Sep
19

Landlord fined £32,000 after creating hazardous conditions within illegal flats

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A rogue landlord who ignored fire risks and serious hazards at his flats and caravans has been fined £32,000.

Thomas Evans, 84, faced seven charges of failing to comply with a housing prohibition order, which were proven in his absence at Telford Magistrates’ Court, reports the Shropshire Star.

It heard that the landlord had converted a house at a ramshackle former farm called The Oakery in Ashford Carbonell (pictured) near Ludlow into six flats and created a traveller site next door – both without planning permission.

Shropshire Council housing officers followed up a complaint about a faulty boiler in 2017 and found the condition of the flats and caravans presented a potential risk to life, with category one and two hazards relating to heating, drainage and clean water supplies.

Notice ignored

Evans was issued with an improvement notice to do the works, but officers found nothing had been done when they returned in February 2020 and served a new improvement notice.

He addressed the category one electrical hazards but a follow-up visit in 2021 confirmed many hazards still remained, including log burners in the traveller units that had been deemed unsafe four years previously.

In November 2022, conditions had further deteriorated and the hazards presented a serious risk to the tenants’ health and safety.

The council issued prohibition notices in respect of every flat and plot, but during a visit in March this year, officers discovered two of the flats and five of the traveller plots were still occupied.

Magistrates ordered Evans to pay a £3,500 fine for each of the seven breaches, the council’s costs of £5,507 and a £2,000 victim surcharge. He also faces ongoing fines of £20 per day, per property, if they remain occupied.

View Full Article: Landlord fined £32,000 after creating hazardous conditions within illegal flats

Sep
19

‘Government policies stifling competition and bad for tenants’ says landlord

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Landlords can effectively now charge what they like as the government’s draconian policies are stifling competition, says Nottingham benefits landlord Mick Roberts.

He reckons fewer properties and tenants who are afraid to speak out are also the unintended consequences of increasing red tape.

“My long-standing tenants are often only paying 70% of the market rent, but when I get a new tenant, I’m charging what I can get, as I need to factor in all these extra costs like licensing and EPCs,” Roberts tells LandlordZONE.

“I’ll be forced to charge tenants more if I’m having to pay out £10,000 for energy efficient improvements.

“That, and the fact there are so few houses to rent around, means tenants are too scared to ask for things anymore, they’re just grateful to have a house – and I don’t just go around offering to update kitchens.”

Salutory lesson

The situation in Scotland, where rent controls are pushing up rents faster than anywhere else in the UK, is a salutary lesson, says Roberts.

“This is not down to landlords; it’s the lack of supply and I think the government is just realising that. I used to take anyone as a tenant because I knew I could get rid of them if things went wrong – a landlord needs to know they can get their house back.

“Without Section 21, that won’t happen, and you won’t get as many landlords buying houses.”

New eviction laws could be some way off though, as the Renters Reform Bill is not expected to get a second reading until the next Parliamentary session.

There are also rumours circulating that five senior Tories accused of “blocking” the new law are landlords, including chief whip Simon Hart and two senior government whips, Jo Churchill and Steve Double, according to The Mirror. However, the whips office denied the suggestion as “absurd”.

Read more: What landlords need to know about energy efficiency laws.

View Full Article: ‘Government policies stifling competition and bad for tenants’ says landlord

Sep
19

England’s biggest social housing providers ignore official complaint warnings

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Several of the largest social housing providers in England are persistently ignoring official warnings from the housing ombudsman over how to improve their handling of tenants’ complaints – and the situation is getting worse.

Landlords such as L&Q

View Full Article: England’s biggest social housing providers ignore official complaint warnings

Sep
19

Log burner left unattended in shed caused huge fire!

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Hello, we have had a lot of problems from one set of neighbours who regularly display anti-social behaviour. They regularly have drinking/drug parties and light fires late at night when inebriated. The fires at times have been very dangerous and extremely close to our property.

View Full Article: Log burner left unattended in shed caused huge fire!

Sep
19

Majority of landlords won’t buy a property below EPC C

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More than 71% of landlords are unlikely to buy a property which has an EPC rating of less than C, according to new data.

The study by Foundation Home Loans and BVA BDRC, reveals the more properties a landlord has within their portfolio

View Full Article: Majority of landlords won’t buy a property below EPC C

Sep
19

‘Crumbling eviction courts must be fixed before renting reforms go live’

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The National Residential Landlords Association has warned the Government that the crumbling courts system for evictions will undermine its hoped-for reforms of the private renting sector unless they are reformed.

In an open letter to the Ministry of Justice, its Chief Executive Ben Beadle (main picture) warns Ministers that unless the courts system is reformed and waiting times for possession cases dramatically reduced, the Government’s plans to ban Section 21 evictions will “exacerbate an already serious crisis of supply of rented housing”.

paul shapmplina

Landlords seeking to evict tenants are already facing waits of up to six months to get hearings and, as LandlordZONE recently reported, Landlord Action’s Paul Shamplina (pictured) believes court delays for landlords are the “worst ever he’d seen during his career within the private rented sector”.

The Government has also been slammed by MPs for the parlous state of the courts – a recent report by the Levelling Up, Housing & Communities Select Committee warned that: “It is not clear whether the Government fully appreciates the extent to which an unreformed courts system could undermine its tenancy reforms”.

Beadle wants Ministers to bring forward initiatives to speed up hearings including the digitalisation of the court process, plans to increase the number of court staff dealing with possession cases, target processing times and publish their own assessment of the impact the Bill will have on the courts system.

Failing users

“The court service is failing its users and has done for some time,” he says.

“Court wait times are a major issue for landlords – particularly those who need to repossess property from anti-social tenants or those individuals who are in extreme rent arrears.

Beadle adds that, before the second reading of the Renters (Reform) Bill, the Government must set out clearly what court reform means and bring certainty to the sector.

“Section 21 was introduced to give property owners the confidence to bring their property to the market in the knowledge that they could deal swiftly with problem tenants,” he adds.

“With its abolition planned, landlords must have the same confidence that having given their tenant a legitimate reason, their repossession claim will be processed without delay.”

The evictions/possession system is not the only one creaking – the Law Society this week highlighted how “terrible backlogs in our criminal courts continue to spiral out of control”.

Picture credit: Twitter/X/Ben Beadle

View Full Article: ‘Crumbling eviction courts must be fixed before renting reforms go live’

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