Social Tenant Access to Information Requirements (STAIRs) consultation is now open. 

Take part in the consultation

The Guinness Partnership Limited (202429317)

Back to Top

Decision

Case ID

202429317

Decision type

Investigation

Landlord

The Guinness Partnership Limited

Landlord type

Housing Association

Occupancy

Assured Tenancy

Date

29 October 2025

Background

  1. The resident is an assured tenant of the landlord. The property is a 2-bedroom maisonette.

The landlord is aware the resident has autism and dyslexia.

What the complaint is about

  1. The complaint is about:
    1. The landlord’s response to the resident’s concerns about heat loss in his property due to draughts through his windows and the lack of insulation on his heating pipes.
  2. We have also considered how the landlord handled the complaint.

Our decision (determination)

  1. We have found that:
    1. There was maladministration by the landlord in its response to the resident’s concerns about heat loss in his property due to draughts through his windows and the lack of insulation on his heating pipes.
    2. There was service failure by the landlord in how it handled the complaint.

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

Summary of reasons

  1. Given the overall delays in the landlord carrying out remedial works to the resident’s windows, and providing a resolution to his concerns regarding the insulation on his heating pipes, we are not satisfied that the £100 offered by the landlord for the time, trouble and inconvenience to the resident, as well as to cover his heating bills, was sufficient to resolve the complaint.
  2. The landlord acknowledged and apologised to the resident for the delay in its stage 1 response however, this was not sufficient to satisfactorily resolve the complaint or to put things right.

 


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

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

 

No later than

26 November 2025

2           

Compensation order

 

The landlord must pay the resident a total of £450 compensation, made up of:

  • £100 for the time, trouble, and inconvenience caused by the delay in completing the repairs to his windows.
  • £200 for the time, trouble, and inconvenience caused by the delay in insulating the heating pipes and its failure to provide him with a reason the heating pipes in the riser were not insulated.
  • £100 to assist the resident with his heating bills due to the delay in it completing repairs to his windows and in it insulating his heating pipes.
  • £50 for the inconvenience to the resident as a result of the delay in the landlord issuing its stage 1 response.

 

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 paid.

 

No later than

26 November 2025

3           

Provide resident with an update about the heating pipes in the riser

 

The landlord must share with the resident what works if any it intends to carry out to the resident’s heating pipes that pass through the riser, following its visit in early 2025.

 

The landlord must.

  • Share its findings and any proposed resolutions with the resident.
  • If it has a feasible resolution, the landlord is to provide the resident with a full scope of works to achieve a lasting and effective resolution. This is to include likely timescales to commence and complete the work.
  • If the landlord has not been able to identify a feasible resolution it is to explain the reasons for this to the resident. It is also to consider if there are any other mitigating steps it could take to reduce the reported heat loss and to share its findings with the resident.

.

No later than

26 November 2025

 

Recommendations

Our recommendations are not binding, and a landlord may decide not to follow them.

Our recommendations

If it has not done so already, it is recommended that the landlord now pay the resident the £39 it offered for the 13 days he was without heating and hot water while waiting for his boiler to be installed.

 

 


Our investigation

The complaint procedure

Date

What happened

11 December 2023

The resident met with his Customer Liaison Manager (CLM) to discuss his concerns about his windows. The CLM advised the resident they had arranged for someone to attend and renew the seals around his windows on 29 January 2024. The resident said he was unhappy with that timescale as it was more than 28 days away. The resident also complained about the lack of insulation on his heating pipes following the installation of his new boiler.

 

15 December 2023

The landlord called the resident to advise him that it would not be able to provide its complaint response until 10 January 2024. During the call, the resident provided further information about his complaint. The resident said:

  • The contractor had not insulated the heating pipes when they installed his new boiler.
  • The heating pipes went into the cleaners cupboard, into the riser and then back into his home.
  • He wanted compensation for the money he had lost trying to heat his home since the new boiler was installed.

 

10 January 2024

The landlord issued its stage 1 response. The landlord upheld the resident’s complaint with regards to both his windows and the delays in completing remedial works following the installation of his boiler. The landlord said:

  • Its failure to address the draughts coming through the resident’s windows, when it attended on 20 December 2023, was ‘simply not good enough’.
  • It had arranged for someone to attend on 29 January 2024 and renew all the seals around the resident’s windows. If this appointment was not suitable the landlord said it would ‘happily change’ the appointment.
  • The windows were due to be reviewed in due course as part of a wider planned programme of works. The landlord said it would be in touch nearer the time.
  • The new boiler was fitted on 29 November 2023 and its contractor attended on 18 December 2023 to insulate the heating pipes in the cleaning cupboard.

The landlord offered the resident £89 compensation and said this was made up of:

  • £39 for no heating or hot water for the 13 days between when it was informed he needed a new boiler and when the next boiler was installed, calculated at £3 per day.
  • £50 for the time, trouble, and inconvenience.

 

11 January 2024

The resident escalated his complaint saying the landlord’s response did not address:

  • The insulation of the heating pipes that left his home and went into the riser.
  • The continuous cost of heating his property. The resident said the compensation offered would not pay for 2 weeks of heating let alone all winter.

 

15 January 2024

The landlord acknowledged the resident’s escalation request.

 

30 January 2024

The landlord issued its stage 2 response. The landlord acknowledged it had not provided its stage 1 response within the required timescales. The landlord said it was sorry for any frustration this caused the resident. The landlord said:

  • It would have expected the windows to be assessed during the appointment on 20 December 2023 and apologised for its poor service and any frustration this caused.
  • It arranged for the windows to be inspected on 29 January 2024 and a further appointment had been arranged for 15 February 2024 to resolve the issue.
  • This was within its 20-working day target time. The landlord said sometimes it needed additional time, materials, or for operatives to complete repairs if they are needed following an initial visit.
  • It had noted the resident was unhappy that the pipes he was paying to heat went into the cleaner’s cupboard and riser, and that by the time the heated water made its way back to his home through the riser, it was cold.
  • As its stage 1 had advised, its Heating and Hot Water contractor had added insulation to the heating pipes on 18 December 2023 to reduce the impact of this.

The landlord said it was sincerely sorry for the resident’s overall experience and the distress this had caused him. To put this right, the landlord offered the resident a total of £139 compensation, made up of:

  • The £39 previously offered for 13 days without heating, calculated at £3 per day.
  • £50 for the time, trouble, and inconvenience caused by the delay in completing the repairs to his windows.
  • £50 to assist the resident with his heating bills whilst the repairs to his windows were ongoing.

The landlord also confirmed the £139 replaced the compensation offered at stage 1 and the outstanding repairs to the resident’s windows would be completed on 15 February 2024.

 

Referral to the Ombudsman

The resident asked us to investigate as he remained dissatisfied with the landlord’s response with regards to both his windows and the insulation of his heating pipes.

 


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 response to the resident’s concerns about heat loss in his property due to draughts through his windows and the lack of insulation on his heating pipes

Finding

Maladministration

What we have not investigated

  1. In its complaint responses the landlord offered the resident £39 for the 13 days he was without heating whilst his boiler was being replaced. As this was not a matter that formed part of the resident’s complaint to the landlord, nor was it a matter raised by the resident when he referred his complaint to us, this will not be referred to any further in this report. Nevertheless, a recommendation has been made for the landlord to now pay the £39 to the resident if it has not done so already.

What we have investigated

Draughts through windows

  1. On 4 December 2023, the resident reported he was experiencing draughts through his windows. Having been advised of the resident’s concerns, the landlord would have been expected to inspect the windows to establish what if any repairs were needed and to complete the repairs within a reasonable period of time. As a routine repair, and in accordance with its repairs policy, the landlord would have been expected to do this within 20 working days.
  2. The landlord attended the resident’s property within this timeframe, on 15 and 20 December 2023, but failed to carry out any works to the windows.
  3. The landlord acknowledged this failure in its stage 1 response, on 10 January 2024, for which it apologised. However, it did not then book another appointment until 29 January 2024, a further 10 working days later, and 37 working days after the resident had initially reported the repair.
  4. At the time of its stage 2 response, the landlord had attended on 29 January 2024 as promised but this was only to assess what materials were needed. The landlord said in its response that a further appointment had been booked for 15 February 2024. The repair was completed on that day.
  5. The landlord said that this was within its 20-working day timescale, however, that was evidently not the case given the repair was initially raised on 4 December 2023, 50 working days earlier.

Lack of insulation on heating pipes

  1. On 16 November 2023, the resident called the landlord to report a leak from his boiler.
  2. On 24 November 2023, the landlord emailed its heating and hot water team to advise the resident had raised concerns about heat loss due to his heating pipes going outside his property into the cleaning cupboard and riser.
  3. A new boiler was installed on 29 November 2023. However, the heating pipes to the cleaning cupboard and riser were not insulated at that time.
  4. The heating pipes in the cleaning cupboard were then not insulated on 18 December 2023. To date, no insulation has been added to the heating pipes that pass through the riser.
  5. The landlord apologised for the delay in insulating the heating pipes in its stage 1 response of 10 January 2024. However, it only referred to the cleaning cupboard, not the risers. This was flagged by the resident in his escalation request.
  6. The landlord did make reference to the heating pipes that pass through the riser in its stage 2 response. However, it failed to acknowledged that these had not been insulated and simply referred to ‘the insulation’ on 18 December 2023, which only related to the cleaning cupboard pipes.
  7. What the landlord failed to share with the resident was that it had been advised by its contractor on 18 December 2023 that it was not possible to insulate the heating pipes in the risers. The contractor told the landlord they were ‘deemed unsafe and inaccessible unless you abseil down them from the roof’. The landlord’s failure to be transparent with the resident about this matter was not reasonable nor was it in accordance with our Complaint Handling Code (the code). This is because the Code states landlords must address all points raised in the complaint and provide clear reasons for any decisions. The Code also states the landlord should provide a response to a complaint when the answer is known.
  8. When he referred his complaint to us, the resident said he had been informed by the landlord, from a visit around the beginning of 2025, that it had a proposed solution to the issue of the heating pipes that went through the riser. However, he was still waiting for the landlord to confirm what its proposed solution was or when any works would be carried out.

Conclusion

  1. Given the delay in the landlord carrying out draught proofing works to the resident’s windows and the failures identified with regards to the insulation of his heating pipework, we are not satisfied that the £100 compensation offered was proportionate to the level of its failure. As a result, the landlord has been ordered to pay the resident an additional £300. This brings the total payable to £400.
  2. A further order has also been made for the landlord to provide the resident with an update with regard to any proposed resolution to the issues with his heating pipework that passes through the riser.

Complaint

How the landlord handled the complaint

Finding

Service failure

  1. The Housing Ombudsman’s Complaint Handling Code (‘the Code) sets out when and how a landlord should respond to complaints. The relevant Code in this case is the 2022 edition (March 2022).
  2. The landlord had a published complaints policy which complied with the terms of the Code 2022 in respect of timescales.
  3. The landlord has since updated is complaints policy in line with our 2024 Code (April 2024).
  4. The resident made his complaint to the landlord on 11 December 2023. His Customer Liaison Manager discussed the resident’s concerns with him on that day. The landlord then provided its stage 1 response on 10 January 2024, 19 working days later (taking into account the 3 bank holidays during that period of time).  This was not in accordance with either the landlord’s complaint’s policy or our Code at that time. Both state the landlord should provide its response within 10 working days from the date the complaint was logged.
  5. It is noted that on 15 December 2023, the landlord contacted the resident to advise that it would not be able to provide its complaint response until 10 January 2024. Whilst both the landlord’s complaints policy and the Code at that time state that the landlord can take up to 10 working days longer to provide its response, they both also state the landlord must explain the reason for this to the resident and the reason for doing so must be ‘good’. We are not satisfied that either of these applied in this case.
  6. The resident escalated his complaint on 11 January 2024. The landlord then provided its stage 2 response on 30 January 2024, within 20 working days (11 to 30 January 2024). The landlord therefore acted in line with its policy and the Code.
  7. It is welcome the landlord acknowledged and apologised to the resident for the delay in its stage 1 response. However, this was not sufficient to satisfactorily resolve the complaint or to put things right.

Learning

  1. In its complaint responses the landlord acknowledged the need to learn from its complaints and said it had given feedback to its repairs team to ensure that when issues were reported they were addressed within targeted timescales. This has been highlighted as a reminder to the landlord to take this forward.
  2. The landlord should also remind its complaint handlers of the need to address all points raised in a complaint and provide clear reasons for any decisions.

Knowledge information management (record keeping)

  1. We identified no recording keeping issues when investigating this complaint.

Communication

  1. We identified no communication issues when investigating this complaint. We did however note good practice in that the landlord called the resident to discuss his complaint rather than asking to put his concerns in writing.