Residents living in the shadow of Grenfell Tower were billed by their council for cleaning a memorial to the fire which claimed at least 72 lives.
Kensington and Chelsea Council charged leaseholders on the Lancaster West estate a total of £618.09 for work around the 2022 anniversary of the fire, the Big Issue has learned, including hanging and removing lanterns, dismantling a stage and removing “excrement and other human debris” from a memorial.
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The charges were only discovered after leaseholders requested to inspect their service charge invoices, and were then refunded in May 2024 when the residents complained to the council. Kensington and Chelsea Council apologised in a statement to the Big Issue.
“Who in their right mind would think it was fair and reasonable to charge even a penny to residents and leaseholders for this?” leaseholders wrote in a complaint to the council.
“That no one picked it up or thought it was wrong shows how little they’ve changed,” leaseholder David O’Connell told the Big Issue.
The largest charge, of £182.25, was detailed as: “Brush to remove litter, excrement and other human debris, mould, moss growth algae and lichen and power wash all surfaces of hard surfaces at a minimum pressure of 1,500 psi, but not to exceed 2,000 psi, load up and remove waste and debris.”