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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Kate MacLachlan & Neil Shaw

Two women with sensitive noses homeless after refusing flat near Lush factory

Two women who refused to move into a flat near the Lush factory which makes fragrant soaps and bath bombs have been left with nowhere to live.

Cherie Hitchens, 58, and Joanna Morrison, 63, have a number of disabilities and conditions including sensitivity to chemicals and chemical smells.

Cherie said chemical smells can make them vomit, have rashes, racing heart rates and brain fog.

They were diagnosed with the condition by their GP and Ms Morrison has had treatment by a hospital specialist, reports DorsetLive.

So when Dorset Council said the only permanent accommodation it could offer them was a bungalow in Upton, one mile from the Lush soap factory, Cherie and Joanna said they had no choice but to turn the offer down, leaving them homeless as a result.

Cherie said: "They evicted us because we said no to one permanent bungalow in Upton.

"We said no to that because it was right next to the carriageway, there were lots of Lush smells, lots of people working for Lush - we are allergic to scented products, they make us very ill.

"Also the problem with the bungalow was they said if we didn't stay there for five years, we would have to pay for all the disabled adaptions."

Both Cherie and Joanna sometimes need to use wheelchairs, with Joanna suffering from asthma and diabetes. Cherie also suffers from spinal stenosis, Graves Disease and has recently recovered from cancer.

They had to move out of a council-funded home this year when it was no longer available and were placed in temporary accommodation in a hotel.

They were then moved to a temporary house and the flat near the lunch factory has been offered as a permanent home.

(Image: Google Streetview)

"We had to do an assessment, of their opinion and our opinion of why we couldn't take the bungalow in Upton. We did that. They [the council] said you should have taken it," said Cherie.

"We looked in Devon, Hampshire, Wiltshire, Cornwall, and Dorset obviously, to start off with. They're throwing us out of Dorset.

"We can't go to places that have a very well-known scented product shops and factories - we can't go near them, and they are all over the place.

"We did look at three properties out of a lot that I saw. Three of them we wanted, but one landlord said: 'no, housing benefit'.

"They believe what's on the TV - that we're all scum and we're just milking the system. We are not. It's not our fault we had these accidents - it's not our fault we have to rely on benefits. We're relying on credit cards now - I'm almost maxed out," she said.

Cherie says they went through the courts, but the council has now stopped all forms of help and evicted them from their temporary home on January 26.

The two friends are now staying in a hotel for as long as they can afford to, which they expect will be until tomorrow.

Cherie said: "They're expecting us to sofa-surf, they're expecting us to have friends and family. But they use scented products! We used to use scented products - we used to have lovely incense sticks, you know? We couldn't live there.

"[Joanna's] suffered enough. She's nearly 64 years old - she doesn't deserve this, we don't deserve this. No disabled person deserves this - the way we are being treated."

Cherie said: "We've looked for a three bedroom, detached bungalow, with a wet room, with a garage, no wood burners, no VOC paint, not newly refurbished, no new carpets and not near carriageways, factories or industrial estates. That's what we want.

"It's not easy - of course, we're part time wheelchair users, and I'm going to be paralysed in a few years because of my narrowing of the spinal cord."

Cherie said: "Jo has to see the specialist, she's got another condition, and she has not been able to see them for six months. So we cannot move out of Dorset until she sees them. So we've got to stay here until February 1.

"There's other counties that offer three, four, five properties. We were only offered one. We didn't know that! They never said to us, if you don't accept it, then you are going to be on the streets."

She said that their situation had left her and Ms Morrison with mental health problems. "I have got depression, obviously. We do laugh...but mostly we're crying," she said.

A spokesman for Dorset Council said: “The council is unable to go into detail on individual cases.

“However, there is a very clear legal procedure the council has to follow in offering residents a suitable property.

“The consequences of refusing to accept a property, which is deemed suitable, are clearly communicated in writing and verbally.

“Decisions can also be reviewed and go through the court system.

“The council also has an obligation to use temporary accommodation in the best way possible for all residents.”

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