10:48 AM, 10th September 2012, About 12 years ago 28
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Dear Sir
The combined housing provision of Local Authorities and Registered Social Landlords (e.g. Housing Associations) now provides no more UK homes than the Private Rented Sector.
Given that the UK Private Rented sector has matured significantly since the Housing Act was implemented in 1988 many landlord and tenant groups feel that a review is necessary.
On behalf of over 1 million Private Rented Sector landlords and over 4 million tenants living in their properties I ask you to set up a working committee to look into issues affecting this huge sector of the UK economy and to consider the amazing legacy you are in a position to leave with a reform of the Landlord and Tenant Act.
At the macro level the issues are:-
The Private Rented Sector has proven that with the right level of incentive it can provide significant help in solving the housing crisis. However, reform is necessary to deal with the three fundamental requirements for Private Rented Sector landlords:-
Many private landlords feel they are discriminated against.
An example of this discrimination is that Local Authorities and Registered Social Landlords are paid rents directly for benefits claimants. In the Private Rented Sector, benefits are paid to tenants and it is then up to the landlord to collect the rent. For a person whose business is not in the provision of housing the differences may not appear significant. However, given that most landlords operate on a profit margin of circa 20% of rent a none payer of just two rent can easily result in over one full year of lost profits. Recovery of this money from benefits claimants is rarely a commercially viable option. Small landlords are small businesses and very few are able to withstand losses of this nature.
Once simple yet fundamental issues such as this are addressed more private sector investment will pour into the PRS.
The cost of renting safe residential accommodation is rising due to scarcity, i.e. supply and demand. Correct this and strip out unnecessary levels of bureaucracy and provision of supply will grow.
Landlords who have lost faith in providing accommodation to benefits claimants are now turning to group operators such as Group 4 Security which are offering guaranteed rent and to return properties to landlords in good condition after a period of 5 years. However, these terms are only offered to landlords who are prepared for their properties to be let to asylum seekers and ex-offenders. The law abiding population are therefore disadvantaged. This is creating bad feeling and criminal ghettoisation and it could be argued that such conditions actually incentivise crime such as the 2011 riots!
Over 170,000 landlords and associated professionals subscribe to this Forum and its newsletter, many of the higher level discussions occur offline. For example, I am in regular contact with a number of European Park Home operators, each of which will be far more interested in pouring substantial investment into the PRS and joint ventures with local authorities if simple issues such as the above can be addressed. They don’t want to manage crime ghetto’s and nobody wants them to exist in their area. However, a model exists whereby in areas with the highest demand for low cost accommodation (e.g. London and the South East), detached modern prefabricated units can be provided for rent at less than the the cost of single persons LHA allowance and local authorities could be cut into a profit share even at this level if they were to provide land on peppercorn terms. The calculations to arrive at these claims include the cost of taking a brown or greenfield site and putting in all mains services as well as the costs of the pre-fabricated units. Clearly the investor operators of such developments will have similar concerns as local populations. They would much prefer to provide this affordable accommodation to low paid working tenants than creating ghetto’s of asylum seekers and ex-offenders. Why therefore, does the structure incentivise the opposite?
Landlords provide a service and good landlords deserve respect and equality. Where a tenant is not paying or behaving anti-socially landlords need similar rights to that of an Innkeeper, Hotelier, Hostel or Guest House Owner, i.e. the ability to have a person removed and, where necessary, arrested if services are not paid for or when a guest in their property is causing damage or behaving anti socially. In the same way that squatting is no longer a civil offence and is now a criminal offence, similar protection needs to be given to the basic needs of small businesses operating as landlords.
Yours faithfully
Please email or post this document to your local MP, media and press contacts, landlords association, tenants association and all other landlords, lettings agents and anybody else you know with an interest in the welfare of the UK Private Rented Sector.
Further to comments left below the requested e-petition has now been published, please see >>> http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/38471
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Property Snake and Property Bee
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Sign Up6:13 AM, 12th September 2012, About 12 years ago
Instead of Trading Standards officers dealing with enforcement, I would rather suggest Environmental Health Officers,who have training in housing condition and inspections in their qualifications. They would be ideal for a role such as is proposed
Matchmade
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Sign Up11:20 AM, 12th September 2012, About 12 years ago
EHOs might be suitable as assessors of properties on which justifiable complaints have been made, but I would resist a blanket regime that inspected *every* rental property, as if the whole country were covered by Article 4 directions and compulsory landlord registration at vast expense. In my experience EHOs are over-zealous and let modern over-refined notions of "safety" trump all other considerations, like respect for the historical fabric of a building and the creation of an attractive living environment. For example, I've had EHOs demand the removal of solid Victorian internal doors in favour of flat-fronted fire doors in houseshares/4-person 2-storey HMOs, the installation of sinks in every bedroom, the installation of fire safety lights, intumescent strips, locks on doors, wired-in smoke alarms and fire insulation underneath every tread and riser of a staircase - the list is endless and would have made the house feel like a set of bedsits or a hotel. Some EHOs and housing departments have a mania for micro-managing private sector landlords and treating them as criminals unless proven otherwise.
Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118
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Sign Up12:22 PM, 12th September 2012, About 12 years ago
Hello all. I have now created a PDF of this article as requested by Cosmo. If you would like a copy to forward on to your local MP, landlords association, tenants association or media contacts with your own covering letter please email mark@property118.com and I will send the PDF back to you.
Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118
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Sign Up14:26 PM, 12th September 2012, About 12 years ago
Hi Jane, I have created the e-petition am awaiting approval. I will post back here when it is approved. In the meantime I ask the Property118 community to think of which member organisations they could approach to seek support.
Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118
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Sign Up2:00 AM, 13th September 2012, About 12 years ago
A copy of this Open Letter to Mark Prisk MP can now be downloaded via the following URL >>> http://www.IAMALANDLORD.COM/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Open-Letter-to-Mark-Prisk.pdf
Please email or post this document to your local MP, media and press contacts, landlords association, tenants association and all other landlords, lettings agents and anybody else you know with an interest in the welfare of the UK Private Rented Sector.
Annette Stone
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Sign Up23:33 PM, 14th September 2012, About 12 years ago
I have sent off your article to Boris Johnson, two
people at Westminster City Council and a copy to David Cameron. I
have also sent to my MP who is called Matthew Offord. and I have met him
so I sent this as a personal thing. Will let you know if I get any response.”
Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118
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Sign Up21:01 PM, 15th September 2012, About 12 years ago
Here's something to get you all going.
I've been posting on a LinkedIn forum and a guy in Texas has been telling me what happens over there, Check this out >>>
"Bill Williamson • I have been a property manager since 1981 in San Antonio, TX. I am a RMP with the National Association of Residential Property Managers (NARPM).
In Texas we give a notice to vacate (three day notice) on the fifth day of the month if the rent is not paid. If the rent is not paid by the twelfth of the month, then we file an FE & D with the JP Court. The cost is $90 for one tenant on lease and $60 for each other on lease. The court date normally takes two weeks. Have been to JP Court over 150 times, never lost a case. The Judge will give the tenant five days to appeal the judgement or move. If the have not moved or paid what is owed, then you can get a Writt of prossion ($150) to remove the tenant and/or anyone else in property. This takes about a week. Here in Texas it can take a little over a month to evict a tenant."
Mark Alexander - Founder of Property118
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Sign Up9:05 AM, 2nd October 2012, About 12 years ago
Hello all - the requested e-petition has now been published, please see >>> http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/38471