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Angela Hemmings, 59, was also advised to turn the dining room table into a makeshift child’s bed in their poky two-bedroom terraced house. Angela, a care worker, lives with her daughter and four grandchildren at the house in Kings Heath, Northampton. She has begged Northampton Partnership Homes (NPH) - who manage council housing services - for a bigger house for the family since July last year, when her two grandsons aged five and ten, along with her eight-year-old granddaughter, came to live with her. Her daughter Helen Forward, 34, and her 11-year-old daughter were already sharing the house with her. Read more: David Cameron's war on social housing to be attacked by furious working-class peers But she has repeatedly been told she cannot go on the waiting list because her home doesn't meet the statutory limit for overcrowding set by the Government . Angela also claims she was told by a Northampton Partnership Homes housing officer to "put a board over the bathtub" to turn it into a bed.
She said the officer also told her to do the same with the dining room table to create extra children's beds during a recent assessment of the £110,000 house. Angela fumed: "Under no circumstances is my daughter or any of my grandchildren sleeping in a bathroom, it just isn't happening. "When I explained I needed a bigger house, an officer from Northampton Partnership Homes told me 'put a board over the bathtub'. He also suggested using the dining room table. "How on earth in this day in age can children be expected to sleep on a table or in a bath tub? We all work hard but have basically been told 'tough' by the council.'" She added: "I said what happens if someone needs the toilet and she said we could pull the shower curtain out for privacy. "She said she knows it's not ideal but we could do it. Read more: Cowardly Iain Duncan Smith ducks MPs' furious questions over court ruling on "rotten" Bedroom Tax "I couldn't believe my ears, it is ridiculous that the council told me to do that. "
Putting a child on a table or the bath is abuse, people would be straight around to take the children off me." Angela has been a social housing tenant for nearly 30 years and is asking to be put on the waiting list for a bigger home. She says her family of six are crammed into two small bedrooms and a box room every night. But under housing regulations a household is not classed as overcrowded as long as there is a separate room for a couple, a single adult aged 21 or older and two young people of the opposite sex aged ten or over. Angela, who works in the laundry room at a care home, has lived at her home for 17 years but has been a council tenant for over 25 years. She pays £105-a-week in rent as well as council tax but says she is willing to pay more in order to get a bigger house. Angela added: "I am not asking to jump the queue, I just want to be able to join the queue and be allowed to bid on the bigger properties. "But the council said because of the rules and regulations I am not overcrowded.
"I don't know if it is the Government rules or not but at the moment it is the council telling me I am not eligible so there is nothing I can do. Read more: Zac Goldsmith slams Tory definition of £450,000 homes as 'affordable' "I love my house, I've lived in it for years and have done it up nicely but I just need a bigger property. "It is not fair on the children. They are happy children but the boys shouldn't have to share a bedroom with their gran. "They need space and especially as they get older and turn 16, it will become even worse then." Angela's situation was also spoke about as part of a debate on overcrowding at a Northampton Borough Council meeting on Monday. But a Labour motion put to the full council asked the controlling Tory group to do "what it can to help alleviate overcrowding in homes, including going beyond statutory our duties" was turned down. The council's cabinet member for housing, Councillor Stephen Hibbert, said their housing allocations policy is currently under review.
He added: "There are guidelines and as you know we must work within the law. "But this is a far more complex issue than it appears. "How do you determine allocating a home between a family lacking a bedroom or someone who has to move because of a serious medical condition?" Northampton Partnership Homes is an arms-length management organisation which is responsible for the management of council housing services. The not-for-profit organisation is wholly owned by the council but has its own Board of Directors. A spokesperson said they had to enforce the council's housing allocations policy and wouldn't move families unless they met the statutory overcrowding limit. They added: "The current housing allocation policy accepts a reasonable preference to households who have been assessed as being statutorily overcrowded. "Those families who are assessed and do not meet statutory overcrowding are generally not allowed access to the housing register unless they have another housing need such as medical or welfare grounds."