Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Nick Clark and LDR Reporter

'Serious housing fraud' uncovered at London council as dozens of homes 'given to people who weren't eligible'

At a glance

A Newham Council housing officer allegedly manipulated allocation systems to give 35 homes to ineligible people; the fraud was exposed by a whistleblower, and the officer resigned immediately when confronted.

The council says it is working with the police to pursue a criminal investigation and recover the 35 misallocated social homes

The fraud emerges amid Newham’s severe temporary housing shortage — the borough has over 7,500 households in temporary accommodation, costing £100 million annually — prompting new policies allowing placement of families outside Newham or even London.

A Newham Council staff member allegedly “manipulated” its housing systems to give 35 homes to people not eligible for them, the town hall has revealed.

The council says it uncovered the “serious internal housing fraud” thanks to a whistleblower.

It says the housing officer who is suspected of the fraud “immediately resigned” after being confronted.

A council spokesperson told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) that the authority is now “working with the police to pursue a criminal investigation”.

However the Metropolitan Police said there is “currently no active police investigation”.

The council spokesperson said: “We can confirm that after our fraud team was contacted by a whistle-blowing member of staff reporting apparent malpractice by a housing officer, an internal fraud investigation was launched by the council.

“When the housing officer was confronted, they immediately resigned.”

They added: “The council is working with the police to pursue a criminal investigation.

“In the meantime, the council is seeking to recover 35 social homes that we believe may have been inappropriately let. This is a live legal case, and we cannot comment further.”

The allegation of “serious internal housing fraud” was revealed in a report on the council’s anti-fraud work, set to be discussed by its audit and governance committee this evening (Wednesday 5th).

The report alleges the member of staff “manipulated housing allocation systems to improperly assign 35 properties intended for use as temporary accommodation to ineligible individuals”.

The discovery comes as the council faces a temporary accommodation crisis.

Temporary housing is allocated to families and vulnerable people to prevent them becoming homeless. The council has seen a sharp rise both in the number of people seeking such accommodation and in the cost of providing it.

Newham has the highest number of people in temporary housing in England – more than 7,500 households – costing the council some £100million a year.

This is expected to grow by £12.8m next year, rising to £140m by 2028.

The council also says the availability of suitable, affordable homes in Newham is “insufficient”.

Council leaders agreed last month that the authority could house more people seeking temporary accommodation outside the borough.

The new policy says people with “a clear need to remain within commuting distance of Newham” could be placed up to 90 minutes away by public transport.

Others could be placed even further afield, including outside of London altogether.

Homes within the borough, or within 30 minutes by public transport, will be allocated to those “with a strong need to remain within Newham or the immediate local area, including residents with health issues or with vulnerable children in the household”.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.