bill, the issues with the fire and emergency alarms were not the only ones the council had failed to address. The roof of Garden Court's community area has been leaking for three years, causing damp to appear and making part of the room unusable, he said.
Bill said: "The roof of our little common room has been leaking for three years and we can only use half the room because of it."
"The safety of all our residents is our primary concern, and at no time has our fire detection system been out of function. Our careline service has been interrupted due to wire damage, and we have provided alternative means of support and contact for our residents should they wish to draw on the support of our 24/7 floating support.
"We also recognise that works must be completed safely, both by our contractor and for residents and therefore we ensure the appropriate skilled contractor undertakes these works in a safe way.
"There will be further and ongoing repairs at Garden Court as we strive to improve the scheme for our tenants, so they can continue to benefit from the independence that our scheme provides."
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