Community “left to look after itself” on day of Grenfell disaster, inquiry is told
Grenfell Tower residents were “left to God and good neighbours” after council blunders on the day of the fire, a charity boss has said.
The chief executive of the P3 Charity Group, Mark Simms (pictured), said the North Kensington community was left to look after itself in the immediate aftermath of the tragic fire on June 14, 2017.
Mr Simms told the Grenfell Inquiry yesterday that he struggled to get hold of Kensington and Chelsea council’s emergency response team on the morning of the fire, which meant volunteers were left to help people on the ground without help from officials.
He said: “The North Kensington community was looking after its own people in the absence of anything coming from anywhere else.
“They were left to God and good neighbours and that can’t be right in 2017 in Central London.”
Mr Simms left his home in Nottinghamshire and travelled to Kensington early in the morning on June 14.
Speaking at the inquiry on Tuesday he said: “It’s a sad indictment really, that people were getting out of bed to help their fellow neighbours when other people weren’t getting out of their offices to help our citizens.”
The inquiry heard how Mr Simms helped to coordinate an emergency hub, known as a ‘rest centre’, for survivors at the Rugby Portobello Trust, which is based a short distance from the tower.
He said his team helped about 100 survivors and bereaved families in the immediate aftermath of the blaze by giving them shelter in the club and sourcing clothes, food and medicine for them.
Mr Simms also said the volunteers booked hotel rooms for survivors, organised taxi journeys to accommodation and gave cash donations in the days that followed the tragedy, and later sourced mobile phones, laptops and cooking equipment for Grenfell residents.
The inquiry previously heard from survivors that the council failed to tell them where they would be housed immediately after the fire and they had no information about where their missing family members were.
Some people desperately searched hospitals for their relatives as they were left in the dark about whether they had survived the blaze.
An ex-council worker recently told the inquiry the authority’s emergency response team was not properly trained to deal with a major incident and was too slow to react to the fire.
Rebecca Blackburn, an expert in disaster management, said staff couldn’t manage the situation and were unable to direct people where to go.
In a statement, Mr Simms said: “There was an absence of a coordinated visible response from the council.
“In my view, the lack of communication from other lead agencies at a strategic level outlining what the plan was and how things were being managed was the biggest challenge.
“I kept thinking that help and support would come from other lead organisations, however it never materialised.”
The Grenfell Inquiry continues.
Pictured top: Grenfell tower (Picture: PA)