Renters’ Reform Bill publication sends the PRS ‘back to the Dark Ages’

Renters’ Reform Bill publication sends the PRS ‘back to the Dark Ages’

8:48 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago 85

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The long-awaited government plan to overhaul the private rented sector (PRS) with the publication of the Renters’ Reform Bill has been condemned as ‘going back to the dark Ages’.

The government says that more than 11 million tenants in England will now enjoy safer, fairer and higher-quality homes thanks to the introduction of the ‘ground-breaking’ Bill.

It adds that the legislation is a ‘once-in-a-generation’ opportunity that meets the government’s 2019 manifesto commitment.

That’s when the Tories promised to abolish section 21 ‘no fault’ evictions and give renters the power to challenge ‘bad’ landlords without fear of losing their home.

But Neil Patterson, the managing director of Property118 slammed the law’s publication and said: “There’s nothing for landlords to rejoice about – this law will take the PRS back to the Dark Ages.”

‘Too many renters are living in damp, unsafe, cold homes’

Michael Gove, the Housing Secretary, said: “Too many renters are living in damp, unsafe, cold homes, powerless to put things right, and with the threat of sudden eviction hanging over them.

“This government is determined to tackle these injustices by offering a New Deal to those living in the Private Rented Sector; one with quality, affordability, and fairness at its heart.”

He added: “Our new laws introduced to Parliament today will support the vast majority of responsible landlords who provide quality homes to their tenants, while delivering our manifesto commitment to abolish Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions.

“This will ensure that everyone can live somewhere which is decent, safe and secure – a place they’re truly proud to call home.”

New bill also protects more than two million landlords

The government says the new bill also protects more than two million landlords, making it easier for them to recover their properties when they need to.

This means landlords can sell their property if they want to, move in a close family member or deal with tenants who refuse to pay rent.

The new law will strengthen powers to quickly evict anti-social tenants by widening the disruptive and harmful activities that can lead to eviction.

There will also be a reformed courts process which will be largely digitised to help ensure the new tenancy system works for everyone.

‘Government’s pledge to ensure landlords can swiftly recover properties’

The chief executive of the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA), Ben Beadle, said: “We welcome the government’s pledge to ensure landlords can swiftly recover properties from anti-social tenants and those failing to pay their rent.

“Plans to digitise court hearings will also improve the speed at which legitimate possession cases are processed.”

He adds: “The NRLA will continue to work with the government to ensure the detail of the Bill is fair for responsible landlords and tenants alike.”

Quicker and cheaper resolutions to disputes

There’s also a new Ombudsman planned that will provide quicker and cheaper resolutions to disputes.

Plus, landlords will get a new digital Property Portal to understand their obligations and help tenants make better decisions when signing a new tenancy agreement.

The government says this will give confidence to good landlords while driving the criminal minority out of business.

Legal right to request a pet in their home

The new Bill will also enable tenants to have the legal right to request a pet in their home – which a landlord must consider and ‘cannot unreasonably refuse’.

That means landlords will be able to require pet insurance to cover any damage to their property.

The Bill will also:

  • Apply the Decent Homes Standard to the PRS for the first time, giving renters safer, higher quality homes and remove the blight of poor-quality homes in local communities. This will help deliver the government’s Levelling Up mission to halve the number of non-decent rented homes by 2030.
  • Make it illegal for landlords and agents to have blanket bans on renting to tenants in receipt of benefits or with children – ensuring no family is unjustly discriminated against when looking for a place to live.
  • Strengthen councils’ enforcement powers and introduce a new requirement for councils to report on enforcement activity – to help target criminal landlords.

The government says the Bill is a key part of the government’s mission to level up across the country and follows the wider housing reforms in the Social Housing Regulation Bill and Building Safety Act.

These address the systemic issues identified following the Grenfell Tower tragedy on improving the safety and quality of social housing and how tenants are treated by their landlords.

‘The Renters’ Reform Bill is a huge opportunity’

Dan Wilson Craw, the acting director of Generation Rent, said: “The Renters’ Reform Bill is a huge opportunity to improve the lives of the 11 million people who now rent from private landlords in England.

“Arbitrary Section 21 evictions make it impossible for tenants to put down roots and report problems about their home with confidence.

“Abolishing them will take away much of the stress of renting and improve communication and trust between tenants and landlords.”

He added: “The new Property Portal and Ombudsman have the potential to make it much harder for criminal landlords to operate.

“These reforms wouldn’t be happening without the tireless campaigning of members of the Renters Reform Coalition and thousands of renters over many years.

“We look forward to reading the Bill and working with ministers and Parliamentarians to make sure the legislation achieves what it sets out to do.”


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Alan Bailey

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9:59 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Does anyone know how this bill will affect landlords who want to move back into the property themselves when they want to? Say if they come back from overseas etc?

Reluctant Landlord

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10:04 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

anyone know if its possible to watch this being proposed live?

Alan Bailey

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10:07 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by DSR at 17/05/2023 - 10:04
Talk radio will be live for PMQ

Dylan Morris

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10:28 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Alan Bailey at 17/05/2023 - 09:59Well you won’t be able to issue a Section 21 notice or even simply ask your tenant to leave as that will be strictly illegal. The fixed term of the tenancy and the fact that it has expired will be completely irrelevant. So you will have to apply to the Court and convince a judge you’re worthy of being given a possession order. You will need to supply evidence as to your circumstances and explain why exactly you want to move back in. There’s not going to a specialist housing court as originally muted so expect your case to take several years as the courts (already at breaking point) won’t be able to deal with the huge number of additional cases. Plus you will have court fees and the costs of a specialist eviction company if you don’t feel confident to handle the court process yourself. Probably best not to rent your property out in the first place.

Dino Saw

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10:32 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

So Tenants are allowed pets, we can ask for insurance… what happens if they don’t take out insurance… is that a valid reason to evict… and then what happens if they get it after eviction last day of eviction after all costs by landlord… tenants won’t get insurance and there is nothing. Landlords can do with this reform bill…
What happens if damage is caused… what damage is classed as an evictable reason - how is this defined - it won’t be so this is going to be an issue… cannot take big deposits now so if tenant leaves and leaves damage landlords are not covered..
Tenants can decorate now but put it back in same condition at end of tenancy - they won’t or will paint over light switches, handles and not do a professional job leaving landlord to replace and repair everything (I know about this one).
So now landlords are fleeing the industry, I have personally put up some rents by 20% to get ready for this (my rents were cheaper but now are up to market rates)
So what we have here is the Wild West for tenants - because landlords can chase tenants and will not get back all costs and be left with a load of aggro..
So Wild West goes like this;
Tenant upside;
1) Tenants can decorate as they want
2) Tenants can modify property as they want
3) Tenants can have pets
4) Tenants can damage as they want
5) tenants can complain it’s landlords responsibility to fix their breakages

There is no good for tenants from this as rules are already in place to deal with all these issues - downside for tenants is;

1) Less properties to choose from
2) Higher rents
3) Stricter affordability rules
4) greater housing crisis

There are no winners here!

Old Mrs Landlord

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10:51 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by DSR at 17/05/2023 - 09:29
I fear you will find that Councils refuse to answer such questions using the excuse that it breaches GDPR (Data protection). Whether it does is questionable but they trot out this as their reason.

Reluctant Landlord

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10:55 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Old Mrs Landlord at 17/05/2023 - 10:51
then that's reason enough to not progress with a tenancy then. They are then shooting the tenant in the foot.

Yvonne Francis

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11:00 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by York student landlord at 17/05/2023 - 07:08
If Which is to be belived, in an artical dated today, then it looks as if fixed term tenancies are not to be abolished.

https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/renters-reform-bill-introduces-big-changes-for-tenants-and-landlords-a1EJe4G2iU0w

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11:22 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by DSR at 17/05/2023 - 09:29
DSR, I just want to echo what you are saying. I dont take pets or DSS. Several hard costly experiences. It's easy for me now to do this now covertly as an advert will typically get 100 enquiries and I cherry pick, ask for employment details, references etc and find a genuinely grateful tenant wanting a home rather than an entitled wet behind the ears leftie treating me like their mum. Tenants will need to sell themselves as supply drops, and those with few saleable qualities are going to be forced into lower quality housing.

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11:30 AM, 17th May 2023, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Old Mrs Landlord at 17/05/2023 - 10:51
yes, but it means that the tenancy was NOT turned down due to DSS discrimination it was turned down because of reference failure.

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