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Daily Record
Daily Record
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Stephanie Balloo & Hannah Mackenzie Wood

Mum 'struggling to feed family' in six-week wait for council to fix broken oven

A mum says her family has been forced to live off chips, chicken nuggets and pasta after waiting six weeks for an oven repair by the council.

Sophie Murphy, along with her husband and two children, have been left with just a borrowed microwave, AirFryer and camp fire hob to prepare meals since their oven broke just before Christmas last year.

The 31-year-old retail worker, whose kids are four and 12, says she 'can't afford' to keep surviving off takeaways in the almost two-month wait for repairs.

She claims the cooker the stopped working on Monday, December 20 due to a blown fuse, Birmingham Live reports.

A Birmingham City Council worker visited their Kings Norton home on Christmas Eve, but after realising it was a bigger job than initially thought because the electric was faulty, it was left unfixed and with the wires exposed.

"It will be six weeks this week," she told BirminghamLive.

"I've had to borrow a microwave because I didn't own one. I had to buy a two hob that you have for camping to boil stuff.

"The first week we had to have help from neighbours and someone lent me their microwave, I've had to borrow somebody's Air Fryer to do the chips.

"Basically we've just been doing chips, chicken nuggets, pasta - and that's all you can really cook without an oven."

Sophie Murphy has been waiting six weeks for the council to repair the faulty oven wiring. (Birmingham Mail)

On weekends, she has to try to cook with no oven for five children, as her husband's three other kids join them for the two days.

"I am so stressed and upset with the situation. I can't afford to pay for an electrician myself and I have been struggling to feed my kids for five weeks," Sophie, whose husband also works in retail, said.

"I have two children and my husband has three who stop on the weekend, so I'm trying to cook for seven people.

"We've been paying for takeaways and things like that, but I told the council 'there's only so many takeaways we can buy'.

"We don't get a lot of money from work, obviously we just get by so we can't afford to keep having takeaways."

The cooker stopped working after a fuse blew on Monday, December 20. (Birmingham Mail)

She said her son, in the process of being diagnosed with autism, was also 'very picky with food', adding to the difficulties.

"He can only have certain foods which is difficult without having an oven," she continued.

"The (the council) said they would send an email to get someone out to do the job. They said: 'Someone will contact you within 24 hours and they never do.'"

The council apologised for the problems and vowed to ensure it was 'replaced as soon as possible'.

A spokesman for the authority said: "We are sorry for the problems caused by the failure to repair the tenants' broken cooker. A housing officer will ensure it is replaced as soon as possible."

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