The Regulator of Social Housing has today (9 July) published
the results of its
third monthly survey of housing associations and local
authorities about how they are coping with the coronavirus
pandemic.
The responses indicate the sector is continuing to maintain
adequate levels of service delivery in the areas surveyed and has
begun work towards recovery. Emergency and urgent repairs are
being completed, where lower priority health and safety checks
had been paused they are being rescheduled, repair backlogs are
stable and plans are being made to address them, and care and
support settings continue to maintain safe staffing levels and
essential services.
Over 90% of providers are reporting either all or most gas safety
checks are being completed although due to continuing challenges
accessing some properties, a slightly increased number of
providers are completing most, rather than all gas safety checks.
Providers report starting to address backlogs, but this is
balanced in some cases by the number of properties where the gas
safety check has just expired.
Fiona MacGregor, RSH Chief Executive
said:
We are pleased that housing associations and local authorities
are able to report continuing stable service delivery for
tenants and further progress towards recovery.
We recognise that some operational challenges still remain and
will continue to monitor the situation through these surveys
for the time being.
Notes to editors
-
The short survey asked providers to answer a single
multiple-choice question on each of five key areas: emergency
repairs; statutory gas safety checks; statutory fire safety
checks; asbestos, electrical, legionella and lift checks; and
care and support staffing levels. For each area it also asked
them to identify any key constraints, risks and mitigating
actions and the scale of any backlog and how this has changed
since the previous survey.
-
The survey and supporting guidance were made available for
providers to complete on RSH’s online data
collection portal NROSH+ from 19 to 25 June. It was issued to
all private registered providers with 1,000 or more
properties, local authorities, and to some smaller private
registered providers with over 500 properties and/or a high
proportion of care and support activity. The next round of
the survey will take place between 17 and 24 July.
-
We intend to run the survey monthly for as long as is
necessary and will keep the frequency under review. However,
where providers believe tenant safety is threatened or
viability is under strain, we urge them to
inform RSHimmediately through
their key contact at the regulator, or our Referrals and
Regulatory Enquiries team enquiries@rsh.gov.uk or SmallProviders@rsh.gov.uk or
by calling 0300 124 5225.
-
Please see our Coronavirus statements
page for the latest updates.
-
The Regulator of Social Housing promotes a viable, efficient
and well-governed social housing sector able to deliver homes
that meet a range of needs. It does this by undertaking
robust economic regulation focusing on governance, financial
viability and value for money that maintains lender
confidence and protects the taxpayer. It also sets consumer
standards and may take action if these standards are breached
and there is a significant risk of serious detriment to
tenants or potential tenants.