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I know this issue has cropped up on here before but can anyone advise on the hours that builders can work? We have a team of roofers working on the housing association house next door and they work roughly 8-4 each day but have been here since 8 today and the combination of drilling, crashing, shouting and radio blaring is hard to deal with. Anyone know?
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https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/217044-noisy-builders/
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Thanks so much for the advice. At 3pm I went next door to complain that I couldn't work at home and it went steadily downhill from there - an aggressive builder shouting over me saying he didn't care about times and that he had to complete a cabling job at any cost. Laughed in my face when I said I was going to complain to the housing association and Southwark, started mocking me and finally slammed the front door right in my face and told me to clear off. I was shaking with shock and anger. I had managed to record him and take a picture so shouted through the door to warn him I had done this and would provide it as evidence and within five minutes they had packed up and left. I managed to get his registration number too. Now written to everyone on the board of the housing association. Still shaking at the types that are out there.

Oh God, sounds horrible. You can make a complaint online to the noise team at Southwark after the incident which would get it on record in case there are any further problems.


I had a noisy builder next door to me last year who thought he was entitled to blast his radio because 'he was working'. After the noise team visited him he spent the rest of the afternoon bashing the floor although at that stage he had only been called back to fix a hole in the wall which had been left on a previous day. They can be very intimidating.

I've had a response from the company overseeing the work who have said that they're sorry for the stress caused and that the issues rauised will be dealt with in the appropriate manner. Personally I feel that this isn't very transparent and surely an apology from the actual contractor is the basic first step?

Noise - Council and local councilor

Abuse - Community police/Safer Neighbourhood Team and local councilor


Community police get involved in a lot of this sort of thing and can help stamp this out - it is also a soft option too in getting things sorted amicably (they will have lots of experience)

cella Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I've had a response from the company overseeing

> the work who have said that they're sorry for the

> stress caused and that the issues rauised will be

> dealt with in the appropriate manner. Personally I

> feel that this isn't very transparent and surely

> an apology from the actual contractor is the basic

> first step?


You would think so but the companies employing sub-contractors trust that they will do the right thing but do not realise what is going on until incidents such as this. The funniest example of this was when it was found that the Home Office had used an agency to provide cleaners for its offices and half of them turned out to be illegal immigrants!

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2006/may/19/immigration.immigrationpolicy

uncleglen Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------


> You would think so but the companies employing

> sub-contractors trust that they will do the right

> thing but do not realise what is going on until

> incidents such as this. The funniest example of

> this was when it was found that the Home Office

> had used an agency to provide cleaners for its

> offices and half of them turned out to be illegal

> immigrants!

> https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2006/may/19/i

> mmigration.immigrationpolicy



Even by your own disgustingly low standards you really are being a complete pillock this weekend.

cella Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I've had a response from the company overseeing

> the work who have said that they're sorry for the

> stress caused and that the issues rauised will be

> dealt with in the appropriate manner. Personally I

> feel that this isn't very transparent and surely

> an apology from the actual contractor is the basic

> first step?


That's like saying sorry for the way you feel rather than what they did - but that's the way everyone writes apologies now.

rendelharris Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> uncleglen Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

>

> > You would think so but the companies employing

> > sub-contractors trust that they will do the

> right

> > thing but do not realise what is going on until

> > incidents such as this. The funniest example of

> > this was when it was found that the Home Office

> > had used an agency to provide cleaners for its

> > offices and half of them turned out to be

> illegal

> > immigrants!

> >

> https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2006/may/19/i

>

> > mmigration.immigrationpolicy

>

>

> Even by your own disgustingly low standards you

> really are being a complete pillock this weekend.


And you OBVIOUSLY know nothing about how agencies and sub-contracting works.....much like everything else you pontificate on!

Whereas racist Islamaphobic antisemitic bigots like yourself really know what's going on, don't you. I do wish you'd disappear, you nasty little man, your recent comment that you weren't sorry that Jeremy Hardy was dead clearly indicates that you're a filthy individual with nothing intelligent to say and who gets his jollies by provoking reactions by being as foul as possible. You are beneath contempt.

ianr Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Rendel Harris, I think you do more harm on this

> forum than any of your accuseds.


If you view calling out someone who consistently pushes a hate-filled far-right racist agenda here as being wrong then I don't really care what you think.

cella Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> All sorted - the overseeing company came round,

> apologised, identified training needs & brought

> chocolates. The actual contractor has just been

> and gave the right sort of apology & took my

> number to give advance notice of extra loud

> anticipated work - so all well.



That?s great to hear! Having had to deal with a similar situation myself I know how stressful it can be, so I?m really happy for you.

cella Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> All sorted - the overseeing company came round,

> apologised, identified training needs & brought

> chocolates. The actual contractor has just been

> and gave the right sort of apology & took my

> number to give advance notice of extra loud

> anticipated work - so all well.



Excellent.


I recently had an issue with builders a couple of houses down.


Not as bad as yours, but when I asked them to turn their radio down they lobbed a lump of wood onto the roof above the room where I was trying to work. It's still there.

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