Broken lift in flats 'traps' some for nine weeks

Cameron Weldon
BBC News, South West
BBC An elderly women standing in front of a closed lift door, pressing the call button. There is a sign on the wall next to the elevator with a red circle and diagonal line which says not to use the lift in the event of a fire. She is wearing a blue jumper and wearing glasses. BBC
Myra Hunter said she was left feeling that nobody from housing provider Sanctuary cared

A woman living in a block of flats in Devon said she and a number of other residents were unable to leave their block for nine weeks due to a damaged lift.

Myra Hunter, 73 said she felt "trapped" and "isolated" in her fourth-floor flat at Citadel Court in Plymouth.

She said the lift, which broke in February, was a "vital part of living in the block" and she felt the fact they were left without one for so long was "not acceptable" and made her feel "vulnerable".

Sanctuary Housing, which runs the over-55s housing block, which was built in 1987 and has 38 flats, apologised for the disruption and confirmed repairs works had been completed after delays in getting parts.

The image shows a person standing in front of a lift door. The lady is wearing a glasses, a dark blue hoodie and a black shirt underneath, along with a necklace that has a heart-shaped pendant. There is an elevator control panel with the number "1" illuminated in red.
Ms Hunter said to leave residents for "nine weeks with no lift is just not acceptable" and made her "feel vulnerable"

Ms Hunter said that many residents were in their 80s and 90s and could not manage stairs anymore, adding that one neighbour could not visit his wife who lived in care.

She said: "When you come here at 55, you don't anticipate being disabled. But, as age catches up with you, you need that lift."

She added that the situation was worse than when they were forced to stay in during the Covid-19 lockdown.

"To stay in because you can't get down the stairs from your apartment, it's really not good," she said.

Ms Hunter said her and her seven-year-old granddaughter had got stuck in the lift for about 10 minutes in February after it broke, but "thankfully, a manager was on site to release them".

She added that, on another occasion, one resident got stuck and firefighters had to be called to get them out.

She said she felt nervous about getting into the lift because of the "constant worry" that it might break down.

'Openness and honesty'

Ms Hunter said the information given to the residents by Sanctuary was "very sporadic" and "contradictory" and left her feeling that "nobody cared."

"We need to know what's going on," she said.

"We all own the flats, we need openness and honesty."

Sanctuary said it was "sorry for the disruption and the inconvenience it caused residents".

It said: "Delays with the availability of the specialist parts required meant it took longer than expected to complete the repairs."

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