16:47 PM, 29th January 2019, About 6 years ago 21
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The government has committed to introduce mandatory five yearly electrical safety checks fir the PRS and Landlords will be legally required to ensure that the inspectors they hire to carry out safety inspections have the necessary competence and qualifications to do so with tough financial penalties for those who fail to comply.
Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government press release goes on to say:
Minister for Housing and Homelessness, Heather Wheeler MP has announced that tenants will receive greater protection from new measures designed to ensure mandatory electrical inspections are carried out by competent and qualified inspectors.
Ministers will also publish new guidance which sets out the minimum level of competence and qualifications necessary for those carrying out these important inspections, meaning both landlords and tenants can be assured their home is safe from electrical faults.
Heather Wheeler MP said: “Everyone has the right to feel safe and secure in their own home. While measures are already in place to crack down on the small minority of landlords who rent out unsafe properties, we need to do more to protect tenants.
“These new measures will reduce the risk of faulty electrical equipment, giving people peace of mind and helping to keep them safe in their homes.
“It will also provide clear guidance to landlords on who they should be hiring to carry out these important electrical safety checks.”
The new guidance will provide clear accountability at each stage of the inspection process of what is required and whose responsibility it is, but without placing excessive cost and time burdens on landlords.
As well as making homes safer for tenants, improving electrical safety also benefits landlords by making a material improvement to their property and helping to prevent fires, which can cause costly and significant damage.
The measures announced today build on ongoing government action to drive up standards in the private rented sector and support people to feel safe and secure in their home ensuring millions of hard working tenants can live in the homes they deserve.
Ministers have also introduced tough new powers for councils to tackle the small minority of rogue landlords who rent out poor quality properties, including fines of up to £30,000 and banning orders for landlords who do not comply.
The Tenant Fees Bill, which will be implemented from 1 June, will bring an end to unnecessary, costly fees imposed by landlords or property agents – stopping tenants being charged hundreds of pounds for minor fixes to their homes and putting cash back in their pockets.
Together, these measures will help to create a housing market that works for everyone by making renting fair and more transparent for all.
The consultation Electrical safety in the private rented sector ran from 17 February to 16 April 2018 and received 582 responses from a range of organisations, including landlord associations, housing charities and local authorities, as well as individuals including electricians, landlords, tenants and fire and rescue representatives.
Following the consultation, the government announced in July that regulations would be introduced requiring private sector landlords to undertake 5 yearly safety checks of electrical installations in their properties. We intend to introduce new legislation on a phased basis, starting with new tenancies, as soon as Parliamentary time allows.
The new guidance will be broadly in line with existing regulations in Scotland, helping to ensure consistency and ease for landlords operating across the two nations.
A decision on penalties for non-compliance will be made before the secondary legislation is introduced. Penalties are likely to include a range of sanctions, with local authorities being given discretion to decide which is most appropriate in a particular case. Government will engage closely with local authorities in England when determining the penalties.
The measures announced today only cover the private rented sector. The forthcoming response to the social housing green paper consultation will cover a wide range of issues including the safety and quality of social housing.
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Whiteskifreak Surrey
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Sign Up13:06 PM, 30th January 2019, About 6 years ago
"Ministers will also publish new guidance which sets out the minimum level of competence and qualifications necessary for those carrying out these important inspections". No doubt LLs will have to check thoroughly the qualification of a person they are hiring. After being immigration officers we are now becoming Trade Board Quality Controllers (or something along these lines)...
Ian Morgan
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Sign Up14:05 PM, 30th January 2019, About 6 years ago
A plastic CU is a C3, Improvement Recommended. So, don't have to change, it is not unsafe. Just an electrician wanting to get some more cash! You can get a C3 for not having a sticker saying to test RCD every 6 months, I.e. it's not a dangerous or potentially dangerous situation.... This is why I am now a NAPIT registered domestic installer!
Mike
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Sign Up16:48 PM, 30th January 2019, About 6 years ago
🏍💨😮 I am getting on my bike and quit renting, enough is enough!
Simon Williams
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Sign Up18:42 PM, 30th January 2019, About 6 years ago
This WILL be expensive. Every time I have my HMO's re-done there always seems to be something new to be done which, taken with the inspection cost, leaves me very little change from £1000 per property.
As usual, good LLs will comply and rogues won't bother. If over a million rental homes need tests and associated remedial works in a relatively short time frame, expect electrician's prices to go through the roof.
Meanwhile, as has been stated, tenants portable items can be dodgy. Just last week a tenant's laptop charger caught fire (the transformer unit) and could have burnt the place down. Fortunately the tenant was home and took swift action.
I will be surprised if a single life will be saved by this, but electrician's will do rather nicely.
Annie Landlord
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Sign Up12:25 PM, 31st January 2019, About 6 years ago
Reply to the comment left by Rob Crawford at 30/01/2019 - 12:38
Yes I know the plastic boxes don't have to be swapped for the metal boxes, but I don't trust the people making the legislation!
CrocadileBoy
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Sign Up8:48 AM, 2nd February 2019, About 6 years ago
Large rent increases coming for my tenants and in some cases they will be given notice to leave. I’m expecting many properties will require some work, potentially a few needing full rewriting as the houses are old. However I guess the local authority owned properties in the same area and privately owned will not need the same tests but have the same electrics!
Jo Ramkissoon
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Sign Up9:06 AM, 2nd February 2019, About 6 years ago
Unless I'm mistaken, this new requirement refers to electrical installation testing, rather than appliance testing (PAT). Some comments seem to be confusing the two different tests, the former needing to be carried out every 5 years (in HMO's) and PAT tests annually (again, in HMO's).
I have no object to the 5-year installation test in single-lets. However, once again the non-level playing field between the PRS and local government / social housing is being highlighted. The Grenfell Tower disaster is mentioned in the consultation document as being a driver for this change, which is obviously not part of the PRS...
Bill
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Sign Up10:01 AM, 2nd February 2019, About 6 years ago
Reply to the comment left by Jo Ramkissoon at 02/02/2019 - 09:06
I think the point being made about PAT tests is that you can pass a property's electrics for safety, then a tenant cones along and plugs in a dangerous appliance which they need not PAT test. Then set your property on fire or kill themselves.
Whiteskifreak Surrey
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Sign Up12:12 PM, 2nd February 2019, About 6 years ago
Reply to the comment left by Monty Bodkin at 30/01/2019 - 10:32
I am sure it will come to the situation LLs will have to provide certificates for every single item in the property. They will also be made responisble for quality of electrical items TTs are bringing into the property, forcing them to provide every item properly checked. I am not against the electrical certificate, we do it every 5 years anyway. The problem will be with replacing the old istallation with a new one, it is very costly. Can I assume that these costs will be tax deductible? It is a replacement from old, non-compliant one to a new one, isn't it?
TheMaluka
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Sign Up12:02 PM, 3rd February 2019, About 6 years ago
Reply to the comment left by Mike at 30/01/2019 - 16:48
Make sure your bike is properly tested by a 'competent person' before you ride it.