16:57 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago 74
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Rishi Sunak has once again shown his true colours as a Prime Minister who does not care about the interests of landlords and the private rented sector.
In a shocking move, he has scrapped the plans to enforce minimum Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) ratings for rented homes, which would have required landlords to upgrade their properties to a C rating. To me, the EPC rules should either not have been introduced without a firm and achievable deadline – an insinuated deadline created lots of confusion among landlords – or the government shouldn’t have bothered with the notion that only rented homes needed energy improvements.
The PM’s decision is a slap in the face for thousands of landlords who have already invested in improving the energy efficiency of their properties, in anticipation of the new regulations.
Some landlords have spent thousands of pounds on installing insulation, double glazing, new boilers and renewable energy sources.
And let’s not forget that thousands of landlords will have sold their properties – some will have offloaded at a loss – because they could not afford the necessary EPC improvements.
For those landlords who have already invested in upgrading their properties to meet the EPC standards, Sunak’s decision is a bitter blow.
They have spent their hard-earned money on making their properties more energy-efficient, and now they are being told that it was all for nothing.
This is a betrayal of their trust, and it will leave many landlords feeling resentful.
However, I accept that without EPC criteria, there is no guarantee that landlords will invest in making their properties more energy efficient.
Why can’t we have a staged approach? Why couldn’t we move to a D rating, with exemptions for listed homes, and then a few years later to a C? (And then, I’m guessing, the climate crisis hoaxers would demand an A rating…).
But we can’t pretend that something like this was not in the offing – I raised the issue when I asked: ‘Landlord’s EPC deadline: Does anyone else feel conned?‘
This is when the landlord’s friend Michael Gove hinted that too much was being asked of landlords, and the costs were too high.
Now, Sunak claims that he made this U-turn because he felt the costs involved were too much at a time when many people are facing financial difficulties.
He also said that he wanted to have a more honest and pragmatic debate about how to achieve Net Zero emissions.
But these are just empty words from a Prime Minister who has no vision or leadership. Remember, this is a leader who wasn’t voted into power by us or even the Conservative Party members. He’s a placeman for the Parliamentary loons running (ruining?) this country.
Landlords and landlord organisations have been asking for a firm deadline for the EPC regulations for years now, so we had something to work towards.
It didn’t come.
I’ve also got issues with Sunak’s argument that scrapping the EPC criteria is necessary to help landlords and tenants during the cost-of-living crisis.
This argument is flawed because scrapping the EPC ratings will not help landlords in the long term.
In fact, it will probably make it more difficult to rent out homes in the future since tenants will want to live in energy-efficient homes that are cheaper to heat.
Landlords who do not invest in making their properties more energy-efficient will find it difficult to attract tenants.
Indeed, we saw this week that landlord investors are unwilling to buy a home that doesn’t have a C rating. This is the direction of travel, whether we like it or not.
Sunak is not only betraying landlords but also tenants because landlords who have improved their EPC rating have had to put rents up. Sunak has belatedly acknowledged this.
This is in a ‘cost-of-living’ crisis.
Now Sunak says he is still committed to meeting the 2050 Net Zero target.
What does this mean? What can we expect as landlords?
Landlords deserve better than this.
We also deserve a Prime Minister who respects our contribution to the housing market and supports us to make our properties greener and more comfortable.
After this debacle, will landlords vote Conservative at the next election? The answer will be Yes because the prospect of Labour getting in (which I don’t for a second believe they will) means the EPC regulations will be back on the agenda, along with other draconian legislation aimed at wiping out those nasty landlords in the UK.
Who will fight our corner? Who will stand up and explain that without our investment efforts and time spent providing homes, the country needs us?
And if we are to improve EPC ratings in the future, make it for ALL homes not just those in the private rented sector. Afterall, the ‘climate crisis’ affects everyone in the country and not just private sector tenants – does it not?
But, just in case, here’s a helpful message to a future government: Please reinstate section 24 so we have a chance of making a profit and commit to helping us provide the desperately needed warm homes that tenants need.
It’s not too much to ask, is it?
Until next time,
The Landlord Crusader
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dismayed landlord
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Sign Up13:41 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by John Mac at 22/09/2023 - 13:04
Go ahead. I think it’s relevant. Even though I clearly made a massive error. My bad. I accept that.
John MacAlevey
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Sign Up13:42 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
Dear Readers
It was pretty clear to me that the lack of availability of contractors/materials/finance to begin to test & improve the nations housing stock with uprated EPC`s was never going to happen.
These ideas, plans & wishes from HMG are the usual pressing of the FEAR button that this administartion is addicted to pressing to compel the populace to act.
There is aboslutley no chance of UK housing stock achieving `C` in the next 10 years.
Seething Landlord
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Sign Up13:50 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
Are you mad? I have lost count of the number of times that on this and other forums I and others have criticised the numerous articles from all sorts of self-appointed experts urging landlords to get ahead of the game by acting now to bring their properties up to band C. The only sensible approach has been to wait for Government's response to the consultation in which the proposals were floated and now we have it - they have implicitly recognised that the whole thing was ridiculous from the start and would have a devastating impact on the PRS.
The EPC rating system would also have needed revision and abandoning the exercise has removed the pressure for what would probably have caused even more turmoil and unintended consequences.
Well done Rishi and good riddance to the nightmare proposals is my reaction.
Whether the next Government will have the same clarity of vision remains to be seen, but in the meantime landlords will act to make improvements dictated by common sense and business need rather than following the mindless uneconomic rubbish commonly churned out by the EPC algorithm.
Reluctant Landlord
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Sign Up14:02 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
I will look at possible options to increase the EPC at each end of tenancy but all will be cheap quick wins only.
Big stuff = rent increases over an above the 'norm'. End of. The benefit is purely for the tenant and the tenant will have no choice than to pay for it.
At the moment bigger upgrades are optional. I can choose to do the work, raise the rent or not do the work and not raise the rent. With the market as it is, I choose not to and the tenants I have I am sure prefer rent financial stability too knowing no huge hike is comming.
When I am forced to do so by law then that choice is taken away from both me and the tenant. I wil decide at that point to either do the work and increase the rent accordingly or sell up. Either way the tenant loses out. None of my tenants will ever have the ability to buy the property from me.
John MacAlevey
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Sign Up14:07 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by Reluctant Landlord at 22/09/2023 - 14:02
Low energy bulbs give the best uplift in EPC rating at minimal cost.. The whole EPC rating method/s is skewed & terribly inaccurate. Don`t bother until you actually have to do, then, like many others, you`ll want it doing which then leads to lack of availability of contractors/materials etc..then HMG will postpone the plan..forget worry about something else.
Seething Landlord
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Sign Up14:08 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
To clarify, my comment was not directed at Dismayed Landlord but to the original author (Landlord Crusader) regarding his response to a PM showing the courage and acumen to abandon a policy that was flawed from the start.
dismayed landlord
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Sign Up14:08 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
Reply to the comment left by Seething Landlord at 22/09/2023 - 13:50
I agree. I was mad . Massive error. Never did it again. Sold 13 as they were. . proved very profitable. .I’d like the others to go but the courts are a pain right now. Will serve S14 asap. One under offer. If the govt and shelter do not care then why should I? No longer interested in doing the right thing- just do as you want.
Chris Rattew
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Sign Up14:25 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
Sunak should not be blamed, but those who worked on the plan before him. I had continued as normal, as it was impossible to meet our responsibilities and meet the required EPCs. Sunak had no choice. We may have been able to improve our ratings, while increasing emissions, as it was a tick-box exercise, and the cost would have delayed the real improvements.
We may have one of our three properties efficient in 2025 and another in 2028, but the third one will be ready in 2030 or later.
keith taylor
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Sign Up15:58 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
The problem is that we have bought properties under one regime. We are then asked to upgrade under a different one. Landlords are just a convenient bogey man. Personally I am glad to see the plans to upgrade to C dropped. Just pushing costs onto landlords was always the wrong approach
Judith Wordsworth
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Sign Up16:07 PM, 22nd September 2023, About A year ago
It was a proposal which has not gone ahead so why should anyone feel conned? If landlords chose to jump the PRS ship before became required that was their choice. Same as those that have sold up when the Renters Reform Bill began its journey - not that its got very far as not even its 2nd reading of 12 is imminent. And might not even go through. Though interesting to see all those podcasts and pay for courses around before any amendments or changes have been publicly aired.