Hello and welcome once again to date to the shadow of Grenfell Tower, that familiar green heart and that phrase forever in our hearts on the top of the tower behind me. And if yesterday was a day in the words of some survivors of the forensic detail from the public inquiry, a Day Forfirst inquiry, a day for first reaction inquiry, a Day Forfirst Reaction and lots of emotion, of course, then today is about a further looking into that 1700 page report, its recommendations, and those calls for justice from the bereaved families and the survivors of those who died as a result of the Grenfell Tower disaster because they a result of the Grenfell Tower disaster because they Say a result of the Grenfell Tower disaster because they Say over seven years after that fire, in june 2014, they are still waiting for justice. June 2014, they are still Waiting Forjustice. We will also talk about the damning report which set out a catalogue of failures. The six year public inquiry s final report laid the blame on successive governments, Systematic Dishonesty from Cladding Companies and the indifference of the local council. 0ur Correspondent Ellie price has more. They may not have come to terms with their loss, but they have, finally, got some answers. We didnt have the right treatment. We were discriminated. To some, it gives answers and to some it doesnt do anything except its put that extra nail in the coffin, as they Say. At The End, seven years have passed and we still have no justice and we have to fight again. I dont know how manyl years its going to take. The memory of that night still dominates this community. Residents who were victims of, at best, incompetence, at worst, calculated dishonesty and greed, the report said. Lives that didnt need to be lost. The simple truth is that the deaths that occurred were all avoidable, and those who lived in the tower were badly failed over a number of years and in a number of different ways by those who were responsible for ensuring the safety of the building and its occupants. The Prime Minister visited Grenfell Tower two weeks ago. Hes vowed to take swift action. There will be a debate on the floor of this house. We will respond in full to the inquiry s recommendations within six months and we will update parliament annually on our progress against every commitment that we make. But there are some things i can Say right now. There are still Buildings Today with Unsafe Cladding, and the speed at which this is being addressed is far, far too slow. The fire here was a result of dishonest companies, failures by successive governments, and a lack of strategy by the fire service. The council, which was responsible for the tower, has apologised for failing to protect residents before the fire and to look after them in the aftermath. Has enough changed . No, i dont think enough has changed. I think we need to continue. So for an easy reply, i could Say, well, all the recommendations in the first part of the report, you know, weve put them in, weve changed our resilience team, weve changed the way we organise ourselves, weve changed how we behave with our residents. We are held to account by our residents. But is that enough if youve lost a child, is that enough . No, i dont think so. Police Say they need until The End of next year to finish their investigation into what happened here, which means no criminal prosecutions will be brought until The End of 2026 at the earliest. But for families who lost Loved Ones here, theyve waited six years to see in Black And White who was to blame for their deaths. Their wait for justice continues. Ellie price, Bbc News at Grenfell Tower. 0ur correspondent, producer of the Grenfell Tower via podcast has Spent Hundreds Of Thousands of hours listening to evidence. Thank you forjoining me again today. The government has promised action already on a number of areas, speeding up the removal of Unsafe Cladding. There are thousands of buildings are still with Unsafe Cladding on them. We know that was the primary factor in the fire here at grenfell. They have also talked about making sure tenants never again feel ignored or their views dismissed. How Big A Step Forward is that . We dismissed. How Big A Step Forward is that . Dismissed. How Big A Step Forward is that . We have had these pledges forward is that . We have had these pledges over forward is that . We have had these pledges over a forward is that . We have had these pledges over a numberj forward is that . We have had i these pledges over a number of years, it was in discussion with the previous government and there have been attempts to speed up remediation when legal letters have been sent out, threats that these companies will not be involved in future cure it. That is yet to see consequences and so the detail is important, how that process will be sped up, where this money will be found from. That is Something Money will be found from. That is something for money will be found from. That is something for people to look more, exactly what the government Says in terms of the detail of those actions they promise. And then 58 recommendations in total from the inquiry, part two of the inquiry, which reported back yesterday at, of course. We have seen in the past that recommendations are one thing, implementation is another. Do you think this time is going to be different . The government has sent to will report back on others recommendations within six months. We others recommendations within six months others recommendations within six months. ~ ~.. six months. We know governments dont have to six months. We know governments dont have to carry six months. We know governments dont have to carry out six months. We know governments dont have to carry out the dont have to carry out the recommendations of inquiries, they dont even have to report back which they are carrying out, which they havent and why. 0ne out, which they havent and why. One of the Inquiry Recommendations as to change that, to make sure there is a recommendation. 0ne that, to make sure there is a recommendation. One of does make it across the industry and arguably there is a scale of change required to deal with the decades of failure that the report describes, and there is a bigger question here about whether it does decades of failure can be addressed with 58 recommendations, whether there is a cultural shift here across the industry that is also important to see. One of those other also important to see. One of those other changes also important to see. One of those other changes as also important to see. One of. Those other changes as looking at how Construction Ups are regulated and ensuring that they are safe, fit to be put on so people can sleep peacefully in bed at night. {line so people can sleep peacefully in bed at night. In bed at night. One of the most interesting most interesting recommendations is that there should be a review about whether private interest should be removed from Building Control, the organisation to sign off buildings as safe. We get to watch these wider questions of how you separate profit and safety. These are the Big Question is moving forward, not easy fixes. {line forward, not easy fixes. One survivor forward, not easy fixes. One survivor of forward, not easy fixes. One survivor of grenfell forward, not easy fixes. One survivor of grenfell said survivor of grenfell said yesterday that the real fight begins now and i think that was the feeling i got from the survivors, the bereaved families that i spoke to yesterday, that this is where the real work begins. This was an important day, a significant day to step On The Road to the justice, they Say. The day to step On The Road to the justice, they Say. Justice, they Say. The fight noes on justice, they Say. The fight goes on for justice, they Say. The fight goes on for them. Justice, they Say. The fight goes on for them. A justice, they Say. The fight goes on for them. A lot. Justice, they Say. The fight goes on for them. A lot of| goes on for them. A lot of people talk about cautious optimism. 0ptimism set out in Black And White, watch the failures were, and caution. Criminal charges, which many people are interested in, are a long way off, nobody will be in court until 2027, ten years on from the fire. This is a mark in the middle of the story, not The End.. ~ in the middle of the story, not The End.. G ~ ,. in the middle of the story, not theend.. The End. Use at 36 years plus of this inquiry, The End. Use at 36 years plus of this inquiry, both The End. Use at 36 years plus of this inquiry, both parts, i The End. Use at 36 Years Plusj of this inquiry, both parts, of this inquiry, both parts, you sat six years plus stop when you got home at The End of a busy day and you are reflecting on the day and what you had heard, and all those people connected with grenfell had experienced. What was the key thing going through your mind . ~.. key thing going through your mind . ~. key thing going through your mind . ~.. mind . What was interesting as i was sat here mind . What was interesting as i was sat here at mind . What was interesting as i was sat here at Dawn Mind . What was interesting as i was sat here at Dawn Yesterday| was sat here at Dawn Yesterday looking at the tower, thinking about the morning of the fire. And now i am here again, but this time set out in Black And White is what the Inquiry Heard. The report, what the Inquiry Heard six years of emotional and technical evidence about layers of failure across decades of different organisations, opportunity is missed, warnings are not heeded. What the inquiry has done is unpick their tangled accusations about who was responsible and laid it out very clearly and very systematically. Out very clearly and very systematically. Out very clearly and very s stematicall. ~ , systematically. Thank you very much. Weve had plenty of political reaction. No doubt more to come. Speaking to the bbc, the deputy prime Minister And Housing secretary Angela Rayner said work to fix unsafe buildings must be speeded up. The report is pretty harrowing. When you see the level of failure, its not one failure in one place its everybody who had a responsibility to protect people and keep them safe in their homes completely, catastrophically failed them. And thats why the Prime Minister apologised yesterday. But quite rightly, as was said, more needs to be done. After phase one, there has been significant changes new regulators and new laws that have been passed but when i took up my position eight or nine weeks ago, i was absolutely astonished at how many buildings still are waiting to start Remediation Work. And thats why i want to come forward this autumn with a remediation acceleration plan, to make sure that we can do everything we can to get this cladding off the buildings and to hold those responsible. And the phase two report We Saw Yesterday gives 58 recommendations that we will have to go through now. Weve identified 4,630 and only 50 of them are currently in remediation, or 29 that have had that remediation completed. Theres a number of steps that have been taken around waking watches, around the way in which the Fire Brigade identify, and those that have got obligations for Building Safety to keep people safe in their buildings. A number of changes that have been made. But it is completely unacceptable that the remediation is taking as long as it is. And thats what i want to see concluded much more swiftly, because i completely understand that it is incredibly difficult to be stuck in one of those buildings now that you bought in good faith, or that youre there in good faith you are stuck there now and you have no timeline to when that Remediation Work is going to be completed. And thats why the Accelerator Plan that im coming forward with in the autumn has to make sure that this is speeded up. That was Angela Rayner. Joining me now is our chief political correspondent, henry zeffman. Good morning, henry. What is the key thing or the things you took away from what Angela Rayner had to Say in that interview . Interview . What is really interesting interview . What is really interesting about interview . What is really interesting about the interesting about the Government Response to this is that they are waiting six months, as is often the case with these very meaty extensive inquiries, to respond in full to all the recommendations of the report. But it is also clear from what Keir Starmer was Saying in house of Commons Yesterday and what Angela Rayner has said this morning to the bbc, that there are some areas where the government feels it needs to move faster. And one of those as you head emphasise there is remediation, the term given to basically taking cladding off the vast number, it appears, taking cladding off the vast number, itappears, of residences where people still are living surrounded by Unsafe Cladding, and what is so striking about what Angela Rayner is Saying is that the government still doesnt seem to have a complete idea of how many buildings that affect. She said she still believes, actually, that new laws are required. Seven years after this disaster new laws may be required to compel the owners of the buildings to take the measures the government wants them to take. I think what is going to be very interesting is to see whether this government can find ways to speed it up and to make those laws bite in and to make those laws bite in a way that previous governments since 2017 have tried and in Angela Rayner s view failed to do so. Angela rayners view failed to do so.. Angela Rayners view failed to do so... do so. That is a really interesting do so. That is a really interesting point, do so. That is a really i interesting point, henry. Do so. That is a really interesting point, henry. How is the government is going to make that work . Words are one thing, actions are another. How will it speed up the process . I think talking to people here around grenfell, clearly, and we have heard this from many times, they are clearly frustrated at the speed at which things move. I dont think we which things move. I dont think we know which things move. I dont think we know the which things move. I dont think we know the answer| which things move. I dont l think we know the answer to that, is the truth. The government Says that they will bring forward new plans in the Autumn Stop we are pretty close to the autumn, i guess that means a sort of october, november time when politicians return from party conferences. Angela rayners department, she is a Deputy Prime Minister but also housing secretary, has an awful lot on its plate and there is broader context for this which is that at the heart of this new Governments Agenda for the economy is planning reform designed to mean that 1. 5 million more homes get built over the next five years. There is the new Homes Side of the agenda but simultaneously this government is expressing severe concern about lots of existing homes. Might not be safe and trying to find ways to get the Construction Industry on the one hand to build lots of new homes and then on the other hand, the Housing Sector more generally, to deal with the existing homes. It is a delicate thing the government will have to try to pull off but, as you Say, a lot of people frustrated by the speed of progress. A lot of people, by the way, and the commit recognise this yesterday, frustrated by how long, even after yesterdays report, criminal prosecutions potentially might still take. So i think in that sort of broader environment of frustration at the speed at which things are moving, i think the Onus Falls on the government to demonstrate that the things which are in its control, they are able to move faster on. Control, they are able to move faster om control, they are able to move faster on.. ~ ,. faster on. Ok, henry, thank you very much faster on. Ok, henry, thank you very much. Henry faster on. Ok, henry, thank you very much. Henry zeffman. With me now is Housing Correspondent at the i paper, vicky spratt. Thank you very much for your time today. It is a fundamental right for people to feel safe in their homes, to have a home, to feel safe in that home. Do you think as a result of what we heard yesterday that that is a Step Closer . I we heard yesterday that that is a Step Closer . A Step Closer . I would like to think so a Step Closer . I would like to think so i a Step Closer . I would like to think so. Ithink a Step Closer . I would like to think so. I think the think so. I think the recommendations of the report make it clear we have a Building Safety Crisis in this country. Homes are not safe seven years on after it grenfell. They should be, but they are not. If the government can move with speed and pick up the recommendations of the inquiry, we are a Step Closer to particularly homes in high rise and mid rise blocks being made safe, but that depends on two things. They have to move quickly. It took the previous government years and they are going to have to find some money. 0ne and they are going to have to find some money. One thing not been talked about enough in my opinion is that the figures on how many blocks are impacted are likely a severe undercount if you look at the government data. It has been going up recently as more blocks are being recorded the figures we have dealt record buildings under 11 metres tall which have Cladding Problems and safety issues and a key point made by the report was that we should claim change the classification of what an Actress Building is. Not because of its height but because of vulnerable residents and unsafe material. Aha, because of vulnerable residents and unsafe material. And unsafe material. A really interesting and unsafe material. A really interesting points and unsafe material. A really interesting points because i and unsafe material. A really interesting points because at Brent Feher we know around 40 of the people who died had Mobility Issues at grenfell we know 40 of the people who died had vulnerabilities. It is an interesting change in classification, a very important one. Classification, a very imortant one. ~ , important one. Absolutely. If ou are important one. Absolutely. If you are on important one. Absolutely. If you are on the important one. Absolutely. If you are on the fourth important one. Absolutely. If you are on the fourth floor. Important one. Absolutely. If you are on the fourth Floor Ofj you are on the fourth floor of a four Storey Block would you need a wheelchair, you are not safe. I spoke to a lady wh