Congratulations for acknowledging – at last – that too many housebuilders treat their customers with disdain, if not contempt (16 April, page 42).
Over the decades I have grown weary of the tales of defects, little and large, plaguing the innocent fools who believed developers' glossy ads that promised trouble-free products and, invariably, a dedication to customer care.

As a result, I have for many years been unable to recommend anyone to buy a brand new home. On the contrary – by the late 1990s things got so bad that I had to take the initiative and protect new home buyers by persuading mortgage lenders to ban conveyancing solicitors from completing new home sales until they were satisfied that Ðǿմ«Ã½ Regulations were complied with and final inspections by warranty organisations had been carried out. This has prevented the worst abuses, but, as ITV is highlighting, not all of them. And I never cease to be amazed at rich and powerful companies trying to present themselves as the victims of bias and "compensation culture". Show me a housebuilder who has paid compensation to a buyer and I'll eat my words.

Angie Skuse (Letters, 21 May, page 21) should not apologise for contacting Watchdog. Her only mistake was waiting 18 months before doing it.