See more Daily Mail on Google - save us as a Preferred SourceBy CLAIRE ELLIOT, SCOTTISH GENERAL NEWS REPORTER Published: 20:50 BST, 8 June 2026 | Updated: 20:50 BST, 8 June 2026

Residents evacuated from a former mining village claim ‘jails are better’ than the ‘damp’ and ‘filthy’ accommodation the council has offered them.Families in Coalsnaughton, Clackmannanshire, face being out of their homes for at least two months as investigations take place to find out why their properties are ‘moving down hill’ following initial signs of ground movement last month.Some 97 households have been displaced but many are unhappy with Clackmannanshire Council for putting them up in temporary student rooms at Stirling University which they say smell of ‘cat foul’.Images posted online by disgruntled families show smeared oven doors, mouldy radiators, dirty worktops and floors, broken units and overflowing bins.One photograph also shows a single bed with a bare mattress in the corner of a small room, with families – some with young children – claiming they are being forced to separate and told if they are not happy to ‘sleep in their car’.One displaced villager has now written to local Labour MP Brian Leishman on behalf of the community saying they were ‘desperate for help now’.In her letter Julie McCheyne, who was evacuated almost a fortnight ago, explains how she and her family are now living in a hotel room with ‘no fridge, cooking facilities or ability to prepare proper meals’.She wrote: ‘While we appreciate that emergency accommodation had to be found quickly, this situation is becoming increasingly difficult and unsustainable. Ground investigations underway at Benbuck View in the village of Coalsnaughton following subsidence at several houses in the street Disgruntled Coalsnaughton villagers posted images from their temporary accomodation‘Residents who have been relocated to Stirling University accommodation have shared photographs and experiences on social media showing conditions that are filthy, damp and, in many cases, simply not suitable.’Another resident said she was told she had been given ‘one of the better’ rooms. But she added: ‘[We] walked in and the first thing you smelled was cat foul, the kitchen has rotten wood, the cooker wasn’t even cleaned and the showers smelled horrible too. It was absolutely disgusting.’Another claimed ‘jails are better than this’, while one woman said after moving to the student accommodation families and couples were being ‘separated into single rooms’.Coalsnaughton, which has a population of around 1,300, was built in the 18th century to house miners, with the area said to be littered with mineshafts.Residents say they have been told their streets are moving between ‘10 and 15mm a day’. Workers from the UK Government’s Mining Remediation Authority (MRA), have been drafted in to investigate.Carl Banton, chief operations director for the MRA, said ‘multiple specialist teams’ were ‘carrying out detailed engineering assessments to understand the cause of the ground movement’.Clackmannanshire Council said its staff ‘recognise this is a difficult and upsetting time for the residents involved and are working under sustained pressure to offer them continued support’.A spokesman for the University of Stirling said: ‘We are working in partnership with Clackmannanshire Council to provide temporary accommodation for a small number of families, who have engaged positively with our staff and settled well into the accommodation. Our staff are available 24/7 to support them.’