'Every night there is banging on our walls'

"I was physically sick, and we are all mentally exhausted - every hour of every night there is banging on our walls."
Mother-of-two Sarah - not her real name - said she had endured persistent antisocial behaviour from her next door neighbours for more than two years, and her landlord, Birmingham City Council, had ignored her pleas for help.
The local authority said it had established a new set of standards in dealing with antisocial behaviour.
"It is an issue we take seriously and want to improve upon," it added.
Living in a semi-detached property in a Birmingham suburb, Sarah told the BBC it was as though the walls between the neighbouring properties were paper thin.
The local authority had sent warning letters to neighbours, but the noise continued, Sarah said, adding that some of the wall had crumbled away as a result of continued banging.
All of this comes at a point Birmingham is seeing large numbers of complaints about antisocial behaviour.
We have obtained figures through a Freedom of Information request that show since 2022, the council has received and investigated 16,575 complaints about antisocial behaviour in council properties.
However, numbers have fallen from 5,491 in 2022 to 4,624 last year.

Sarah's neighbours were served injunctions in 2023, preventing them from harassing or abusing her family, and it also applies to threats made against council employees who visit the property.
Breaking down in tears, Sarah told the BBC her son had been self-harming due to the continued anxiety.
"All I've had from the city council is constant excuses for my neighbour. We submitted CCTV footage, and they told us it's 'normal noise'," she said.
"I feel like they're afraid to go any further with it, and I can't understand why when I'm literally on my knees begging them to help us."
Sarah's experience is not unusual.
The figures we have obtained show that since 2022, only 27 tenants have been evicted, but the authority said it did not currently categorise antisocial behaviour as a reason for eviction.
The data was finally released to us last week, after several months of delays.
The Information Commissioner's Office subsequently found that the council had breached the Freedom of Information Act by failing to release the data to the BBC within the 20-day time limit.

Preet Kaur Gill, Labour MP for Edgbaston, said she had seen a big increase in council tenants ing her over antisocial behaviour and was urging the authority to review its response.
"The council does have an effective policy, so it needs to make sure it's compliant with it," she said.
"We have to look at how on earth we have got to a situation where we have around 5,000 cases of antisocial behaviour every single year.
"We only have about 100 housing officers, so how will they cope with that level of demand"A huge pile of bin bags on a residential street. There are dozens of refuse sacks with terraced homes in the background. " class="sc-d1200759-0 dvfjxj"/>