In the wake of the controversial home insulation program, known as pink batts scheme, which caused the dead of four men, a family was angered about prime Minister Kevin Rudd's reluctance to heed of his promise of meeting the victims' family personally.

As much as Mr Rudd's prompt public apology and personal call to the family for the incident, Kevin and Christine Fuller, parents for one of the victims, expressed anger as Mr Rudd has yet to meet them personally as promised.

"That was well over a month ago and he has not been able to fit it in to his busy campaigning schedule, or to make it make it any sort of priority to have any meeting," Mr Fuller told the Australian Associated Press.

To clarify Mr Rudd's side on this, a spokesman for Mr Rudd told media that he wants to meet with the families in person and his office had been in contact with the three families, including the Fullers, to agree on the most convenient schedule for all families involved.

It had been alleged that Mr Rudd had been negligent in his discretion to continue with the home insulation program amidst letters of warnings that the program poses dangerous threats. As a result of the July incident, the program had been ceased immediately.

However, 65 companies were already seeking compensation for the governments because of its unexpected decision to stop the program. The Home Insulation Industry Action Group (HIIAG) represented these companies against the government.

Peter Stewart, head for HIIAG, told ABC that his clients will now push through with a legal action.

"One of the senior officers of the department who has involved in the administration of the program said to that inquiry, regulation was kept light to encourage people to come into the industry. At the very first meeting that was held with industry stakeholders, industry pointed out at that stage... the difficulties and the safety risks and so on that the program would face."

"That advice was ignored because supposedly, it was all about jobs, jobs, jobs. There are papers, letters from Mr Garrett's office to the Prime Minister's office that Mr Rudd still refuses to release. We believe that those letters contain all the warnings and that that I'm talking about."

"We want them to acknowledge the fact that many of us have lost a significant amount of money, through being left with stock, through being tied up with equipment leases, through being tied up with warehouse leases that we took on in the full expectation that the program would run its course until the money was spent or until the end of 200," Mr Stewart said.