EXCLUSIVE: Shocking story behind council’s failed Selective Licensing bid
A leading member of the private rental market community in Luton has contacted LandlordZONE to highlight the actions of Luton Council over the past 18 months as it has attempted, so far unsuccessfully, to introduce a Selective Licensing scheme.
Luton Council has been thwarted in its attempts to introduce a scheme partly through the campaigning work of local landlords and letting agents, and partly because of errors made by the council.
Quick history
The council tried to introduce a scheme in April 2018, faced significant local opposition and then went silent about its plans until December 2019 when a council committee approved its plans, which were then rubber stamped by its executive committee several weeks later.
After two virtual meetings with concerned locals during July, the scheme was still going ahead. A group of agents, landlords and concerned residents then got together and formed Luton Landlords and Letting Agents Ltd, whose solicitor then launched a legal challenge.
The council then admitted errors in its implementation and decision making, and the scheme now appears to be on hold as the council says want to “continue to work with landlords to help drive up standards in the town and will be undertaking a further review to gauge the current need for/scope of any new Licensing scheme.”.
What went wrong
The person involved wishes to remain anonymous but says the story in the public domain is only part of the picture. They claim that:
- The communication and consultation efforts during the process have been poor and designed to keep locals out of the process.
- Luton Council over-egged problems within the private rental market to justify its Selective Licensing decision.
- The council revealed a conflict of interest – it said if landlords didn’t want to sign up to the scheme, they could rent their homes through the council’s own ‘social tenants’ lettings agency.
- Councillors Dave Stevenson (Private Sector Housing and Enforcement) and Councillor Tom Shaw ignored calls to justify the scheme or explain how it would improve standards in the town.
- Landlords and agents were given a matter of weeks to apply for the scheme which, given the 10,000 properties involved, was optimistic given it was during the height of the Covid lockdown.
- Luton Council failed to follow the proper statutory procedures for bringing in a Selective Licensing scheme and, it now transpires, did not have the authority to make a designation and bring in the scheme at all, which should have been submitted to the Secretary of State for approval, making the original attempts to introduce the scheme unlawful.
- Luton has wasted significant sums of taxpayer cash at a time when it claims to be under financial stress.
“We should be able to trust that people employed by the Council are competent to do the job, to not mismanage their resources, get value for money from staff and contractors, provide much needed services to local… not wasting taxpayer monies and trying to introduce stealth taxes,” our source says.
LandlordZONE has approached Luton Council for comment but so far not received a response.
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