logo
Age UK ‘betraying elderly' by selling retirement home for millions

Age UK ‘betraying elderly' by selling retirement home for millions

Telegraph16 hours ago
Age UK has been accused of betraying elderly residents by planning to sell off retirement flats in one of Britain's most expensive seaside towns.
Residents living in the converted Georgian house in Salcombe, Devon, fear they will be forced to find new homes when it is sold off.
The house, named Woodcot, overlooks Salcombe Harbour and its estuary, and was understood to have been gifted to Age UK to be used in perpetuity as a retirement home for the elderly.
The property was left to the Plymouth Guild of Social Services by Elizabeth Jennings, a local philanthropist and owner of the house, in 1976 before being passed on to Help the Aged, which went on to become Age UK.
Friends and relatives of those now living in the apartments at Woodcot have described Age UK's decision to sell the house to developers as 'a betrayal' of the charity's purpose to care for the elderly.
Age UK's decision to sell the property has now been reported to the Charity Commission by a local activist who is in contact with a number of the home's residents.
She told The Telegraph: 'Should charities be disposing of extremely valuable assets to raise income whilst at the same time evicting the people who they are supposed to be helping? Not to mention the impact that the loss of the property will have on the local community. It's a betrayal and it's quite shameful of Age UK.
'Many people, my own mother included, have lived out their final years there in contented peace and quiet. It is a truly fabulous place. It is very much part of the local community. How does selling the property for development benefit the people they are supposed to be helping, or the wider community – many of whom want to live there?'
An elderly resident who moved to Woodcot 20 years ago said she was told at that point by Age UK that she would 'never have to move', only to be informed a few weeks ago that the property was to be sold.
She told The Telegraph: 'I feel, along with the other residents, that we should be allowed to stay here for the rest of our lives.
'Instead we face the prospect of being evicted so the house can be sold off at huge profit to developers for luxury apartments. It's just not right.'
A community hub
Woodcot has long been divided into self-contained flats for elderly residents, with its gardens open to the public every month in the summer. The gardens are also used to stage Shakespeare plays, host church fetes and hold community events to raise money for local projects.
It was built in 1797 by James Yates, a London merchant, and its three-storey stucco-fronted building with sash windows and a wide gable has stood as a local landmark on the walk from Salcombe to North Sands.
Age UK has justified its decision to sell Woodcot, telling residents it has a legal responsibility to ensure they are making the best use of all the funds and resources available to them to deliver their charitable objectives.
The charity said none of the residents have yet been evicted or given notice to leave.
The building is estimated to be worth several millions of pounds in an area where sea-view properties are at a premium and the average price of a house is more than £970,000. Salcombe has come to be nicknamed Chelsea-on-Sea for its popularity with second-homeowners from London, with new homes also at a premium.
Speculation is rife in Salcombe that Woodcot is already in the process of being sold to two private developers, but Age UK maintains that no sale has yet been agreed.
A spokesman for the charity said: 'We can confirm that sadly we've made the hard decision to explore selling Woodcot. We're looking into a number of things before a final decision about a sale is made and therefore do not expect anything to happen until 2026 at the earliest. None of the tenants have been evicted and no notice to terminate any tenancies has been given.
'We decided to speak to the tenants and let other key people in Salcombe know at this very early stage because we thought it important to be transparent about our thinking. However, doing this early does mean that unfortunately we don't have a lot more information or answers to questions at this stage.
'We're committed to communicating with and supporting tenants through this difficult time.'
The spokesman added: 'We understand that the property is much loved locally and that different views and beliefs have developed over time about the nature of the transfer of Woodcot to us and the role of the property in the community. However, many of these aren't founded.
'The transfer of the property to Help the Aged did not include any restrictions that would stop it being sold or required Help the Aged as a charity to run it as a residential home for older people.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Blackpool lifeboat crew injured after strong waves during rescue
Blackpool lifeboat crew injured after strong waves during rescue

BBC News

time29 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Blackpool lifeboat crew injured after strong waves during rescue

Four coastguard crew members have been injured after battling windy weather and "significant and strong" waves during an attempt to find someone in the sea. A person had been spotted "struggling" 30m (98 ft) out to sea close to Central Pier in Blackpool in the early hours of Friday morning. After the waves struck, one of the crew fell into the helmsman causing injury and the boat had to abort its rescue coastguard crew members from a different boat were able to rescue the casualty after "an extremely challenging push" and "swallowing a large amount of sea water", HM Coastguard Fleetwood said. An RNLI Blackpool boat got hit by several big waves, one of which swamped the vessel, it with the helmsman, three coastguards who entered the water to carry out the rescue suffered from water ingestion, mild hypothermia, exhaustion and one had an ankle injury. They are all now at home recovering. A helicopter was on standby during the major operation as HM Coastguard Fleetwood and Lytham crews continued the search. HM Coastguard Fleetwood said rescuers entered the water tethered to each other as they rescued the said: "It was an extremely challenging push to reach the casualty. "[The crew member] had to push and swim through the same waves that had just hindered the inshore lifeboat and chase the casualty, who was at the mercy of the tidal currents. "Exhausted and having already swallowed a large amount of sea water, with a last push of energy he reached the casualty, took hold and gave the signal to be pulled back to shore."As the shallows were reached though, rescuers realised they were "struggling to get their footing", so two more crew members had to enter the water to pull them back to safety. A coastguard spokesman said it was "an extremely challenging and technical rescue" which highlighted what could be achieved by working together and "how far we are all willing to go to perform our duty". Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

7/7 bombings: Stories that define the bravery of victims and responders 20 years on
7/7 bombings: Stories that define the bravery of victims and responders 20 years on

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

7/7 bombings: Stories that define the bravery of victims and responders 20 years on

Monday marks 20 years since the 7/7 attacks, which saw four suicide bombers kill 52 people and injure 770 others on the London transport network. The attacks on 7 July 2005 all happened within an hour of each other, with the bombers having met at Luton railway station in the morning before heading to King's Cross. Shezhad Tanweer detonated his device at Aldgate, Mohammed Sidique Khan at Edgware Road, and Germaine Lindsay between King's Cross and Russell Square - all within three minutes of 8.50am. Habib Hussain detonated his bomb on board the number 30 bus at Tavistock Square at 9.47am. Two decades have passed, but for the victims' families, survivors and the responders, the impact is still being felt. Sky News spoke to some of the people profoundly affected by the attacks. Passenger went back to the tracks to save lives Adrian Heili was in the third carriage of the westbound Circle Line train heading towards Paddington. It was in the second carriage that Mohammad Sidique Khan blew up his device at Edgware Road, killing six people. If Adrian hadn't been there, it may well have been more. He managed to get out of the train and, having previously served as a medic in the Armed Forces, instantly made it his mission to save as many lives as possible. "Instinct took over," he tells Sky News. 1:48 His bravery first brought him to Daniel Biddle, who had been blown out of the second carriage and was now trapped in a tight space between the tunnel wall and the track. Adrian remembers crawling in blood to reach Daniel, who he now calls Danny. His left leg had been blown off, his right severed from the knee down and he lost an eye, along with suffering other extensive injuries. He pinched shut the artery in Daniel's thigh to stop the bleeding until paramedics got to him. Daniel has written a book about his experiences, titled Back From The Dead, and has credited Adrian with saving his life. Adrian eventually helped first responders carry him out. Then he went back into the tunnel several times over to assist with the evacuation of 12 other people. He pays tribute to the first responders at the scene, who he says were "amazing". "Myself and another gentleman by the name of Lee Hunt were the last to actually leave Edgware Road," he adds. "And I remember sitting at the top of the platform on the stairs and just looking out after everyone had left." In his book, Daniel has been open about his struggles with PTSD after the attack. Adrian says he has had a "very good support network" around him to help him deal with the aftermath, and adds that talking about it rather than "holding it in" has been vital. "It still plays an effect on myself, as it has with Danny," he says, who he has formed a close bond with. He says PTSD triggers can be all around the survivors, from police and ambulance sirens to the smell of smoke from cooking. "But it's how we manage those triggers that that define us," he says. On the 20-year anniversary, he adds: "It's going to be an emotional time. But I think for me, it's going to be a time of reflection and to honour those that are not with us and those that were injured. "They still have a voice. They have a voice with me and I'll remember it. I'll remember that day and that, for me, is very important." 'Instinctively, I decided to see if there was something I could do to help' You may recognise Paul Dadge from the photograph below, where he's helping a 7/7 bombing victim after she sustained severe burns to her face. 1:17 It went viral before the social media age, featuring on the front of national newspapers, and in others across the world. The Londoner, who was 28 at the time, was on his way to an office in Hammersmith where he had just got a job. He passed Edgware Road, where he saw a commotion as people rushed out of the station, and an emergency responder go in. He didn't yet know that one of the bombers had just set off the explosive in their backpack. "Instinctively, I decided to see if there was something I could do to help," he told Sky News. Paul, who was a former firefighter, made an announcement to those standing outside the station, telling them to stick together if they had been affected by whatever had happened and to wait at a shop near the scene until they had spoken to a police officer. Many had black soot on their faces, he says, adding that he initially assumed it was due to a power surge. Eventually the store was evacuated, so Paul went with the victims to a nearby hotel, and it was while doing so that photographers snapped the famous photos of him comforting the victim with a gauze mask, who had been badly burned. He started noting down the names and details of those who had been injured, along with the extent of their injuries, so that he could pass them onto the emergency services. It was only three hours after the incident that Paul found out the injuries had been caused by an attack. His actions had him deemed a hero by the public. "I know that after that bombing had occurred, everybody worked together as a team," he says. "I think it's a bit of a British thing, really, that when we're really in trouble, we're very, very good at working together to help each other." He says he is still in touch with people he met on that day, including the victim he was photographed with, who was later revealed to be then 25-year-old Davinia Douglass. He also says the rest of his life has been "carved" by that day, and that he is now much more politically active and conscious of how emergency services respond to major incidents. He believes emergency services are "a lot more prepared than they were on 7th July", but adds that he still thinks they would find it "very difficult" to deal with an incident on the scale of the 7/7 attacks today. 'What is haunting are those screams' Sajda Mughal is a survivor of the bombing that hit a Piccadilly line train between King's Cross and Russell Square. She tells Sky News that about 10 seconds after leaving King's Cross "there's a massive bang… which was the explosion". "The train shook as if it was an earthquake, and came to a sudden standstill. I fell off my chair to the ground, people fell forward, lights went out." 1:22 Sajda adds: "The black smoke that was coming through, it was really intense. And then all I could hear was screams. I could hear people screaming, I could hear people shouting, someone grabbing on to me saying, 'are you okay'." She was "frozen and just going into that thought process of we're going to die, and then me thinking I haven't said bye to my loved ones, I haven't got married, I haven't had kids, I haven't seen the world." She says that "what is haunting from that morning are those screams and hearing 'blood, she's hurt, he's hurt'". Sajda says that as she and others were escorted out through the carriage to King's Cross, the emergency services told them not to turn around and don't look back. She thinks that was because the rescuers didn't want them to see injured individuals, "so it was a very, very surreal, very traumatic and emotional experience". Sajda, who is the only known Muslim survivor of 7/7, says getting through the attack alive "turned my life around 360". "I took that pain and I turned it into a positive because I didn't want that happening again. And so I left the corporate world, I left my dream to want to change hearts and minds." She became involved with the JAN Trust, including its work countering extremism. "I have travelled across the UK, I've worked with thousands of mothers and Muslim mothers. I have helped to educate them on radicalisation. And I've heard from mothers whose sons… went to Syria, who joined ISIS and died." Calls for a public inquiry Graham Foulkes, whose son David was killed in the Edgware Road Tube bomb, wants there to be a public inquiry into what happened. He says a "public inquiry is the only way because at a public inquiry people can be compelled to come and give evidence. At an inquest, they can just say 'no, I'm not coming' and that's what happens". 1:17 He adds: "The fact that we're here 20 years later, there are unanswered questions and terrorists are still slipping through, still getting past MI5, still get past MI6 and MI5, needs to be answered. "We need to have a better system in place and by not being honest and open about what happened 20 years ago, we've got no mechanism in place at all. "It's still the same people making the same decisions that allowed MSK [Mohammed Sidique Khan] to get through and allowed the Manchester Arena attack and the Westminster Bridge attack. It's still the same people, still the same processes. The processes need to change." Speaking of the last 20 years, Graham says: "We're lucky enough to have a daughter, and we have the two most wonderful grandchildren as well. But we should have a son, and he should have his family. "And I shouldn't be having this conversation with you. I should be at home at this time having dinner or going to the pub with David, and it's not possible to describe the feeling of having your son murdered in such a pointless way." 'The resilience was as inspiring as the attack was ghastly' "Most of all, my thoughts are with the families of the 52 people who lost their lives and also the more than 700 who were injured, some of them horrifically seriously on that day," Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley starts as he speaks to Sky News. He then pays tribute to those who stepped forward on the day, like Paul Dadge, and the emergency services, who he says acted "extraordinarily" to help others. "They and the families and the victims - what strikes me is how they're still carrying the effects of that day through to today and for the rest of their lives," he adds, saying you can still see the "heavy burden" many of them carry 20 years on. 1:30 The commissioner, who was a senior officer in Surrey at the time, says he remembers the "slow horror" of watching on as investigating and reporting uncovered what had happened. "The way everyone stepped forward, the bravery… the resilience was as inspiring as the attack was ghastly." He says the attacks have led to "massive changes" in counter-terrorism work to better protect the public. "The first was the changes that brought policing and our security services, particularly MI5, much more close together so that we now have the closest joint operating arrangements anywhere in the world," he says. "And secondly, counter-terrorism work became something that wasn't just about what was based in London and a network was built with bases in all of the regions across the country." He adds the unit now has a reach "far stronger and far more effective at protecting communities than we had before that day". Asked about those who may still feel under threat from similar attacks now, he says the public has "extraordinary people working hard day in and day out to protect you" and that policing and security services have strengthened due to experiences like that of the 7/7 bombings. "The efforts of all those who were involved on that day… that all feeds through to today… [and gives us] one of the strongest and most effective preventative approaches you could possibly have," he says.

Letchworth Lido clean-up operation begins after flooding
Letchworth Lido clean-up operation begins after flooding

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Letchworth Lido clean-up operation begins after flooding

A clean-up operation has begun after a town's 1930s outdoor pool was forced to close as a result of flooding. The operators of the 50m (164ft) lido at Norton Common, Letchworth in Hertfordshire, announced the closure after the rain on Active, which operates the pool for the council, posted on Facebook and said: "We are busy cleaning up after the flood... it is now raining again". It added it would provide an update in due course. Owner North Hertfordshire Council is due to mark the pool's 90th anniversary with a family celebration event on 26 July. Everyone Active did not expand on the nature of the flooding in its social media someone responded to the post saying the Pix Brook on the common "burst its banks and flooded the whole area with nasty water" adding it "def seems to happen every year or two". Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store