Let's introduce a few more facts into this discussion
• We know, at least as far as is possible the Mail article, that there are ten people in the family, including at least three adults, of which two are male and one female.
• We also know that the house has six bedrooms and has been owned by LB Islington for many years.
• The family's residency status is unknown, but they qualify for HB and council housing and therefore cannot be asylum seekers. Whatever their staus, the rules for qualification are clear that they derive no extra benefit from being immigrants to the UK; the points allocated to them are based on the same criteria as any other UK citizen.
Let us make some reasonable assumptions:
• Presumably the woman and one of the men are married. It is possible that the other man is living with his partner (grandparents perhaps).
• There are probably children, but their ages are unknown. We might assume two children aged over 16 and two boys and two girls aged between 10 and sixteen. That brings us up to the ten individuals mentioned.
• Regardless of current market values, the property did not cost LB Islington anywhere near £1.8m to acquire. Quite possibly it has been in their ownership for fifty or more years, when Islington was a relatively poor (and cheap) borough.
Rules for housing, from RB Kensington & Chelsea, though these are set nationally.
http://www.rbkc.hbupdate.co.uk/Help.aspx?helpfile=CalculatingYourBedroomEntitlement
Calculating your bedroom entitlement
The number of people who live with you as members of your family determines how many bedrooms you need and the size of the accommodation you will qualify for under Local Housing Allowance rules. Other rooms such as living rooms, kitchens or toilets are not included in Local Housing Allowance rules.
Couples
Couples are entitled to a bedroom under Local Housing Allowance rules. If they do not have any dependants then this means they get the 1 bedroom rate, unless they share facilities with other joint tenants in which case they get the shared room rate of Local Housing Allowance.
By couple we mean a man and a woman who are married or living together as if they are married, or two people of the same sex who are Civil Partners of each other or who are living together as if they were Civil Partners, and are members of the same household.
Single people
Single people aged 35 or over are entitled to a bedroom under Local Housing Allowance rules in the same way as couples. Like couples, if they they share facilities with other joint tenants they get the shared room rate of Local Housing Allowance.
Single people aged under 35 are limited to the shared room rate of Local Housing Allowance. For more information see shared room rate.
Children
The number of bedrooms allowed for children under Local Housing Allowance depends on how old they are and their sex.
The rules assume that:
two children aged 0-9 share a bedroom whatever their sex
two boys or two girls aged under 16 share a bedroom
a boy and a girl both aged 10-15 have separate bedrooms
Children aged 16-19 and adults
Children aged 16-19 are counted as needing separate bedrooms.
If your household includes adults who are part of your family (such as a grown-up child or a parent) then they should also be included in this category. If any of the adults who live with you are in a couple then they count as one adult for Local Housing Allowance. When entering the number of adults who live with you do not include yourself or your partner, any joint tenants or your landlord).
On the basis of those rules alone we have
2 bedrooms for the two couples
1 bedroom shared by two girls aged 10-16
1 bedroom shared by two boys aged 10-16
1 bedroom each for the two children aged over 16
This gives us a total of six bedrooms required under national rules. The mix may be slightly different, but it justifies a six bedroom house for a family of ten.
In 2013 -14, Islington Council had approximately 25,000 homes in their social housing portfolio, of which only 1% (i.e. about 250 properties) have more than five bedrooms. Given the distribution curve for the number of rooms, it is not unreasonable to assume that the number having the six bedrooms required by national rules would be well below 0.5%.
Source:
http://www.islington.gov.uk/publicr...14/(2013-07-25)-Social-housing-allocation.pdf
Of the entire estate, fewer than 1,000 homes become available to let in any year. If we assume that the same 0.5% figure, then in any given year, fewer than five properties would be available to house this family within national rules in any given year. The quoted comment that they are 'very lucky' would appear to be quite true, especially if they had previously been living in temporary accommodation.
It is worth noting, from the same document, that "People will not be able to join the Housing Register unless they have been resident in Islington for 3 of the last 5 years."
Equally, if Islington had allocated the one of these rarely available properties to a smaller family, then it would clearly be an inappropriate use of resources (and also attract the 'bedroom tax' that has been introduced since this story surfaced).
A property of this size anywhere in LB Islington is going to be worth a substantial amount of money and would be able to attract high rents. However, is anyone seriously demanding that council housing should be let at full market rates? If they are, then they are missing the point of it.