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Washing Machine Misery

afraser | 02.12.2007 21:43 | Social Struggles

Tenants in high flats across Glasgow have been left without working washing machines.
To do a wash, their machines have to be filled by hand with water. Glasgow Housing Association know about the problem, and know how to fix it. But shockingly, GHA are stalling with the fixes.



Student nurse Alice is a tenant in the Cedar Court high flats. She was left for more than a year without a working washing machine.
“I am required to have a cleanly washed uniform for every shift for infection control.”
“That means I’m constantly running a washing load”
“But my washing machine just wouldn’t work unless I filled it by pouring jug after jug of cold water into the top. It took forever”

“When I phoned the manufacturer, they knew all about it. They said it happened all the time in Glasgow high flats. They said all the other cities in Britain had fixed their water pressure in high flats years ago, and that Glasgow was the last one left.
“But GHA didn’t want to know. At first my housing officer told me that a washing machine is a ‘luxury item’!”

"I finally got it fixed because I asked my housing manager about the problem in a public meeting organised by the tenants association. I was really angry and asked him if he'd dare tell his wife that a washing machine was a luxury item! The housing manager said that he didn't consider a washing machine a luxury item in this day and age and the tenants association had the whole meeting on tape. I still had to chase it up though, and I also got my MSP's to write to the GHA as well as a small article in the Evening Times."
"That seemed to do the trick as without warning one morning I got a knock at the door to find 3 men in suits and 2 housing officers wanting to inspect my water tank. The GHA had hired consultants!"

“Then they told me they could only fix it by installing an electric water pump in my kitchen.”
“They tried to scare me off by saying the pump would be big and noisy and expensive in electricity.”
“But that was all nonsense – all I needed was plumbed in to the main water pipe.”

"Finally, after several months of weekly phoning my housing manager I got the fix I'd been waiting for. It took over an hour of the plumber's time but it used to take over 20 minutes of my time every time I needed to do a wash. And my water tastes better too."

Under Pressure

When Glasgow City council built multi storey blocks in the 1960s and 70s, each individual unit was fitted with its own cold water tank. That made sense at the time, since in those days the mains water supply was sometimes cut off for short periods. With each tenant having their own small cold water tank, they would always have water available.

But nowadays the mains water supply is reliable and is almost never cut off. The individual cold water tanks are not needed. Modern washing machines need a higher inlet water pressure than the old models did. Water supply drawn from the small local tanks is at a lower pressure than water taken from the mains. New washing machines simply will not fill with water when connected to the low pressure local tanks.

An Easy Fix

Luckily, the fix is straightforward – simply disconnect the small local water tank and draw cold water direct from the main water pipe. This procedure takes a plumber about an hour to carry out. But GHA have to pay out to City Building Glasgow for the plumbers time. And GHA don’t want to spend that money – except when a tenant insists.
Quote:

CAMPAIGN

Do you have a problem with your washing machine water?

The first thing to do is ask your Housing Officer for the fix of direct plumbing in to the main cold water pipe.

If you find you are constantly stalled and fobbed off, the Glasgow Residents Network will be able to take up your case direct with GHA — just call or text them on 07932 387 757 or email
 glasgowresidentsnetwork@gmail.com

afraser
- Homepage: http://libcom.org/news/


Comments

Hide the following 8 comments

environment

03.12.2007 15:26

surely using a washing machine uses electricity which in turn damaages the environment these people should be pleased their saving the ozone layer the student nurse is just selfish

anyway these people are in scotland noone washes there everyone knows that

qwerty


Kind

03.12.2007 21:05

That's very kind of you to handwash the overworked nurse's clothes for her.

I think also to cut down on carbon emissions you should switch off your computer, permanently.

uiop


Environment ?

04.12.2007 11:43

I just recommended alternative washing machines here  http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2007/11/386793.html?c=on#c185441 but Qwertys criticism is nonsense.
Nursing is a vocation that doesn't tend to attract selfish people, and does require extremely clean clothes. The sort of machines that are simply manually rotated would be useless you are prepaped to spin it for many hours each week. If a wind-driven one was on the roof of flats that high, I wouldn't use it out of vertigo. A bicycle based washing machine is noisy and wouldn't be suitable in a flat, it also takes up a lot of space.

Dan


environment

04.12.2007 12:40

well if you guys want to destroy the environment go ahead you should be ashamed of yourself i bet you drive cars aswell you scum

qwerty


Little old hypocrite me...

04.12.2007 18:26

Oh damn they have sent the Captain of the BNP debating society. We don't stand a chance.

Yeah, I've had a hard day today burned 300 lorry tyres just out of spite. I invested some money I embezzled from a charity in Unocal and smashed the windows in my local hospice. I don't drive because I'm a trustafarian, I get my "man" to drive me, and he drives me in a soviet tractor using tar as a lubricant and brown coal to push the piston (singular).


And the reality:

No bullshit, I have just sat down after doing my weekly shopping. It's a round trip of 6 miles which I always do on foot, gladly. I bought mostly base ingredients. I'm sitting in a house that is only lit in this room and rather than put the heating on I am wearing an arctic grade fleece. I only put the boiler on 3 times a week and only do the dishes on those days. I honestly only hand wash my clothes. I am fortune that we have rubbish recycling at the village hall.

It may all seem a bit incredible. But I have the time to do it because I am not working at the moment. Even if the said nurse was acting as you say, I wouldn't begrudge her that. Who the hell would have the energy to be an eco-saint with her workload? As it is, I actually know her and she is not a wasteful person.

Got nothing better to do than pick on medics? Go fucking harass an arms dealer you twat. Pick on people who take lives, not those who save them.

Bet you are one of these idiots who attacks medics on A&E.

You are the scum here just for what you have written here and your mother would tan your arse for it.

Scum


observation

04.12.2007 21:38

i thught this guy was making it up till i read the bit about him not working

good on you sir we dont want to smash scottish stereotypes here i suppose you keep warm by drinking buckfast out of a brown (broon jimmeh) paper bag

you workshy tosser

stan


Handwashing

06.12.2007 11:54

As someone who regualrly handwashed their own clothes I am pretty sure that I use far more water handwashing them than my current washing machine uses. I also probably used a lot more electicity when boiling the kettle several times to get a load of hot water. Of course the manufacturing of washing machines is detremental the environment, but so many people are chucking out their old machines that work perfectly so I managed to find a second hand one in very good nick. It would only have gone to the tip otherwise. Not sure who easy it would be to find loads of second hand washing machines in Glasgow they are usually fly-tipped round our way.

Tipsy


Tipsy

06.12.2007 16:39

Perhaps some fair comment there. However, I don't boil kettles to handwash. I switch the boiler on, and have a bath and do the dishes. This must use considerably less electricity than a washing machine. Drying them is a bit of a pain this time of year though.

Unfortunately I live in a village out of town. Thankfully we don't have much in the way of "street furniture". But since I don't own a 220v generator and a high pressure water bowser the chances of me picking up a free washing machine on the off chance it works are nil.

But on that note, there are charities all over the country that do provide the needy with reconditioned furniture and white goods.

Scum


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