Amplius Living (202329768)

Back to Top

 

Decision

Case ID

202329768

Decision type

Investigation

Landlord

Amplius Living

Landlord type

Housing Association

Occupancy

Assured Tenancy

Date

17 December 2025

Background

  1. The resident lives in a property in an Older Person’s Living Scheme. She is disabled and has health conditions that impact her mobility. She raised a complaint about the landlord’s handling of her reports of antisocial behaviour (ASB) from her neighbour. She reported that her neighbour was harassing her over a parking space and had installed cameras which were recording her.

What the complaint is about

  1. The complaint is about the landlord’s handling of the resident’s reports of ASB.
  2. We have also considered the landlord’s complaint handling.

Our decision (determination)

  1. We have found maladministration in the landlord’s handling of the resident’s reports of ASB.
  2. We have found service failure in the landlord’s handling of the complaint.

We have made orders for the landlord to put things right.

Summary of reasons

  1. The landlord failed to follow its ASB policy. It did not complete action plans or risk assessments and missed opportunities to manage the resident’s expectations. It occasionally delayed acting on the resident’s ASB reports and failed to attend appointments on multiple occasions. It did not recognise this in its complaint process and has not put these failings right.
  2. The landlord acknowledged complaint handling delays and offered appropriate compensation, but it did not recognise that it failed to recognise the resident’s earlier complaints.

 

Putting things right

Where we find service failure, maladministration or severe maladministration we can make orders for the landlord to put things right. We have the discretion to make recommendations in all other cases within our jurisdiction.

Orders

Landlords must comply with our orders in the manner and timescales we specify. The landlord must provide documentary evidence of compliance with our orders by the due date set.

Order

What the landlord must do

Due date

1

Apology order

The landlord must apologise in writing to the resident for the failures identified in this report. The landlord must ensure:

  • The apology is specific to the failures identified in this decision, meaningful and empathetic.
  • It has due regard to our apologies guidance.

No later than

14 January 2026

2

Compensation order

The landlord must pay the resident £350 made up as follows:

  • £200 for the distress and inconvenience caused by its handling of her reports of ASB.
  • £150 for the time and trouble caused by its handling of the complaint.

This must be paid directly to the resident by the due date. The landlord must provide documentary evidence of payment by the due date.

The landlord may deduct from the total figure any payments it has already made.

No later than

14 January 2026

 

Our investigation

The complaint procedure

Date

What happened

10 June 2021 to 27 October 2022

The resident reported concerns about her neighbour’s behaviour over a disputed parking space and that the neighbour filmed her and her son.

 

On 2 September 2022, the landlord issued a complaint response about the parking issue. It said the resident had not formally requested the issues to be raised through its ASB process, and it had spoken to the resident and agreed the ASB team would open a case so she could log any incidents.

The landlord provided a final response to the complaint about the parking space on 27 October 2022, and it said it could not allocate parking spaces.

16 December 2022

The resident emailed the landlord. She explained:

  • Her neighbour had moved his cameras, and they were now recording her car. She said he monitored her when she went in and out of her front door.
  • She raised concerns he was breaking the law and invading her privacy.
  • She had spoken to the police, who told her it was harassment and the neighbour could be evicted.
  • The landlord was passing the buck to her, and it was not acceptable.
  • Her neighbour had been trying to use her preferred car parking space.
  • If the landlord did not do anything, she would take it further, as the situation was impacting her health.

13 January 2023

The resident said she had been in contact with the police and was raising a formal complaint. She advised:

  • She had not been updated or been able to speak to staff about ASB. She raised several instances between November 2022 and January 2023 where she reported concerns to the police and the landlord about the neighbour’s cameras.
  • She had been completely stressed, and this affected her health. She felt like she was in prison as she was being watched every time she went out.
  • The neighbour would park in her parking space whenever she left, even though he knew she needed the space. She said he was parking in that space to harass her and knew she would have to park around the back.
  • She was blocked in by her neighbour, and he had filmed her son on his phone.

25 May 2023

The landlord issued its stage 1 response. It said:

  • It acknowledged the complaint response was late and apologised.
  • The resident had complained about ‘negative interactions’ with her neighbour and asked for regular updates and consideration of evicting the neighbour for violating his tenancy agreement.
  • It had investigated all allegations but found no evidence of a breach of tenancy to warrant enforcement action.
  • It had checked the neighbor’s cameras and was satisfied it was not recording her property.
  • It offered independent mediation. It said it had offered this before, and the resident had previously declined.
  • It was liaising with the police to organise visits, and it would confirm the date of the visit once police availability known.
  • It could not uphold the complaint but offered £50 compensation for the delay.

5 June 2023

The resident called the landlord about the complaint response. It noted she was not happy about the response and was upset because she believed the ASB complaint was closed. The landlord said it explained only the complaint letter was closed, and the ASB was still an open case. It noted the resident felt much better at this.

24 November 2023 – 8 December 2023

We contacted the landlord on 24 November 2023 and asked it to respond to the resident’s complaint from January 2023 within 5 working days.

The landlord phoned the resident on 29 and 30 November 2023 and said it would respond by 8 December 2023. It noted that the resident wanted the ASB handling to be resolved.

On 4 December 2023, the landlord noted it had already completed a response. It provided a further response on 8 December 2023 and said:

 

  • It had reviewed her ASB complaints from 25 May 2023 onwards.
  • It had advised her that, although there had been an agreement between the resident and a previous Housing Officer about her having exclusive use of a parking space, this had changed. It said it allowed residents to have more than one vehicle, so there were no allocated parking spaces.
  • It decided it would not be helpful to have disabled parking areas as many residents in the scheme had blue badges. It had completed works in the car park to make the parking bays more accessible.
  • It had dealt with her concerns about her neighbour taking pictures of the car park and the use of his cameras through its ASB process.
  • It arranged mediation with a third party, and the mediation worker was continuing to follow up on her concerns.
  • It had visited the neighbour that day and confirmed there were no cameras pointed at her property.

12 to 17 January 2024

The resident phoned the landlord on 12 January 2024 and said she wanted to clarify points about the landlord’s response. She said we had advised her to take her complaint further. The landlord said the time for escalating to stage 2 had expired, but it would check if it was possible to respond.

It called the resident on 17 January 2024 and noted that she said she had sent in a letter to escalate her complaint. It emailed the resident that day confirming it had escalated her complaint and the stage 2 team would acknowledge it.

30 January 2024

The landlord received a letter from the resident dated 16 January 2024. She said she was escalating to stage 2 as:

  • She first complained nearly 3 years ago. She explained her concerns about the parking and her neighbour’s behaviour.
  • The landlord had taken away the assigned parking space.
  • The mediator had been to help with the neighbour’s cameras, but they were still up. She said they were filming her car and property, and her neighbour used them to take her parking space if she left the house.
  • The neighbour had not taken his cameras down and had broken the good neighbor agreement. She said he had another car and was parking them both in spaces near her house.
  • The landlord was letting the neighbour get away with his behaviour.
  • She explained her disabilities to the landlord and said she felt discriminated against. She advised she was unhappy, and the landlord had not helped her. 
  • The situation impacted her independence, as she cannot go out because he will move his car into her space and leave it there.
  • She reported being depressed and stressed. As a resolution, she asked for a parking space so she could be independent.

5 and 6 February 2024

On 5 February 2024, the landlord called and wrote to the resident to acknowledge her stage 2 complaint. It apologised for the delay and requested an extension to the resolution date by a further 10 working days. It noted the resident agreed to this.

 

The resident emailed the landlord on 6 February 2024 and explained her concerns about the situation again. She said the police told her the landlord should evict her neighbour as he had broken his contract.

20 February 2024

The landlord issued its stage 2 response. It summarised her previous

complaints and said:

  • Its investigations found that it did not believe the neighbour’s cameras were directed to her property. If she felt the neighbour was filming her, it said her best point of contact would be the police.
  • It had responded to complaints about the car parking space previously.
  • There were no allocated parking spaces at the scheme. 
  • It had addressed issues with cameras and car parking in line with policy and procedure, and it found no service failures.
  • There was a delay in acknowledging her complaint and it offered £50 compensation.

Referral to the Ombudsman

The resident asked us to investigate the landlord’s handling of the ASB.

On 13 July 2025, the resident confirmed the neighbour had now moved and the situation was not ongoing. She explained she wants to know what actions the landlord took in response to her reports.

What we found and why

The circumstances of this complaint are well known by the parties involved, so it is not necessary to detail everything that’s happened or comment on all the information we’ve reviewed. We’ve only included the key information that forms the basis of our decision of whether the landlord is responsible for maladministration.

Complaint

The landlord’s handling of the resident’s reports of antisocial behaviour

Finding

Maladministration

What we did not investigate

  1. We previously investigated the landlord’s handling of the resident’s concerns about the parking space between October 2021 and September 2022 (under case reference 202224549). We determined that case in May 2024. While we saw failings in the landlord’s communication with the resident and policies around parking, we noted the landlord’s decision to have unallocated parking in the circumstances was reasonable. Therefore, we have not considered the landlord’s decision not to allocate parking to residents in this investigation.

What we did investigate

  1. This investigation focuses on the ASB raised in the resident’s formal complaint. We have reviewed the resident’s concerns up to February 2024 to ensure the landlord has had a fair opportunity to investigate and respond through its complaints process. The resident may wish to pursue any more recent issues directly with the landlord as a new complaint.
  2. The landlord’s Anti-Social Behaviour (ASB) policy says that it will:
    1. Respond to non-high-risk reports of ASB within 5 working days.
    2. Review potential vulnerabilities and the risk of harm to the complainant during the initial assessment, and complete further risk assessments throughout the case in line with its ASB procedure.
    3. Complete an initial action plan that takes risk assessment into account and do further action plans as and when appropriate until the case is closed.
    4. Consider and complete referral and signposting to support agencies.
    5. Participate in multi-agency partnership working.
  3. In cases relating to ASB, it is not our role to determine whether the ASB occurred or who was responsible. Rather, we assess how a landlord dealt with reports it received, and whether it followed its policy and good practice. We note that, after the resident’s complaint, the landlord underwent a merger in December 2024.
  4. The resident said her concerns were ongoing for years. The landlord does not dispute that the resident reported her neighbour’s behaviour from as early as August 2022. In a complaint response dated 2 September 2022, it said the resident had not formally requested her concerns be looked at through its ASB process, and it had agreed with her that it would contact her and open an ASB case so she could log any future incidents.
  5. The landlord responded appropriately to the resident’s early reports in September 2022. She was concerned about the neighbour looking at her car and possibly using his CCTV cameras to record her. The landlord followed its procedure, warned the neighbour about the use of his cameras and directed the resident to the police and Information Commissioner’s Office for advice on her data concerns.
  6. It took a proactive approach and continued to contact the resident in October 2022. It completed regular case reviews and confirmed there had been no further tenancy breaches. Its actions were reasonable and in line with its policy and procedures.
  7. Between November 2022 and February 2024, the resident made 29 reports about her neighbour. The landlord continued to act on, and respond to, her reports but there were some delays.
  8. Between November 2022 and January 2023, it said it spoke to the neighbour and arranged a visit to check his cameras. It asked the resident to share any updates from the police with it.
  9. However, it did not always keep the resident updated in line with its policy. There was a delay of around 17 working days from 25 November to 20 December 2022 after the resident reported further incidents and asked that it add her comments to her ASB case.
  10. There was a further delay between 22 December and 20 February 2023, approximately 40 working days, in the landlord providing updates. It also agreed to visit the resident and neighbour on 1 March 2023, but we have not seen evidence of this taking place. These delays were inappropriate.
  11. On 7 March 2023, the landlord told the resident it would speak to the police. It noted she declined mediation and said it would update her when it had more details. On 8 March 2023, it issued a stage 1 warning letter to the neighbour about his cameras.
  12. Between March and April 2023, the landlord contacted the police for support and requested a referral to its problem-solving group. It offered mediation, which it noted the resident declined. It issued a warning letter to the neighbour about the position and signage for his cameras. It completed regular case reviews. This was positive and showed the landlord was taking reasonable steps to resolve the ASB.
  13.  In April and May 2023, the resident reported an escalation in the ASB. She said her neighbour had been intimidating her and there was verbal abuse and shouting. The landlord said it would conduct a joint visit with the police and told her to keep notes of this. However, there is no evidence the landlord completed a joint visit, or that it investigated these reports. It did not complete a risk assessment or record that it followed up on the reports with the neighbour. This was not in line with its ASB policy.
  14. The landlord issued its stage 1 complaint on 25 May 2023 and appropriately explained its findings and the next steps. It said it had investigated all allegations, and it was satisfied the neighbour was not recording the resident’s property. It offered mediation and said it would arrange a joint visit with the police once the police had confirmed their availability.
  15. However, it did not identify or address delays, or the lack of a risk assessment and action plan, or that it had not followed up on her reports of intimidation and harassment. As explained above, we have also seen no evidence it completed the agreed visit with the police or explained if it cancelled the visit.
  16. The resident made further reports about being filmed in June 2023. The landlord appropriately discussed options with her, including mediation and a good neighbour agreement. It completed a referral to an independent mediation service once the resident agreed to this. This was positive and showed the landlord was making attempts to resolve the ASB.
  17. The mediation took place in July 2023. As an outcome, the neighbour agreed to move a camera that covered part of the resident’s garden and said he would remove cameras from communal areas once the landlord installed its own CCTV. Both parties signed good neighbour agreements.
  18. The resident reported new incidents in July 2023. On 2 August 2023, the landlord said it had spoken to the complainant and closed the case. The resident made a further report that day, which it gave a new case number. We have seen no evidence the landlord wrote to the resident to confirm the case closure or the opening of a new case. The lack of communication caused confusion, and it is not clear why it gave the case a new number.
  19. Between September and December 2023, the resident raised 5 further reports. These included concerns about a new camera, the neighbour taking photos of the car park and him using 2 parking spaces. She also said she had tried to contact the mediator about ongoing issues and reported that the landlord did not attend an agreed visit in October.
  20. The landlord asked the mediator to update both parties, restarted welfare calls to the resident following new ASB reports, completed visits and held an ASB call. During the call, the landlord recorded that the resident said her only concern was parking. In October and December 2023, it confirmed there were no parking restrictions or allocated spaces. These were reasonable steps to make.
  21. In its complaint response on 8 December 2023, the landlord confirmed its position on parking. It said it had addressed her concerns through its ASB process, and the mediator was continuing to follow up on this. It appropriately confirmed that it had checked the neighbour’s property, and his cameras were not pointed at her property. It said it found no failings.
  22. However, the landlord failed to confirm what actions it would take moving forward, or whether it would close the case. It missed the opportunity to provide clarity on its overall position regarding the ASB and resolve the complaint.
  23. In its final response of 20 February 2024, the landlord explained how it had addressed her reports of ASB. It said it did not believe the neighbour’s cameras were filming her property, but if she felt he was filming her, her best point of contact would be the police. It maintained it managed the cameras and car parking in line with policy and said there were no service failures.
  24. The landlord took reasonable steps to address the resident’s reports of ASB, including arranging mediation and carrying out regular case reviews. It met with both parties and issued appropriate warnings.
  25. However, there is no evidence the landlord completed a written action plan or risk assessment for the resident, as required under its ASB policy. It also failed to show it investigated her reports of verbal abuse and intimidation appropriately, despite defining these as examples of ASB in its policy. The landlord did not acknowledge delays or missed appointments in its complaint responses and, as such, did not put these failings right.
  26. The landlord missed opportunities to manage the resident’s expectations about what actions it could take and how often it would update her. Its failure to complete action plans or provide written confirmation of case openings or closures caused the resident additional time and trouble.
  27. We have ordered the landlord to apologise and pay £200 compensation to put right the adverse impact of its failings on the resident.

Complaint

The handling of the complaint

Finding

Service failure

  1. The timescales set out in the landlord’s complaint policy used in December 2022 and the updated policy of February 2023 were in line with the Housing Ombudsman’s Complaint Handling Code (2022).
  2. The landlord responded to the resident’s complaint about the parking space in September and October 2022. We considered its complaint handling for this as part of our previous investigation.
  3. In an email on 16 December 2022, the resident raised concerns about how the landlord was handling her reports of ASB. She said that it was ‘passing the buck’ to her to resolve the issue with the neighbour’s cameras, and she said she wanted the landlord to do something about it.
  4. The resident raised a formal complaint on 13 January 2023. The landlord did not respond until 25 May 2023, which was a delay of 81 working days. The landlord acknowledged this failing in its response, apologised and offered £50 compensation.
  5. Following the May 2023 stage 1 response, the landlord noted on 5 June 2023 that the resident was not happy about that response. The Code says that a resident does not have to use the word ‘complaint’ for it to be treated as such, and that emails can be used to submit complaints. The landlord should have confirmed if the resident wished to raise or escalate a complaint at this point. This was a failing.
  6. Following further contact in late 2023, the landlord issued another stage 1 response on 8 December 2023.
  7. On 12 January 2024, the resident tried to escalate her complaint. She wrote a letter to the landlord dated 16 January 2024, and it confirmed it would escalate her complaint to stage 2 the next day. The landlord wrote to the resident on 5 February 2024 to acknowledge her complaint, and it apologised for the delay. It agreed an extension for its final response with the resident and provided its response within this time. It offered a further £50 compensation for the delay in acknowledging the resident’s complaint.
  8. The landlord did not explain the reasons for its delay at stage 1 or show that it took any learnings to prevent future delays. While it was positive the landlord took steps to put this right, its total £100 compensation offer did not appropriately reflect the length of the delay at stage 1. The landlord also did not identify that it failed to recognise the resident’s earlier complaint or escalation requests and, as such, it has not put this right.
  9. Given the additional failings we have identified, we have ordered the landlord to pay further compensation of £50 for complaint handling. This is in line with our Guidance on Remedies for service failings which have impacted the resident.

Learning

  1. The landlord should ensure it follows its processes and appropriately carries out action plans and risk assessments when managing ASB cases. This would allow it to clearly evidence to residents what steps it will take and will help manage expectations of the ASB process.

Knowledge information management (record keeping)

  1. The landlord maintained good records of communication with the resident and recorded the steps it was taking to investigate her concerns.

Communication

  1. The landlord should ensure it is responding to residents within the timeframes set out in its policies.