Long-awaited report into Grenfell Tower fire to be published

Earlier this year, a memorial was installed in Mousehole's Grenfell Street here in Cornwall remembering those who died

Author: Oliver Morgan & Aine Fox, PAPublished 4th Sep 2024
Last updated 4th Sep 2024

A long-awaited report into the deaths of 72 people in a fire at Grenfell Tower is due to be published more than seven years after the blaze.

The lengthy document - the final report of the inquiry into the 2017 disaster - is expected to lay out in detail its findings around the actions of corporate firms in the construction industry, the local authority, London Fire Brigade and government.

Families of those killed have insisted it must be a "landmark report" which prompts widescale change after what was described as a "spider's web of blame" was spun during inquiry hearings.

A report in 2019, from the first phase of the inquiry, concluded the tower's cladding did not comply with building regulations and was the "principal" reason for the rapid and "profoundly shocking" spread of the blaze.

This final report, which follows further hearings on the tower's 2016 refurbishment, will present conclusions on how the west London block of flats came to be in a condition which allowed the flames to spread so quickly.

The report comes just over a week after a major fire in east London at a block which had been undergoing work to have cladding removed as a result of what happened at Grenfell.

The non-fatal Dagenham blaze, coming so many years after the 2017 fire, prompted fierce criticism from various quarters including bereaved and survivors group Grenfell United, which said it showed the "painfully slow progress of remediation across the country, and a lack of urgency for building safety as a whole".

'Utterly inspiring'

People living in tower blocks here in Cornwall living in Grenfell-style cladding are hoping today's report will mean change for them - after 72 people died in the blaze in West London seven years ago.

It was Britain's deadliest residential fire since World War 2.

Cornwall Hugs, who commissioned a plaque in Mousehole earlier this year have called the dignity, determination and courage of the survivors - 'utterly inspiring'.

In a post earlier this week, they said: "Thinking today, with gratitude, of the unimaginable sacrifices Grenfell survivors and the bereaved have made to give evidence at the Grenfell Public Inquiry: reliving their trauma; speaking publicly about the most painful and private matters.

"They have given their all in the service of truth, accountability and justice. In the service of all of us too - to ensure their nightmare never becomes ours.

"The personal cost of doing this has been huge.

"Their dignity, determination and courage in the face of the 'merry-go-round of buck passing' has been utterly inspiring. Today the Grenfell Inquiry's final report is published to affected families. Tomorrow publicly. Please hold the families in your thoughts and prayers as they read in black and white, why their loved ones died.

"May this report be widely read, not just now but in the months ahead - by industry, government and all connected with public services and the built environment. May it lead to the justice and change they have given so much to achieve."

'Really concerning' that many people are still living in uncertainty and fear

Dame Judith Hackitt, who led an independent review into building regulations after the Grenfell fire, described it as "really concerning" that so many people are still living in uncertainty and fear about the safety of their homes.

Number 10 said Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer had, at Tuesday's Cabinet, said the Dagenham fire was a further reminder of the importance of learning lessons from Grenfell to ensure mistakes made then never happen again.

The Fire Brigades Union has said the Grenfell fire "was a crime caused by deregulation and institutional failings at the highest level".

The final hearing of the second phase of the inquiry took place in November 2022, with families having previously spoken of their long wait and continued fight for justice.

The report's findings could ramp up pressure on police and prosecutors to make speedier progress on getting people before the courts - something many bereaved and survivors have said must happen for justice to be served.

In May, the Metropolitan Police said their investigators need until the end of 2025 to finalise their inquiry, and prosecutors will then need a year to decide whether charges can be brought.

Bereaved and survivors have described that wait, which could stretch to a decade after the catastrophic fire, as "unbearable".

According to the update from police and prosecutors earlier this year, the mammoth police investigation into the fire has already generated 27,000 lines of inquiry and more than 12,000 witness statements.

A total of 58 individuals and 19 companies and organisations are under investigation for potential criminal offences, and more than 300 hours of interviews have taken place.

Potential offences under consideration include corporate manslaughter, gross negligence manslaughter, perverting the course of justice, misconduct in public office, health and safety offences, fraud and offences under the fire safety and building regulations.

Read more: Grenfell plaque unveiled on Mousehole's 'Grenfell Street'

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