- Review of staff training and qualifications to improve social
housing services and ensure residents’ complaints are dealt with
effectively
- Residents encouraged to come forward and have their say on
future of social housing
- Social Housing White Paper will make sure tenants are safe,
listened to and live in good quality homes
Social housing residents will be better protected as part of a
review to ensure they are listened to, the Minister for Rough
Sleeping and Housing Eddie Hughes confirmed today (18 January
2022).
The review on qualifications and professional training will drive
up standards by making sure social housing staff are better
equipped to support tenants, deal effectively with complaints,
and make sure homes are good quality.
The Social Housing White Paper Professionalisation Review will
explore the qualifications currently available for staff, with
landlords, residents and trade bodies putting forward
recommendations to the government. It will also consider if
additional training is required to improve the service to
residents.
The government is now urging social housing residents to come
forward and have their say in the review and talk about their
experience dealing with social housing staff. They can also
suggest what changes they would like to see.
The Social Housing White
Paper set out how the government will ensure residents in
social housing are safe, listened to, live in good quality homes,
and have access to redress when things go wrong. This review is a
crucial step in ensuring staff and trained to support residents
and listen to their concerns.
The comes after thousands of social housing residents told the
government following the Grenfell tragedy that they felt their
landlords were failing to treat them with courtesy and respect.
It also follows the latest English Housing Survey report, which
shows that more than 59% of social housing residents who
complained were not happy with the response to their complaint.
At the same time the Housing Ombudsman has seen a 139% increase
in complaints in the past year.
Minister for Rough Sleeping and Housing said:
“Too many social housing residents have told me they feel like
they are not listened to or treated with respect – raising
complaints time and time again only for the problems not to be
fixed.”
“This needs to stop. This review announced today will drive up
the standard of services received by residents, making sure their
concerns are taken seriously and they have somewhere safe to
live.”
“The review is a key element of our Social Housing White Paper,
which is bringing forward wide-ranging improvements for tenants.”
Chartered Institute for Housing CEO Gavin Smart
said:
“As the professional body for housing, CIH is delighted to be
involved with DLUHC’s Professionalisation Review. Home is the
foundation on which we all build our lives, our experience during
the Covid-19 pandemic has reinforced just how important home
is.”
“We are pleased to have the opportunity to take part in the
review to help make sure that housing professionals have the
right tools to deliver good quality homes and services with
people at the heart.”
The government used feedback from residents to inform the
Social Housing White
Paper: Charter for Social Housing Residents.
As part of its work to implement the Charter, the Department for
Levelling Up, Housing and Communities is reviewing the Decent Homes
Standard, which sets out what makes a good and decent home,
and is considering whether this needs to be updated.
Crucially, the Charter will make sure tenants know how to raise
concerns when things go wrong - and can be confident that their
landlord will make things right. The government will also be
bringing forward legislation as soon as practicable to strengthen
consumer regulation of the sector.
The working group will include representatives from the Chartered
Institute for Housing, tenant engagement experts TPAS as well as
North Star Housing Group and Sanctuary Housing.
Landlords, residents and other interested parties can contribute
to the Social Housing White Paper Professionalisation Review by
emailing: Professionalisation.Review@communities.gov.uk.