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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Naomi DeSouza & Graeme Murray

Family face £60,000 bill and being homeless by Christmas after order to demolish home

A family face being homeless by Christmas plus a £60,000 bill after an order was made to demolish their home.

Stephanie Rolfe and Stuart Macdonald reckon they could face "financial ruin" after being forced to pay the bill to bulldoze their own mobile home.

The family now have just 56 days to "dismantle" the home which replaced a garage that was built on the same site.

The couple have two young children and say they built the home under caravan legislation.

Stephanie, 41, and Stuart, 34, told Birmingham Live : "We had an honest held belief it was lawful"

Built in a quiet cul-de-sac in Shirley, Solihull, the timber structure sits on a plinth, and has been rendered to fit in with nearby homes.

The couple's home next to a neighbour's on the estate (Darren Quinton/Birmingham Live)

But Solihull Councils say the home has a "harmful effect on the character and appearance of the area" and have pressed forward with the demolition order, despite neighbours writing in support of the family of four.

The couple, who have two children Freddie, five, and Mollie, two, said the decision could leave them "paying a mortgage on a home they no longer have" during a cost of living crisis.

Stuart said: "We will be homeless by Christmas. Our son is disabled and has a helper in the local school, there's no way we can get a house near here."

The pair have been paying rates and council tax on the property.

Solihull Council said they "recognise the disappointment" the recent court decision will cause and are committed to supporting the family.

Stephanie Rolfe and Stuart MacDonald have been given just 56 days to demolish their home after they built it under caravan legislation (Darren Quinton/Birmingham Live)

In 2018, they were looking for an affordable way to live near Stuart's mother and got retrospective planning permission to convert his mum's detached garage to a single two-storey dwelling.

Solihull planning officers had no objections to the development and only asking for a revised drainage scheme.

Once provided, the planning document stated "the scheme shall be implemented and managed in accordance with the approved details."

But due to the cost of building with bricks and mortar, the couple opted to use a local company to construct a mobile home instead.

Stephanie said: "We found a company that construct homes under caravan legislation and therefore not requiring planning permission, so in February 2018 I contacted Solihull Council to notify them, this is what our intentions are, and they didn't reply, although I'd offered them the chance to respond to that.

"We started the building in June, around six months later, and then we had a letter saying we were possibly breaching planning regulations."

They applied for a lawful building development certificate as an assurance, but that was rejected by council planners.

Stephanie claims they didn't hear from the council for two months.

The family have been served a court order to demolish their home (Darren Quinton/Birmingham Live)

The couple then lost their appeal and were served a court order to demolish the home.

Stephanie added: "We've tried to mediate with the council on this to say we're going to be made homeless, we've got two young children, aged 2 and 4.

"We'd be financially ruined, we still owe money borrowed for the mobile home, and demolition costs of about £60,000."

She added: "We've offered to make affordable changes that will allow us to keep our home."

John Orgill, who lives opposite the home said: "I've got no issue, I'm only too glad there's housing and people in the houses. Why not use the space?"

Mr Orgill added: "It almost classes as a caravan as it's movable. If anything, I should be the one complaining, but why? It's a young family."

The couple say the authority didn't allow them 28 days to appeal (Darren Quinton/Birmingham Live)

Fellow neighbour John Tranter said: "I thought when they put it up it was tasteful.

"They used to have a bloody great big garage there, I'm devastated for them, and supportive of them keeping it."

Max McLoughlin councillor for Shirley East said: "As councillors we’re used to representing residents opposing new housing. But this hasn’t happened here.

"Over all the years this has dragged on, I’ve not had a complaint, and I’ve knocked on neighbours doors to ask specifically if it’s a problem.

"The typical response is ‘it doesn’t bother me’. We’re in the middle of a cost of living crisis, there’s been a housing crisis since before I was even a councillor, and we’re heading into a winter where people don’t know how they’re going to stay warm and survive.

"To think that the council would not only demolish a family’s home now, but charge them for it, feels abhorrent. The home does nobody harm, so why do harm in getting rid of it?”

A Solihull Council spokesperson said: "The applicant began to build the structure without planning permission in early 2018.

Stephanie Rolfe and Stuart MacDonald say they are facing financial ruin because of the ruling (Darren Quinton/Birmingham Live)

"They were informed in June 2018 that the works were unauthorised, and subsequently applied for a Certificate of Lawful Development, but this was refused and enforcement action commenced a month later, as required by law.

"The enforcement notice was appealed and once again was refused, this time by the Planning Inspectorate.

"Due to the Covid pandemic, the applicant was given more time to comply with the enforcement notice.

"The Council worked with the family for over four years to respond to enquiries and resolve the planning matter openly and fairly, however they chose not to.

"The Council therefore had to consider escalating the matter through the courts.

Neighbours have no issue with the home, but the council says it must be demolished (Darren Quinton/Birmingham Live)

"All actions were undertaken in accordance with national planning legislation and guidance and have been verified though the national Planning Inspectorate at appeal.

"We fully recognise the difficult outcome of the recent High Court hearing, where the court issued a High Court Order granting the injunction and requiring compliance by 14 November 2022.

"As the Local Planning Authority, we have worked with the family for over four years to respond to enquiries and consider planning based applications openly and fairly, with a view to finding a fair and equitable solution.

"We recognise the disappointment that the recent court decision will cause and are committed to supporting the family as best we can through our housing and social service functions."

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