A mum claims a council has moved her into an "unliveable" home after her four-year old daughter fell into a 2ft hole in the kitchen.
The schoolgirl, who has autism and ADHD, was fortunate to escape with just scratches and bruises after falling into a rotten floorboard, MyLondon reported.
Mum Fiona Wood admitted her child was lucky to have survived the fall, she said: “She fell over the balcony and it was only because I grabbed her by a hair and swung back she didn't fall to her death.
“They're telling me to let her sleep in the sitting room where she had easy access because there was no lock key on the balcony door and she could fall over the balcony at any time.”
The mum now fears each time she hears the floor creak as her 4-year old daughter could have pierced her ankle as the floorboards are so sharp.
She said: “She was really lucky because the way the floorboards snapped they were so sharp they could have pierced straight through her ankle.
“Even the workmen said she'd been so lucky she just didn't seriously get injured.”
Fiona admitted that on another occasion, a brick from the garden fell and bruised her leg, which she reported to the council.
The families council home in Havering, east London was previously stated as "void" - which meant no tenants were allowed as expensive work was needed in order for the property to be liveable.
And reports provided by surveyors estimated the total amount of work needed to get the council home up to scratch was around £30,000.
The mum-of-two cannot understand why she was allocated the house and thinks it must have been a council "oversight".
Whilst Fiona has been in non-permanent housing for the past six years, the council home is classed as "temporary".
However, Fiona was told if she were to reject a property she would be classified as "intentionally homeless" - which would make her disqualified for any form of council housing.
Left with no other choice, the mum had little choice to accept the house in such a bad state of disrepair.
There were also other issues in the house which Fiona had reported to the council, which included an electric fireplace with a draft that left black soot on the carpet, and broken radiators in the children's room.
She reported the house has rotting floorboards upstairs, while an entire fence had collapsed in the garden.
When she reported her faulty bathroom light, Fiona said she was left in the dark for two weeks as she waited for a repair.
Fiona said: “It's absolutely disgusting. I've been put in this house that I should never have with the void on it, especially with a disabled child.”
A spokesperson for Havering Council said: “The council is currently investigating this case.”