Residents of Godstone in Surrey have complained about a lack of clarity on housing provisions and some reported having to move accommodation nearly every day due to a huge sinkhole

A massive sinkhole that swallowed parts of a street in a Surrey town could take a year to fix, a public meeting has been told.

Residents from 30 properties were evacuated after a sinkhole appeared in the High Street, Godstone, on the night of February 17 and 24 homes remain uninhabitable. A second sinkhole, thought to be linked, appeared in the front garden of a property the following afternoon.

During a Tandridge District Council public meeting on Tuesday evening, residents complained about a lack of clarity on housing provisions and some reported having to move accommodation nearly every day. People lined the walls and some crouched on the floor of St Nicholas Youth Centre as one resident, Diego Silva, 33, said his family has slept at three different locations in the last four nights.

Mr Silva said he, his wife, and their 17-month old child are currently “crammed” inside the home of a friend who has three other children. The banker, who has lived in Godstone for less than six months, told attendees: “If it was for us – me and my wife – we would be more than welcome to jump around, but we have a baby, and she needs the stability.

“We noticed that since we had to leave in the middle of the night, that affects the baby really badly, she has been really clingy, wants mummy and daddy all the time – she has been crying out in the middle of the night because she doesn’t know where she is.” Lloyd Allen, who is in charge of the technical team that is responding, said “something like this takes up to a year to solve.”

The incident is considered a “collapse” rather than a sinkhole, he added. The infrastructure team manager at Surrey County Council said: “We will work as hard as we can to get a solution in place – for those residents who have been displaced by this, it doesn’t mean that you won’t be there.

“We will try and make decisions to get people back into their homes as quickly as we can, but we need to have a knowledge over that – we can’t let people go back into their homes if we feel there’s a danger. We need to be really sure that there’s not a danger and we will be releasing people back into their homes gradually over a period of time, I don’t know what that period of time is.”

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