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Pleas to reopen Aberdeen Raac talks fall flat as councillors war over ‘feelings of hatred’ between rivals

Labour members called for a special meeting to "correct a wrong" they believed had been made at a recent meeting around options for Raac homeowners.

Councillor Miranda Radley sitting down in the Aberdeen City Council chamber.
Councillor Miranda Radley. Image: Kenny Elrick/DC Thomson.

Pleas to reopen talks on helping Aberdeen residents stuck in Raac limbo collapsed today amid claims a meeting was only called over “feelings of hatred”.

The city’s Labour group called for a special summit to “correct a wrong” they believed had been made at a recent meeting of the communities, housing and public protection committee.

They claimed that convener councillor Miranda Radley failed to allow a vote on options for Raac homeowners from being escalated to a bigger meeting – where all 45 elected members could have their say.

Labour also argued that the rulebook was abused in Raac talks going as far back as last February.

Councillor Miranda Radley. Image: Kami Thomson/DC Thomson

They claimed that the council could have taken a different route of action if this had been known, as we are now almost 18 months into a sorry saga that has left homeowners Trapped by Raac.

What caused the council row?

At the housing committee meeting last month, members discussed a number of potential actions called for by homeowners.

This included swapping properties for another of equal value or repairing roofs affected by the crumbly concrete.

One council rule states that immediately following a vote, one third of the committee may request to refer the matter to full council so the debate can be reopened.

In this case, it may have given homeowners more time to plead their case.

But councillor M. Tauqeer Malik noted this procedure did not happen.

Councillor M. Tauqeer Malik. Image: Kenny Elrick/DC Thomson

And that, he explained, is why he dragged members back to the chamber today.

He fumed: “Radley should not be proud of that governance, she doesn’t know what she is doing when she is chairing a meeting.”

Councillor ‘didn’t breach committee rules’

Fellow Labour member Deena Tissera added: “This is not just a procedural debate, it’s about real people, homes and fear.

“Councillor Radley refused to allow a vote to bring the Raac viability proposals to full council.

“That decision is not just wrong and beyond her powers, but it shut down the voices of those we are elected to represent.”

She also claimed the move was a “blatant attempt to avoid scrutiny”.

Council co-leader councillor Christian Allard. Image: Kami Thomson/DC Thomson

But council co-leader Christian Allard fought back, telling the chamber that the convener had used her powers as per the rules.

The SNP member added: “Has there been a breach? No. If an informal vote had taken place, would it have been any different to the outcome? The answer is no.

“We are here today because the opposition wants to try and attack one of us.”

‘Personal attacks becoming normalised’

Lib Dem councillor Martin Greig jumped into the row to tell the chamber that officers had confirmed councillor Radley’s actions were appropriate.

Fighting her case, he said: “She has worked extraordinarily hard to protect the interests and wellbeing of the tenants and owners of Raac properties.”

However, he quickly turned on his Labour counterparts, claiming they were “wrong about the legal and technical questions and interpreted them incorrectly”.

Mr Greig even suggested what the chamber was hearing was a “desperate party-political broadcast”.

Councillor Martin Greig. Image: Kami Thomson/DC Thomson

He added: “I’m sad that Labour’s motion is motivated by feelings of hatred and contempt.

“It’s not good to disparage your colleagues to score political points and sadly that’s becoming routine.

“Deriding individuals with personal attacks is almost becoming normalised in this chamber.

“You are seeking to turn this council into a place where no one can trust anything that we do and that doesn’t help any of us, it helps those forces of darkness out there.”

The councillor even went as far as to say the party was “normalising hatred and the destruction of the democratic process”.

What was the final outcome?

In a final dig, councillor Malik claimed it was “a sad day for democracy”.

And he explained why he believed the Raac crisis should have been handled much differently.

Torry Raac buildings around Pentland Road, Balnagask Road and Girdleness Road. Image: Kenny Elrick/DC Thomson

What do you think of the scenes in the council chamber? Let us know in our comments section below


He said: “The administration was panicking, we told them to hold off and discuss all options.

“They ignored and now they are finding things tough because they rushed into a decision without fully understanding the issue and all of the implications.”

But despite fighting his corner, it wasn’t enough as councillors voted to take no further action.

Time is running out to support families Trapped by Raac. Sign the petition today. 


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