Research lays bare failure to tackle criminal landlords

Research lays bare failure to tackle criminal landlords

0:01 AM, 12th November 2021, About 3 years ago 13

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Two thirds of English councils have prosecuted no landlords for offences related to standards in or the management of private rented housing over the last three years.

 The National Residential Landlords Association is warning that this failure to take action against the criminal minority brings the sector into disrepute and risks undermining further reform of the sector.

The NRLA obtained the data via Freedom of Information Act requests from 283 local authorities across England. In the three years between 2018/2019 and 2020/21, 67 per cent had not successfully prosecuted a landlord for offences related to standards in or the management of private rented housing. A further 10 per cent had secured just one successful prosecution.

Overall, just 20 local authorities were responsible for 77 per cent of all successful prosecutions. The three local authorities with the highest number of prosecutions (Southwark, Birmingham and Hull) were responsible for 38 per cent of all such action across England. Of these, Birmingham and Hull had no local landlord licencing scheme in place.

Among those councils responding, just 937 successful prosecutions of criminal landlords had taken place over the past three years. This is despite government estimates in 2015 that there may be around 10,500 rogue landlords in operation.

The new data follows research published earlier this year by the NRLA which showed that over the same three years, 53 per cent of English councils had issued no civil penalties against private landlords.

Whilst the Government has pledged to publish a white paper on reform of the private rented sector next year, the NRLA is warning that a failure to enforce the wide range of powers already available to tackle criminal and rogue landlords will critically undermine further reform.

The NRLA is calling on the Government to provide councils with the multi-year funding needed to ensure they are properly resourced to take action against criminal landlords. According to research by Unchecked UK the amount spent on housing standards by local authorities in England fell by 45 per cent between 2009 and 2019.

This must, the NRLA argues, happen alongside a requirement for councils to publish details of formal and informal enforcement activity against private landlords on an annual basis. This is vital to ensuring that they can be held to account for efforts to tackle criminal and rogue landlords.

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the National Residential Landlords Association, said: “The vast majority of responsible landlords are sick and tired of a failure to root out the minority who bring the sector into disrepute. The problem is not a lack of powers, but a failure by councils to enforce them properly.

“Whilst ensuring councils have the resources they need is vital, so too is the need for them to be more transparent about the levels of enforcement they are taking. In short, local authorities need to prioritise activity to find and root out criminal landlords, ensuring it is they who meet the costs of such efforts.

“Our research illustrates also that there is no clear link between the existence of a landlord licensing scheme and levels of prosecutions. Councils again need to be open with tenants and landlords about how such schemes are ensuring standards are met in rental housing.”


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Jessie Jones

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19:04 PM, 15th November 2021, About 3 years ago

Although currently a member, I have cancelled my renewal.
Membership of a trade body that does not represent those it purports to represent is doing us a misservice.
I have seen nothing from them to highlight the insurmountable problems with bringing huge numbers of old housing stock up to an EPC C. Nothing about how this will raise heating costs for tenants. Nothing about how disruptive it will be, and nothing about how it will cause a massive increase in house sales as landlords evict tenants to sell the houses to owner occupiers who will be the only people who can afford them.
They have shown little resistance to government plans to scrap Section 21, and do nothing to raise awareness of the wildly ineffectiveness of Selective Licensing.
It's almost as if the increase in regulation benefits the NRLA who sell training packages to cover the increased regulation.

Mick Roberts

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19:43 PM, 15th November 2021, About 3 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 15/11/2021 - 18:19
Yes,
What we didn't envisage at the beginning of Licensing, the good houses get worse cause funds spent on Licensing, landlords pack up cause had enough cause was doing good job, and thinking why am I paying for the bad landlords house up the road.
But the worst thing is, the lack of supply now and the rents sky rocketed. And of course, Benefit tenants can't move now.

wanda wang

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21:56 PM, 15th November 2021, About 3 years ago

Clearly NRLA need a new Chief Executive.

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