Stephanie Bottrill, 52, walked in front of a
lorry on a motorway
The grandmother lived alone in a
three-bedroom house in Solihull
She blamed the Government's housing policy in
her suicide note
Her brother Kevin Owens said she wouldn't
'give somebody else a chance'
Believes it wasn't 'bedroom tax' that drove
her to kill herself
Also disputed claims she was given half an hour to decide about her house
Also disputed claims she was given half an hour to decide about her house
The brother of a woman who walked out
in front of a lorry and killed herself because of 'bedroom tax' has said she
wasn't willing to 'give somebody else a chance' in a housing system that
requires people to 'take turns'.
Grandmother Stephanie Bottrill, 52,
walked across a motorway on May 4 last year after her local council allegedly
told her she had to move out of her three-bedroom terrace house in Solihull,
West Midlands, because of the spare room subsidy.
A coroner has today recorded a verdict
of suicide saying the Government's housing policy had caused her 'considerable
anxiety and stress'.
But after the inquest, her brother,
Kevin Owens - joined by Ms Bottrill’s sister, Josephine Trueman - told
reporters she 'wasn’t prepared to give somebody else a chance' of a larger
home.
He said: 'For social housing to work it
needs for everybody to take a turn.'
'When you’re adequately housed by
successive governments, and your needs are met, you must give somebody else a
turn.
'It’s terrible that people in this
country are cramped into one and two-bedroom flats with children while other
people sit on three-bedroom houses.
'Our thoughts go out to the lorry
driver whose life has been blighted by this, and we just wanted to pass on our
thoughts to him.'
Mr Owens also disputed the claim his
sister had made about being given half an hour to 'make a decision' on a
house.
He added: 'Much has been written about
"bedroom tax" pushing her - it wasn’t, because prior to that she’d
attempted suicide before and that hadn’t been reported before.
'It might have been the catalyst to
push her but was it just an excuse she was looking for? - That’s all I’ve got
to say.'
During a hearing at Birmingham Coroners
Court today, the Black County coroner, Zafar Siddique, said: 'Given the
evidence of notes left of her intention,
Comment:
Whether or not you feel the so called “
Bedroom Tax” is unfair or fair, the tragic death of this lady, who suffered for
a number of years from anxiety and depression felt no alternative but to take
our own life, however the so called “
Bedroom Tax” isn’t responsible for the tragic death of this person.