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Feb
20

Labour MP presses government on timetable for Renters’ Reform Bill introduction

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Rosie Cooper, Labour MP for West Lancashire has received her response to a written question on the timetable for the introduction of the Renters Reform Bill. It has been two months since Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick MP announced the Renters Reform Bill as part of the Queens Speech. Responding to Ms Cooper’s question, Junior Minister […]

The post Labour MP presses government on timetable for Renters’ Reform Bill introduction appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.

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Feb
20

Flooding – both a landlord’s and a tenant’s nightmare…

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Storms & Floods:

Given the severity
of the bad weather and floods in some areas of the country recently,
the past weeks have been an extremely anxious time for some tenants
and landlords.

Unfortunately it
appears that these worries are not going to go away anytime soon.
Year on year we’ve seen certain locations at risk of flooding and
it could get worse. According to the Environment Agency there are
over 5 million properties in England alone that are at risk of
flooding.

Not only does it
turn lives up-side-down, if not handled sensitively it puts a
tremendous strain on the landlord tenant relationship. Good landlords
will take the view that the situation is devastating for their
tenants and do all they can to help.

This may involve
personally getting involved in the clearing operation and
establishing weather the home is still fit for habitation while the
necessary repairs are carried out.

Sooner or later
thoughts will turn to who is responsible for doing the repairs, the
cost of any temporary accommodation if the place is uninhabitable,
and whom pays for all the repairs and replacements?

In an areas that
have suffered extensive flooding tradespeople are likely to be very
busy, so getting someone to come quickly, even when the insurance
company has assessed the damage and given the go-ahead, could be
problematic and will probably take some time.

First off, the
tenants’ personal possessions are not the landlord’s
responsibility, so unless the tenants have paid for their own
tenant’s contents insurance they will find themselves forking out
for this. If the tenants don’t have contents insurance the local
council might be able to help them with items of necessity through
local charities and their welfare assistance schemes.

Secondly, assuming
the flood was in no way caused by the tenants, the landlord is pretty
much responsible for everything else: any structural damage to the
property, the supply of water, electricity and gas, and re-instating
any damaged appliances, carpets, furniture etc., supplied with the
property. Effectively the landlord must reinstate the property to as
it was before the flood.

Tenants have the
responsibility of minimising flood damage to the property and its
consents as it occurs, within the limits of personal safety, and
informing the landlord and the authorities about the situation
without delay.

If the property is
habitable and the tenant is willing to “work around” or should we
say “live around” the repair work as it progresses, then
negotiations may be entered into regarding some form of proportionate
rent reduction to compensate for the inconvenience.

If agreement can be
met in these circumstances, the onus is then on the landlord to
progress the work as quickly as possible, or at leat within a
reasonable time, given what was mentioned above, that in severely
flooded areas trades skills may be at a premium and trades people
hard to secure.

If the property is
uninhabitable then the situation is much more complicated. The
landlord’s insurance may cover for temporary accommodation for the
tenants, and if the repairs can be carried out within that period,
then all well and good. As the flood was not the fault of the
landlord and everything else being equal, such as the convenience of
the new accommodation, then no further compensation for the tenants
would necessarily be involved.

Where the landlord’s
insurance does not cover for the temporary accommodation, and whether
the remedial work is going to be long-term, than the tenants would
need to contact the local authority for re-housing. There is no
immediate obligation on the landlord to re-house the tenants.

However, if a flood
in the property was caused by the landlord’s neglect, a breach of
Section 11 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, which states the
property must be kept in a good state of repair, then responsibility
for rehousing the tenants, and paying the costs of rehousing, would
be on the landlord.

The tenants should
be treated as a priority case by the local authority in this sort of
emergency, bearing in mind there could be many others in the same
situation, but it is an emergency. The local council has a legal
responsibility to find the tenants and family suitable temporary
accommodation, and the tenants might have to register as homeless to
get this process moving.

The landlord and
tenant may want to agree a surrender of the tenancy if the repairs
are likely to take a long time, but otherwise where the tenants wish
to return, they should be continuing to pay the rent, albeit at a
mutually agreed reduced rate, given the inconvenience to them.

Alternatively, where
the tenants are prepared to find and pay for temporary accommodation
themselves, then negotiations could be entered into where the
landlord may suspend the rent payments or pay reasonable costs
towards the alternative accommodation.

For those tenants on
housing benefits, they should seek advice as to what payments are
available toward their existing home’s rent, the temporary
accommodation home’s rent, or a contribution towards both.

Landlords should
check their landlord’s Insurance policy to make sure it provides
adequate cover in the event of flooding.

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Flooding – both a landlord’s and a tenant’s nightmare… | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Flooding – both a landlord’s and a tenant’s nightmare…

Feb
20

Major landlord calls for government to change direction on PRS

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A leading private rented sector player in both London and beyond tells LandlordZONE that he and the fellow landlords are getting fed up with the government’s conflicted and increasingly political approach to renting.

A senior figure from the property world has made an impassioned plea for central government and local councils to change direction and work with landlords instead of increasingly attempting to trip them up.

The landlord, who has asked that his comments are made anonymously for fear of upsetting local politicians in the areas he operates within, says he is becoming increasingly frustrated by the rhetoric coming from the government, and the conflicting messages he receives from local councils.

The industry figure, who is a significant player in the UK rental market, says he is unhappy that all landlords are tarred with the same brush of being ‘rogue’ even though this type makes up a miniscule percentage of the landlord population.

“There are a lot more rogue tenants than there are rogue landlords,” he says.

“But the current climate is political rather than common sense – you have a government which is trying to appeal with its policies to the millions of potential tenant voters, even though these policies will eventually work against the interest of tenants,” he says.

“This has created an atmosphere where the message from on top is that landlords are ripping tenants off and that we are the bad guys.”

He says politicians need to realise, and quickly, that landlords are providing a service that national and local governments are failing to provide themselves through the social and affordable housing routes.

“We are doing them a favour and yet the politicians are bad-mouthing us, are making it increasingly difficult to evict tenants while local authorities too often brief tenants against us and make it difficult to get licences for properties,” he adds.

He also believes the current policies are wrong-headed because the extra costs of paying fees that tenants once bore, and the spread of expensive selective licensing schemes, will push rents up and make it harder for people to afford rented properties.

For example, in one London borough it costs him £50,000 to licence his 100 apartments within its selective licensing scheme every five years.

“It’s just crazy – landlords can’t endlessly subsidise what is going on,” he says.

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Major landlord calls for government to change direction on PRS | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Major landlord calls for government to change direction on PRS

Feb
19

Durham is latest council to introduce huge new selective licensing scheme

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Landlords now have five weeks to let the council know their views on the schemes which will cover 65% of the county and 51,000 private rented properties.

Landlords are being given the chance to share
their views on a proposed large-scale selective licensing scheme across County
Durham.

Covering
43 of its 66 areas – 65% of the county – it would include 51,000 private rented
properties, as part of the county council’s bid to crack down on anti-social
behaviour, low demand and deprivation.

Durham County Council has already run three
selective licensing schemes in Dean Bank, Ferryhill, Chilton West and Wembley
in Easington Colliery, that ended in 2019.

It says
these made a positive impact, with a drop in reported crime and anti-social
behaviour and positive improvements in both the condition and management of
private rented properties.

It
hopes the new five-year scheme will prompt better managed and maintained
housing through the scheme and result in fewer empty properties, improve the
health and wellbeing of tenants and reduce anti-social behaviour, while
providing support and training to landlords.

Councillor
Kevin Shaw, cabinet member for strategic housing and assets, says: “Through the
selective licensing scheme, we will be able to work closely with landlords to
provide information, advice, guidance and tenancy support.

“We
will also be able to work with tenants themselves to help improve the standards
of housing and with our communities to reduce anti-social behaviour.”

This proposed areas include:
Consett West and Castleside, Hutton Henry and Wingate, Langley Park, Cornsay
and Satley, Crook South and Willington North and Cassop and Coxhoe. A council
consultation ends on 27th April.

Find out more
from the council website.

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Durham is latest council to introduce huge new selective licensing scheme | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Durham is latest council to introduce huge new selective licensing scheme

Feb
19

Housing minister reveals plans to shake up ‘unfair’ rentcharge system

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Landlords facing unreasonable estate charges for their properties may soon have reason to celebrate as the government says it will repeal the key legislation and standardise the system.

New Housing Minister Christopher Pincher has
promised to begin the process of shaking up the rentcharge
system in England.

In his first foray into housing, Esther McVey’s replacement said he was now
considering the Regulation
of Property Agents working group report and would announce the next steps, “in
due course”.

But he has
confirmed today that the government will repeal the much-maligned Law of
Property Act 1925 and its Section 121 provisions, which enable rentcharges to
be levied.

Said Pincher: “Where people pay estate rentcharges, it is
not right that these property owners have limited rights to challenge these
costs.

“That is why
the Government intends to legislate to give freeholders on private and mixed-tenure
estates equivalent rights to leaseholders to challenge the reasonableness
of estate rent charges.”

A written question from Shadow Secretary of State
for Housing, John Healey, asked Pincher when he planned to bring forward
legislative proposals to protect freeholders against service charges and other
fees.

In reply, he said the Government had asked the working group to
look at how service charges for leaseholders – and estate rent charges for
resident freehold homeowners – could be made more transparent.

The group also considered if other fees and
charges, such as administration charges or permission fees, are justified or
whether they should be capped or banned.

The report, published last summer, was
prompted by accusations that management charges within estates are unfair, not
transparent and difficult to manage.

It suggested the Government looks into a ‘mandatory standardised charges’
form for both leaseholders and freeholders.

Pincher
added: “The Government is committed to promoting fairness and transparency for
homeowners and ensuring that consumers are protected from abuse and poor
service.”

Join in the
latest debate about rentcharges on the LandlordZONE
forum
.

Read
the RoPA report in full.

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Housing minister reveals plans to shake up ‘unfair’ rentcharge system | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Housing minister reveals plans to shake up ‘unfair’ rentcharge system

Feb
19

Today in politics: ONS data, HMOs and Liverpool licensing

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Today we examine the latest ONS statistics, MP questions on HMO planning rules and Liverpool licensing. ONS: PRS rents up by less than inflation The Office for National Statistics has published the latest Index of Private Housing Rental Prices for the UK for January 2020.  It says:  Private rental prices paid by tenants in the UK rose […]

The post Today in politics: ONS data, HMOs and Liverpool licensing appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.

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Feb
19

Call of the Week-Responsibility for repairs

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Call of the week

The UK has been battered by some Storm Dennis this week, with many parts of the country experiencing incredibly strong winds. One RLA member gave our advice team a call this week, because heavy rainfall had meant that several things needed repairing at his rental property. He had several properties in his portfolio, and his […]

The post Call of the Week-Responsibility for repairs appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.

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Feb
19

LATEST: ITV Tonight news team to investigate Airbnb’s growing power

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Presenter Jonathan Maitland will look at how the platform has revolutionised travel accommodation, helped landlords increase revenue but also reveal downsides for communities.

ITV’s flagship news programme Tonight is to
broadcast an in-depth and critical look at Airbnb five years after it took hold
in the UK.

To be aired tomorrow (Thursday 20th
February) at 7.30pm and presented by Jonathan Maitland, the programme will look
at how Airbnb has grown into a multimillion dollar behemoth revolutionising
both the way people book holidays and business accommodation, and how
increasing numbers of landlords make money from their properties.

“It’s been reported that 7% of residential
landlords have moved their properties to the short-stay market,” says Paul
Shamplina of Landlord Action.

The programme will also look at the downsides
of Airbnb’s success and examine two neighbourhoods where it’s impacting the
traditional housing market negatively.

This includes hollowing out areas as tourist
ghettos, driving up rents for longer-term tenants as supply to the traditional
market is squeezed, and encouraging the spread of ‘party houses’ used by stag
and hen-do organisers as a cheaper alternative to hiring a venue or hotel.

This final problem is one that LandlordZONE
has been reporting on for some time including last week when Airbnb told us
that it was preparing to take measures to ban these kinds of bookings, which
can lead to localised anti-social behaviour.

The Tonight team will also reveal how platforms such as Airbnb, HomeAway and Booking.com are being used by rogue tenants to sub-let properties they have rented via long-term contracts, for a profit. Two weeks ago, industry association ARLA Propertymark published a withering report on Airbnb, which the platform subsequently said featured ‘flawed conclusions’.

Watch Paul Shamplina’s video about the programme

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – LATEST: ITV Tonight news team to investigate Airbnb’s growing power | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: LATEST: ITV Tonight news team to investigate Airbnb’s growing power

Feb
19

Consultation launched on extending minimum notice period for Section 21 in Wales

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The Equality, Local Government and Communities Committee has launched a consultation on plans announced by the Welsh Government last week to extend the minimum notice period for serving a Section 21 in Wales from two to six months. Under plans announced last week, landlords in Wales would be unable to gain possession of their property […]

The post Consultation launched on extending minimum notice period for Section 21 in Wales appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.

View Full Article: Consultation launched on extending minimum notice period for Section 21 in Wales

Feb
19

Estimated number of Landlords falls to 7 year low

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Hamptons International’s monthly lettings index shows that the number of landlords in the private rental sector (PRS) has fallen to a seven-year low. Over the last two years the rental sector in Great Britain has shrunk with the total number of privately rented homes falling by 156,410 since its peak in 2017.

The post Estimated number of Landlords falls to 7 year low appeared first on Property118.

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