The Rushden Echo and Argus, 7th April, 1950, transcribed by Gill Hollis
Tenants Protest Over Rent Increase
200 Send Petition to Council
Two hundred Rushden council house tenants have signed a petition, tendered to the Urban Council, in protest at the “excessive” increase of rents in The Crescents, Highfield Road, Coronation Avenue, Chester Road, Boundary Avenue and Spinney Road.
The petition, which expresses the view that the tenants are having to bear the brunt of council rent increases, stresses the lack of conveniences at the homes as compared with other types of council houses.
Their main points are: The W.C., situated just inside the back porch, causes embarrassment; there is no privacy for growing children with regard to washing facilities; bathrooms are glorified wash-houses; the situation of the coal-place, inside the kitchen.
It adds that considering these disadvantages, the tenants feel that they are being made to subsidise the new houses in the town and regard the increase as inequitable.
Big Grumble
They suggest that a flat rate of increase should be applied to all council houses and that one section should not be singled out to bear the heaviest load.
A visit by a reporter to the west ward of the town served further to reveal the resentment which the latest two-shilling increase in the rents has aroused.
“We have one big grumble,” was the universal comment.
“When I came up here before the war the rent was seven shillings a week,” said one woman. “It’s gone up now to 14s. 6d.”
“What do you think of the petition?” we heard one woman ask another in the street. “Well, I’ve not signed it,” she replied. “When I came up here 17 years ago, I was already paying 12s. 6d. a week for rooms. We are glad to have the house.”
Lack of Space
“Take a look at those houses over there” (Tennyson Road) was the rejoinder. “They’ve all got covered-in porches. We’ve nothing. It cost us £30 to have a workshop put up in the garden. My husband was having to mend shoes in the kitchen and as for washing, I have to stop in bed until my husband and son have finished in the mornings; there isn’t room for all of us in the kitchen at once.”
This grievance was the clue to the whole of the feeling on the estate of non-parlour type houses. It concerns lack of space and having all the “conveniences” inside.
Leading off from the kitchen is the coal-place and the bathroom, which also contains the copper. Between them is shared the babies’ prams, dolls’ prams and bicycles. The pantry leads off from the living room.
At The Crescents it was the same story. Waving across to the Irchester Road houses, which are of the parlour type and have covered-in porchways, at the gross weekly rental of 16s., a group of women deplored these extra facilities for a matter of 1s. 6d.
“We do not mind paying for conveniences, but we are paying for inconveniences,” was one comment. “These houses are all right for more elderly people, but they are hopeless for bringing a family up,” was another comment.
If it is wet on washdays when the bathroom is in use, the prams have to stand in the living room, we learned. The bicycles stand in the kitchens; deck chairs and lawn mowers are invariably kept in the lavatories, and bottled fruit has to be distributed with spare crockery in the bedroom wardrobes because of the smallness of the living room pantry.
“We are not so silly as to expect alterations,” said one spokeswoman, “We really do feel that the majority of the councillors do not know the type of houses on which they keep increasing the rents. After all, there is simply no comparison between these pre-war council houses and the post-war ones, and their rent has been subsidised at only 4s. 6d. more!
“The people in the 19s. a week houses grumble at what they consider to be the high price, but I cannot find anyone who would change with me. I have tried.”
From the two housewives who went round with the petition we learned that they had a ready response with signatures. A committee has been tentatively formed and awaits the result of the petition. There is the hint that should it fail they might form a Tenants’ League.
|