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Home Brighton

Housing repairs backlog halved, council tells tenants

by Sarah Booker-Lewis - local democracy reporter
Friday 20 Jun, 2025 at 9:52PM
A A
7
Council looks to private landlords to help cut waiting list

The housing repairs backlog for council properties in Brighton and Hove has halved in the past year.

The Regulator of Social Housing criticised Brighton and Hove City Council for the backlog last year when the number of outstanding routine repairs open for more than 28 days stood at 9,653.

The number in March was 4,134 – a fall of more than 5,600 since last June, according to Martin Reid, the council’s director of homes and investment.

The backlog topped 10,000 at one point, council tenant and leaseholder reps were told at a series of housing management panel meetings.

They were told that the number started to grow during the coronavirus pandemic when lockdowns and other restrictions prevented maintenance and repair workers from going into people’s homes other than in an emergency.

The council received an average of 3,500 repair call-outs a month and more contractors had to be brought in to tackle the backlog.

The regulator included the backlog among the serious failings in a report on the council’s housing service in a report published last August.

Mr Reid said: “We’re working through the remaining backlog. It really has come down quite significantly and we’ll keep reporting that back.

“I’m making sure we’ll have as few jobs as possible over 28 days. That’s been a really significant piece of work from the team and also from the contractors that were brought in to help up with that.”

Hollingdean Residents’ Association secretary Ian Beck said that the way that repairs were handled was “significantly better” than it was two years ago.

He said: “I’ve had very few complaints from the residents of Hollingdean because rather than come to me they’ve able to deal with it themselves. The repairs hotline is doing a lot better job than it did.”

Bates Estate Residents’ Association secretary Donna James, who co-chairs the north area panel, said: “It’s really helpful that, when you speak to repairs, you can send pictures and emails which speeds up the process. That really helps us.”

The regulator also flagged up issues with testing smoke detectors and electrical, fire and water safety.

Reps were told that performance had improved considerably with a goal of being up to date with electrical safety tests by December next year.

Nearly all homes now had a battery-powered smoke alarm and the council was committed to ensuring that there were smoke alarms in all homes by October.

Two per cent of council homes had not been checked because of access issues.

All high-risk buildings had been checked for legionella, reps were told, and the remaining blocks should have a water safety check by December.

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Comments 7

  1. Fletch says:
    11 months ago

    The council can try and put a positive spin on it if they like, but they are not.meeting their legal duties which is why the regulator issued a judgement against them in the first place.

    Like so many issues at the council, they are only taking action when they have to and have been pulled up on failing to meet their legal duties, not because they put tenants’ safety front and centre of what they do.

    The regulator made clear that most of the repair backlog stemmed from 2023, so the council can’t really just use their default explanation of the pandemic, or inheriting a repair backlog. There are serious issues within the housing department at the council, and while it’s good some of their failings have been unearthed by the regulator so they have been forced to take action, it shouldn’t have got to that in the first place if they were meeting their duties as a responsible landlord in the first place.

    Reply
    • Dino says:
      11 months ago

      It’s nice and hot out. Go get an ice cream and calm down.

      Reply
  2. Anne says:
    11 months ago

    In 2023, we reported the asbestos ceiling in our external porch, and have a letter to that effect. It’s been chased numerous times by both us, and our scheme manager. We eventually said we could go down the route of housing disrepair and reporting it to our local councillor, but didn’t want to do that. It’s been in the hands of contractors for many months, and is hopefully going to be done soon.

    Reply
    • Anne says:
      11 months ago

      To add, all BHCC staff have been fab, despite long wait.

      Reply
  3. Paul says:
    11 months ago

    The BHCC tradesmen work as efficiently as they can and do a good job over all.

    It’s the pen pushers in the officers ( management ) that cause problems as some have been giving jobs that a) aren’t qualified to do and b) don’t care about the position they are in.

    Reply
  4. Barry Phillips says:
    11 months ago

    I have been in contact with baccarat about my pealing kitchen ceiling for about 2 years plus and only get excuses
    it is an asbestos ceiling

    Reply
    • Anne says:
      11 months ago

      I’d actually forgotten about this, I was there, when a tenant asked about their asbestos ceiling flaking, with little bits falling off. They were told, it’ll take about 20 years before it affects you. I don’t think anything was followed through.

      Reply

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