Private Renting: Homeless and Vulnerable People 4.29
pm Richard Benyon (Newbury) (Con) I beg to move,
That this House has considered private renting solutions for
homeless and vulnerable people. It is a pleasure to serve
under your chairmanship, Sir Alan. I refer hon. Members to my entry
in the Register...Request free trial
Private Renting: Homeless and Vulnerable People
4.29 pm
-
(Newbury) (Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered private renting solutions
for homeless and vulnerable people.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Alan. I refer hon. Members to my entry in the Register of
Members’ Financial Interests. I will talk about the housing
problems around the country, but of course every area is
different, and I concede that some of the ideas and
statistics that I apply to my arguments may help the
situation differently in different parts of the country.
The private rented sector is an increasingly important
route out of homelessness. When renting works for homeless
people, it can be life changing. It is often a huge step
towards finding a job, reconnecting with family and
rebuilding lives.
-
(Mitcham and
Morden) (Lab)
Is the hon. Gentleman aware that the single biggest reason
for homelessness in the UK, particularly in London, is
eviction from assured shorthold tenancies in the private
rented sector?
-
I am well aware that the hon. Lady and her colleagues
frequently deal with cases in which people were made
homeless for precisely that reason, which is an increasing
problem. I will come on to talk about some of those issues,
and I hope that the Minister can add some flesh to the
bones of the White Paper that was published yesterday and
the work that he is doing on tenure with the private rented
sector.
Finding a home in the private rented sector can be
difficult, and we all know that despite the Government’s
welcome move to ban letting agent fees, up-front costs
often act as a barrier for people trying to access the
private rented sector. Research by Crisis shows that 16% of
landlords report increasing the deposit when renting to
homeless people, 12% increase the rent required in advance
and 15% increase the contractual rent.
By way of example, I want to pay tribute to a constituent
of mine, Adrian Smith, who runs Swift Logistics in Newbury.
He discovered that one of his temporary agency workers had
collapsed due to epilepsy, because he was finding it
difficult to manage his medication as he was homeless and
living in a tent. Adrian stepped in, gave him a clean
uniform, offered him a permanent position and talked to him
about his situation—things that I am sure he would do for
any of his employees who were going through a rough patch.
Adrian then started to look for accommodation for that
employee. There was very little affordable accommodation in
Newbury that suited that individual, and anything that
Adrian found was made impossible because once the landlord
or his agent discovered that the prospective tenant had
debt problems—he had a county court judgment against
him—they demanded six months’ rent up front. We can see the
vicious circle here. I see some of the ideas put forward by
organisations such as Crisis, which I will come on to talk
about, as possible solutions to such cases.
-
(Shrewsbury and
Atcham) (Con)
My hon. Friend will come on to talk about various
organisations that help people with homelessness.
Shrewsbury Homes for All in my constituency does a good job
of trying to help homeless people. Does he agree that the
Government ought to do more to help such organisations?
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Unless we are extremely hard-hearted, we are all moved not
only by the huddled figures in doorways and the cases that
come to us of people who are either homeless or likely to
be homeless but by organisations in our constituencies such
as the one my hon. Friend mentions. It is when those
organisations work with local authorities and a Government
that all point in the same direction that we can get real
solutions to this problem, and I am sure that that happens
in his constituency.
The Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research found
that 55% of landlords said they were unwilling to let to
tenants in receipt of housing benefit, and even
more—82%—were unwilling to rent to homeless people. The
majority of local authorities agree that it has become more
difficult for single homeless people to access private
rented accommodation.
-
(Airdrie and Shotts)
(SNP)
I pay tribute to the hon. Gentleman for securing the
debate. Does he acknowledge that the number of private
landlords who turn away housing benefit claimants is partly
to do with cuts to housing benefit and the fact that it is
more of a struggle for tenants to pay the difference to
their landlords?
-
It is for a multitude of reasons, but the hon. Gentleman is
right that that factor has contributed in certain areas. I
applaud private landlords who take housing benefit tenants.
Not all of them do, and they need to be supported in trying
to do so. I recognise that that is part of the problem, and
some of the solutions that I will talk about go precisely
to that point.
-
Mr (Enfield, Southgate)
(Con)
The all-party parliamentary group on refugees has found
that landlords increasingly are not taking another category
of people: newly recognised refugees. They are unable to
provide sufficient documentation to prove their status and
struggle to get a deposit and first month’s rent in the
28-day move-on period to ensure that they get the tenancy
that they deserve.
-
Many local authorities are doing noble work in trying to
provide accommodation for the refugees—particularly the
Syrian refugees—who we have taken in. I pay tribute to my
hon. Friend’s local authority for doing its best. However,
there will be several problems at the next stage, because
we want those people to be assimilated into our society,
get work and be able to function like any other person. We
want to ensure that we have systems in place to allow them
to transition from the support that they get at the moment.
I have direct experience of that in several areas, and I am
keen to talk to him about trying to find longer-term
solutions to the issue.
The problem that we are talking about is coupled with the
capping of local housing allowance and the shortage of
available accommodation at the shared accommodation rate.
Those burdens can result in people ending up on the street.
However, I believe that there are ways of making the
private rented sector work for vulnerable people, and
innovative solutions are being delivered every day.
Homeless and vulnerable people are being helped and guided
into the rental market and, most importantly, given the
tools and support that they need to sustain lengthy
tenancies. Creative change in the market has the potential
to improve not only access but standards in the private
rented sector.
-
(East Ham) (Lab)
On standards, does the hon. Gentleman agree that there is
potentially an important role for private rented sector
licensing schemes, such as the one in my borough of Newham,
in helping to tackle the minority of landlords whose
accommodation is below standard?
-
I am glad that the right hon. Gentleman, whom I respect
greatly for his understanding of this problem, says that it
exists among a minority of private rented sector landlords.
One could have got the impression from yesterday’s
statement that nearly every private landlord was a rougue
who managed substandard accommodation. As he says, that is
far from the truth. I entirely accept that in many cases,
local solutions are better suited, but the Government
should be credited for really trying to move things on
through a variety of measures, which are sometimes
extremely burdensome to landlords but seek to raise the
standard of accommodation and improve the way that
landlords treat their tenants.
Evidence shows that when a vulnerable person is in secure
and safe rented accommodation, they can leave their
homelessness behind them and make a fresh start. That also
makes good economic sense, which I hope will be a theme of
the debate. If we get this right, there will be an entirely
virtuous circle. Both the Residential Landlords Association
and the National Landlords Association believe that, with
the right support, financial risks can be reduced and
letting to vulnerable people can be a viable business
model. Even if hon. Members forget everything else that I
say today, I hope that that will resonate with them. By
changing perceptions, we can truly make the private rented
sector work for all.
-
How does the hon. Gentleman feel that the private rented
sector will become a viable alternative for vulnerable
tenants when rental claims under universal credit are
taking an estimated nine weeks—in reality, it is three
months in my part of south London—to be assessed?
-
I recognise that that is a problem. If the hon. Lady will
allow me, I will come on to talk about that. If I do not, I
am sure she will intervene again. I very much want to talk
about the variety of different factors that influence
homelessness.
I want to tell the Minister about two potential solutions
that may be of help. A lot of work on this has been done by
the homelessness charity Crisis, which I cannot praise
enough. It is totally focused on outcomes, working with us,
whatever side of the House we sit on, to try to find
solutions that work. There is nothing particularly new in
the two schemes I am proposing, and they will be familiar
to some. The first is a help to rent scheme and the second
is a national rent deposit guarantee scheme.
WPI Economics developed a model to assess the cost-benefits
of the services over a three-year period and identified
that £31 million would be required per annum over that
period. That would be made up of £6.7 million for the rent
deposit guarantee scheme and £24.1 million for a help to
rent project. In a time of cash-strapped Treasury
forecasts, I want to show—if the Treasury is listening—that
this makes economic sense, because it will reduce the cost
of the burden of homelessness that sits on the taxpayer.
From 2010 to 2014, Crisis, with funding from the Department
for Communities and Local Government, ran the private
rented sector access development programme, which funded
specific help to rent schemes across the country, which
helped homeless and vulnerable people access affordable and
secure accommodation in the private rented sector. I have
seen that work in my constituency in a different scheme run
by the Two Saints hostel in Newbury, which moves people
from the wayfarer beds and being the huddled figures in the
doorway I described earlier through to supported
accommodation and then on to independent living. That works
only because all the complex problems that we know exist in
homelessness, particularly in rough sleeping—mental
illness, relationship breakdown and alcohol and drug
abuse—are dealt with throughout the process, which allows a
sustainable solution to each individual’s problems.
-
(Central Suffolk and
North Ipswich) (Con)
I congratulate my hon. Friend on securing the debate. I
agree with many of the points he has made. However, those
people with chronic and enduring mental ill health find it
very difficult to access any suitable social housing
accommodation, particularly in big cities. That group has
been let down badly by the private sector and I am not sure
whether the solutions he is proposing will change that,
given that those people are often going in and out of
mental health hospitals. What thoughts does he have on
helping that particularly vulnerable group?
-
Mental health problems can cause homelessness and
homelessness can cause mental health problems. In this
place we think of things only in silos. We have a very good
Minister here from one Department, but if we really are to
deal with this problem we ought to have a whole range of
Ministers from the Department of Health, the Ministry of
Defence and people from all the organisations who care for
people sitting down on the equivalent of the Treasury Bench
here so that we can do so in in a much more cohesive way.
The schemes I have been talking about matched tenants with
landlords and provided financial guarantees for deposits
and rent, with ongoing support for both parties. They
provided the landlord with a deposit and insurance
throughout the tenancy were problems to arise. They also
offered the tenant training in budgeting and help to gain
and sustain employment. During the programme, more than
8,000 tenancies were created with a 90% sustainment rate,
which is an incredible achievement.
Another person we should have here is an Education
Minister. One statistic I find fascinating is from the
Centre for Social Justice, which showed that while the
national average of educational attainment is that 60%
achieve five A* to C grades at GCSE, the figure is only 27%
among those who have to move more than three times during
their secondary school education. We can therefore see the
knock-on problems caused by people having to move
frequently, and that sustainability in one home is so
important.
The schemes also saved the Government money. In just three
months of operation, 92 schemes saved almost £14,000 in
non-housing costs. The schemes created homes for those who
need them most and helped some of the most vulnerable
navigate a complex market. With the security of a home and
the floating support from a help to rent scheme, a
vulnerable person is less likely to need assistance from
other services. That is a point that my hon. Friend the
Member for Central Suffolk and North Ipswich (Dr Poulter)
will appreciate. Schemes varying in geography and
specialisms still exist, yet without the funding they need
they are unable to deliver all the services they would like
to the number of people who need them. By working with
landlords, such schemes have the potential to unlock the
supply of private rented sector properties, which could
particularly benefit areas where housing demand is highest.
Local authorities could also incentivise good practice
through the schemes as well as eliminate bad practice
through enforcement policies.
Crisis is also calling for the second project I want to
touch on: a national rent deposit guarantee scheme. To
reduce up-front costs, help to rent schemes often offer
bonds or guarantees to landlords in place of deposits,
which cover certain types of costs that the landlord may
incur at the end of a tenancy including damages and, in
some cases, rent arrears. That was the case in the example
from my constituency that I outlined earlier, where private
sector landlords were demanding six months’ rent in
advance. That means that vital funds are tied up in admin
costs and reserves in case those guarantees are called in
rather than in going into funding the support that helps
vulnerable tenants sustain their tenancies. If the
Government established a national rent deposit guarantee
scheme, that would provide help to rent projects with
greater financial security, with landlords safe in the
knowledge that their property is protected and that the
help to rent projects are providing the right support to
help tenants maintain rent.
Crisis has found claims on bonds by existing schemes to be
relatively low, within the 15% to 20% margin. That is one
of the reasons why the schemes are attractive to the
private sector trade bodies. It seems only fair that, along
with help to buy, there is a similar scheme to help those
who are just about managing and for whom purchasing a home
is just not realistic. Crucially, both the Residential
Landlords Association and the National Landlords
Association support those asks of the Government.
Currently, schemes attract landlords through the
development of a suite of services to mitigate the risks
associated with letting to a vulnerable or homeless person
or family. We could, and should, actively encourage more
landlords to view working with those schemes as an
effective business model. The moral argument aside, there
are fiscal incentives to working with such schemes. For
example, a targeted intervention by a scheme and a national
rent deposit guarantee reduces the financial risks for
landlords. Also, clients using the access support who have
a history of homelessness are much more likely to be deemed
as vulnerable under universal credit and therefore they
should be offered universal credit direct payments for a
limited period, which landlords may welcome. I think that
goes a little of the way to addressing the concerns of the
hon. Member for Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain McDonagh).
Help to rent schemes give landlords a layer of security
that they do not currently receive from letting agents or
the local authority. Such interventions could significantly
increase the landlord’s confidence to let to this
vulnerable sector or to those in housing need, and that
could be part of an agreed longer-term tenancy. Among
landlords with experience of letting to homeless people,
59% said they would consider letting to homeless households
only if that were backed by such interventions. I therefore
believe that the rationale for Government is clear to see.
These policies are cost-effective schemes that will provide
stability in the private rented sector for the most
vulnerable, helping to prevent and tackle homelessness.
Investment in the private rented sector access support
would build on the Government’s recent announcement for
homelessness prevention trailblazers and the Prime
Minister’s welcome commitment to put prevention at the
heart of a new approach.
Government investment has the potential to reduce spending
on temporary accommodation and the costs of rough sleeping.
This would allow cash-strapped local authorities, such as
mine in West Berkshire, to allocate more of their
homelessness budget in a more targeted way—for example,
West Berkshire Council continuing to support the mental
health triage service, which is doing great work.
Independent analysis commissioned by Crisis estimates that
if access were available to all households approaching
their local authority for homelessness assistance, some
32,000 people could receive support annually. The model
assumed that if 60% of people leave temporary accommodation
as a result of the scheme being available, savings
amounting to between £175 million and £595 million could be
realised from one year of the scheme.
Investing in the private rented sector access support fits
with the Government’s wider agenda on universal credit and
homelessness prevention. I was pleased to support the Bill
promoted by my hon. Friend the Member for Harrow East (Bob
Blackman) and will continue to do so. It will make a
difference. My worry is that unless parallel schemes, such
as those I have outlined, are introduced and accompany a
review of the impact of the freeze on local housing
allowances in certain areas, we could get into the mad
situation where inadvertent actions by the Government
create one problem on the one hand that my hon. Friend’s
Bill has to solve on the other. I am pleased that the Prime
Minister has made housing a priority in her wish to lead a
Government that help those people left behind who have not
benefited from recent economic growth. The White Paper is
an important indication of that intent. I suggest to the
Minister that here are two possible schemes that would work
and put the private rental sector at the heart of achieving
the Government’s ambitions.
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Several hon. Members rose—
-
(in the Chair)
Order. I intend to call the Front-Bench speakers at 5.10 pm
so there is not much time left and a number of Members have
indicated that they want to be called. If you could look at
the clock and try to be as sparing as possible in your own
contributions, that would help the general debate.
4.52 pm
-
(Mitcham and
Morden) (Lab)
I congratulate the hon. Member for Newbury (Richard Benyon)
on securing this debate. I am here because I am full of
rage. I am full of rage at the number of homeless families
I see on a weekly basis who do nothing worse than working
for their living and raising their children and who find
themselves homeless because of a lack of security of tenure
in the private sector. It is about time that MPs from all
parties address the issue as it is, rather than as they
might like it to be. Our constituents—the people out
there—look incredulously at us as we seem to consider that,
somehow, things are okay. They are not okay.
When I had a proper job, before I entered this House almost
20 years ago, I worked in the homelessness and housing
association sector. Today, I see things in my suburban
constituency that I never thought possible. The major
reason for homelessness in my constituency—and, I am sure,
in others in London—is mature families being evicted from
assured shorthold tenancies in the private sector. These
are not tenants who have been there a short while, abused
the property or not paid their rent. In my experience—I am
willing to share with any hon. Member the 147 cases that I
have seen since 1 September that fall into this
category—they are families with children at the top of
primary school and the middle of secondary school. They are
simply being evicted because the landlords can get more
rent from somebody else and can realise the value of their
assets. Neither of those things makes them bad individuals,
but it makes for a very bad housing situation for someone
to find themselves in.
There are consequences to this. I sit there and I go
through the process. I say, “They’ll issue you with a
section 21, then they’ll go off to the county court, then
they’ll get a possession order and then you must wait for a
bailiff’s warrant. You will get 10 days’ notice of the
bailiff’s warrant, and when that comes, the council will
put you in temporary accommodation in Luton.” We live in
south-west London. Some of the people I have talked to did
not know that a place called Luton existed, but they will
soon find out. I am sure that Luton is a fine place, but if
someone works in south-west London and their children go to
school in south-west London, it is not the place where they
want to live.
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Mr Burrowes
I have had similar experiences in my constituency surgery.
Does the hon. Lady hope that the ambition, not least behind
the Homelessness Reduction Bill, to deal with this matter
might be realised? Sadly, responsibility is sometimes
triggered only once the bailiff notices have been served.
There is also the issue of the inappropriate placements in
Luton. The ambition needs to be fulfilled by the housing
White Paper—by ensuring that there is sufficient supply,
but also that prevention duties are in place that actually
mean something for the 147 families to whom she refers.
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I have a controversial view on the prevention of
homelessness Bill. I believe that it is a sticking plaster
and does not resolve the problem. It simply puts more
demand on local authorities, which cannot cope with what
they have at the moment. At the heart of the matter is
supply. At the heart of it is control, whether that is
control over how much rent people have to pay, some control
over landlords who are not prepared to maintain their
properties or some control in terms of security of tenure.
Unless those things are addressed, and addressed in
numbers, the problem will not be resolved.
What are we doing to the children who find themselves in
this position, who find themselves moving year on year, or
six months on six months? These are kids who do well at
school and want to be ambitious at school, but who never
know or never experience the simple security of living in
the same place for a reasonable length of time. That is
life for people in my constituency, and the scary thing is
that it is life for an ever growing proportion of people,
not just people in poor, low-paid work—
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Dr Poulter
Will the hon. Lady give way?
-
I will not.
Increasingly, that is life for people in middle-class jobs
who simply cannot get on the housing ladder and cannot rent
something that is in any way affordable.
When the White Paper was presented to the House yesterday,
the Minister talked of families for whom rent is 50% of
their income. I regularly see working families whose rent
is 200% of their family income. We have a crisis. I realise
that everyone wants to speak and I do not want to prevent
anyone from speaking. It is about time that we stopped
pussyfooting around. We have to build homes that people can
afford. Anything else does not address the issue.
4.57 pm
-
(Plymouth, Sutton and
Devonport) (Con)
I will try to limit my remarks, because I am acutely aware
that the right hon. Member for East Ham (Stephen Timms)
wants to speak.
I have been very interested in this issue since I was at
school in the constituency of the father of my hon. Friend
the Member for Newbury (Richard Benyon) in the 1970s. I
congratulate my hon. Friend on securing the debate. I did a
lot of work going in and talking to some people who were
living in very damp accommodation. It was very important
that we got them moved and got the house condemned as well.
If we can actually sort out some of the homelessness
issues, it is very important to ensure that people move
into properties that are dry and acceptable, rather than,
frankly, in an appallingly bad state.
When I was living in London full time, apart from making
visits down to my constituency in Plymouth, I went to
church at the Savoy chapel, which is in the heart of
London, and the chaplain told an horrendous story about
how, if someone is homeless, they feel dirty, no one talks
to them and everything is all very difficult indeed. We
have to take some action to try to deal with that.
My constituency of Plymouth, Sutton is an inner-city seat.
It is south of the A38, running from the River Plym to the
River Tamar, and has a significant level of deprivation, as
evidenced by the 11 or 12-year life expectancy difference
between the north-east of the constituency and the
south-west, around Devonport. That is a very big issue, and
we have to do something about it, and it is not helped by
people being homeless. I am delighted that we have a hostel
in my patch, where a lot of the homeless end up going, but
I am appalled that the national health service has decided
to close one of the GP surgeries in my constituency that
deals with homeless people who live in that kind of hostel
accommodation.
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Dr Poulter
I was particularly distressed to read about that in my hon.
Friend’s local paper because I think I opened that GP
surgery for him. However, the point is that hostels are not
the answer to the problem, particularly for vulnerable
people with mental illness, because they need to be
properly housed, and they are not being properly housed due
to a lack of housing supply, particularly in the social
sector. Hostels must not be—and are not—the answer.
-
I thank my hon. Friend for that intervention. However, it
is better for someone to be living in dry conditions than
on the streets, and I think that is important.
-
(Hyndburn) (Lab)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
I will not, because I am acutely aware that the right hon.
Member for East Ham also wants to speak and it would be
wrong of me not to leave him enough time.
On Christmas day, I spent the morning visiting several
places that were providing lunch for the homeless. They
included Hamoaze House, the Shekinah Mission, Stoke Damerel
church and Davie hall in north Plymouth, where a number of
events were being held for the homeless and I was able to
hear for myself what was going on. It is very important
that we provide the homeless not only with accommodation,
but with access to GP surgeries. I thank my hon. Friend the
Member for Central Suffolk and North Ipswich (Dr Poulter)
for all the work that he did in opening that GP surgery. I
feel real frustration that NHS England has decided to try
and close it.
Next week I will be doing a surgery at the food bank,
because it is important that people should use my offices
to try to make sure we can sort out their benefits too.
Without further ado, I am going to shut up, because I want
to make sure that the right hon. Member for East Ham can
speak as well. Next time, however, we need longer to debate
this issue.
5.02 pm
-
(East Ham) (Lab)
I am grateful to the hon. Member for Plymouth, Sutton and
Devonport (Oliver Colvile) for his considerateness.
My hon. Friend the Member for Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain
McDonagh) is right that the problem is growing. In 2001,
17% of the residents in my borough—Newham in east
London—lived in the private rented sector, whereas today
almost half do. That rapid growth is continuing and has led
to problems. Regulation in this area is weak. The hon.
Member for Newbury (Richard Benyon), whom I congratulate
him on securing the debate, was absolutely right to make
the point that the great majority of landlords do a
perfectly good job and provide decent accommodation, but a
minority do not. The private rented sector has a number of
virtues, as we have rightly been reminded. However, when
there are problems, vulnerable people suffer
disproportionately. They frequently do not know what their
rights are and get a very bad deal, which was why my local
authority—it was the first in the country to do
so—introduced borough-wide private rented sector licensing
in 2013.
-
(Strangford) (DUP)
I, too, congratulate the hon. Member for Newbury (Richard
Benyon) on securing the debate. I will make a few quick
points. There is hesitancy among private landlords to get
away from the mindset of renting out property to homeless
people. They want long-term tenants; however, the most
important thing is the benefit system. If things are not in
place when people have to reapply for housing benefit, they
then have to be reassessed and can fall behind. Landlords
in many places worry about that, as do tenants in
particular.
-
The hon. Gentleman is right about that. My hon. Friend the
Member for Mitcham and Morden made the point that universal
credit is making the problem worse because of the long
delays before any payment is made.
I want to make a point to the Minister about the Newham
private rented sector licensing scheme, which will end in
December. The London borough of Newham is asking Ministers
to allow the scheme to be extended for another five years.
I would ask him to look sympathetically at that proposal
and allow the scheme to go forward.
-
My right hon. Friend makes a powerful point. Will he
comment on two points relevant to that? Landlord licensing
deals with antisocial behaviour and other conditions, but
not stock condition. Stock condition in the north is poor,
and conditions in landlord licensing should be allowed to
deal with that. If the Government were on people’s side,
they would allow licensing conditions to include elements
to do with stock condition.
Furthermore, as my right hon. Friend said, the private
rented sector has grown, but it has also grown into former
social housing, which existed to help poor people to rent.
I find, as I am sure do many other Members, that former
council housing is being offered in the private rented
sector at twice the rent of properties currently in the
stock. That should be stopped.
-
I am grateful to my hon. Friend. In the Newham scheme,
licence holders are bound by conditions, as he described,
to prevent overcrowding and deal with antisocial behaviour,
and to make sure that properties are well managed and safe.
He is right to say that wider stock issues are outside the
scope of the scheme.
Perhaps I can give an example from my constituency of what
has happened. In Waterloo Road there is a typical terraced
house with three rooms on the first floor and two on the
ground floor. All five were being used for people to sleep
in. In the main bedroom upstairs, which on ordinary
standards is appropriate for a couple to sleep in, four
single, unrelated people were sleeping. There were six
others staying elsewhere in the house. That was 10 people
in total, no doubt with a number of cars between them and,
as my hon. Friend the Member for Hyndburn (Graham Jones)
pointed out, there were antisocial behaviour problems for
the neighbours as well as grim conditions for those living
in the house. Because the scheme was in place, the local
authority was able to intervene. There was a fine of more
than £8,000 and the position was brought under control.
Altogether, licences have been issued for 38,880 private
sector properties in the borough and there have been 1,000
prosecutions since the scheme was introduced. Just 28
landlords have been banned for failing to meet the
borough’s “fit and proper” test, in relation to 230
properties. The places where enforcement action is
necessary are a small proportion of the total, but the fact
that it is possible for the council to intervene in
serious, problem cases is an important help to vulnerable
people and others living in the borough. For that reason as
well, I would particularly ask the Minister to respond
sympathetically to the approach that I think he has already
received—at least informally—requesting that the scheme
should be extended for a further five years after it ends
in December.
5.07 pm
-
(Airdrie and Shotts)
(SNP)
It is a pleasure to take part in the debate with you in the
Chair, Sir Alan. I congratulate the hon. Member for Newbury
(Richard Benyon) on securing the debate. I thought his
speech was an honest assessment of the country’s current
situation. It was refreshing and followed on from the
honest title of the White Paper presented yesterday: I
remind hon. Members that that is based on the situation in
England.
The hon. Member for Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain McDonagh)
made a passionate speech and touched on short-term
tenancies and tenancy insecurity, and on the building of
homes. What she said is right: it is the only way we shall
get around the housing supply problems we face across these
isles. I understand what the hon. Member for Plymouth,
Sutton and Devonport (Oliver Colvile) was saying about
hostels, but we must surely be capable of providing
something more secure and dignified to homeless people in
this day and age. The constituency example outlined by the
right hon. Member for East Ham (Stephen Timms) reminds me
of looking at census data from Victorian times. It is
shocking and highlights the desperate situation that people
find themselves in, particularly in London. Action must be
taken on that.
The private rented sector has a clear role to play in
assisting those experiencing or facing the prospect of
homelessness. However, the problems it creates are also
well known: affordability, landlords’ reluctance to rent to
housing benefit recipients, a lack of security of tenure,
poor quality housing and a lack of support for vulnerable
people. All these make what is a potential source of vital
support for homeless and vulnerable people more difficult
for them to obtain.
The focus on seeking private rented solutions for homeless
and vulnerable people presents challenges. Although there
has been a growth in the private rented sector, changes to
housing benefit entitlement since 2010 mean that it is more
difficult for housing benefit claimants to cover the full
amount of rent due, as I said in an earlier intervention.
That is especially so for young people, who are seeing
their support cut away. In the light of all of the UK-wide
issues caused by the Government’s social security policies,
I believe that the effective approach being taken in
Scotland should be commended and articulated.
All local authorities in Scotland have a duty towards all
unintentionally homeless households, regardless of whether
they are classed as being in priority need. That is one
reason why, in April 2016, Crisis recorded that Scotland
has been on a “marked downward path” for the past five
years in relation to homelessness. That downward path can
be seen in the Scottish Government’s statistics from 2016,
which indicate that 81% of unintentionally homeless
households in Scotland that had an outcome between April
and September of that year secured settled
accommodation—not only in social housing but in private
rented tenancies as well.
-
Mr Burrowes
I welcome what the hon. Gentleman says about that progress,
but I was in Edinburgh over the weekend and I was
particularly shocked by the level of street homelessness. I
am a London MP and have sadly seen an increase in that on
our streets in London, but in Edinburgh it was extremely
significant.
-
I would not for a minute even begin to suggest that we have
all the answers in Scotland, nor that, just because the
evidence from organisations such as Crisis suggests that
things are going the right way, we cannot do more. Clearly,
more can be done. I live near Edinburgh and know the
situation there very well, which is a smaller version of
what we see here in London. That is why some of the
Scottish Government’s interventions, which I will touch on,
are directed at that.
If private rented accommodation is to be a viable solution
for homeless people, it is clearly imperative that
protections are put in place to ensure that it is secure
and affordable and provides an acceptable standard of
living conditions. I will focus on some of the measures
introduced in Scotland in the past decade that help to
address some of those issues. In 2006, Scotland was the
first part of the UK to introduce a mandatory landlord
registration scheme, which we touched on earlier, in terms
of licensing. The local authority must be satisfied that
the owner of the property and the agent are fit and proper
persons to let the residential property before registering
them.
Commencement of the Private Housing (Tenancies) (Scotland)
Act 2016 will remove the “no fault” grounds for
repossession, and should mean that there is no risk of a
retaliatory eviction in Scotland. When commenced, that Act
will also introduce a new type of tenancy for the private
rented sector in Scotland to replace short assured and
assured tenancies for all future lets. The new tenancy will
be known as a “private residential tenancy”, which will be
open ended and will not have a “no fault” ground for
possession equivalent to the current notice that can be
given under section 33 of the Housing (Scotland) Act 1988.
Finally, the 2016 Act will allow local authorities to
implement rent caps in designated areas—“rent pressure
zones”; one such zone is in Edinburgh—where there are
excessive rent increases. Applications must be made to
Scottish Ministers, who will then lay regulations before
the Scottish Parliament. Tenants unhappy with the proposed
rent increase will also be able to refer a case to a rent
officer for adjudication. Each of those rules and pieces of
legislation help in different ways to ensure that the
private rented sector is up to standard when used as an
option for homeless and vulnerable people. There is clearly
no point in placing homeless people in privately rented
accommodation when it will only lead to an unaffordable
rent, unacceptable standard of housing or an insecure
tenure.
-
(in the Chair)
Mr Jones, you have literally one minute. I am allowing you
to speak only because I did not see your indication that
you wanted to do so.
5.14 pm
-
(Hyndburn) (Lab)
Thank you, Sir Alan. I quickly say to the Minister that
there should be a slight review of landlord licensing to
include the stock condition of individual properties,
because that is not in the legislation. One issue that we
need to tackle is sofa sleeping—the hidden homeless. We
talk about building new housing being the answer. It
largely is, but not in my area; we have plenty of empty
properties because of a lack of skills and a poor economy.
We have to address skills in the economy if we want to get
people into housing. The houses are there.
In my final minute, I want to raise housing benefit for
under-21s. The cuts will start in April, but the Government
have still not been clear what they will be or where they
will apply. That affects supported housing. I know
youngsters in Crossroads in Accrington, which is a
fantastic resource. They are really vulnerable 16 to
19-year-olds from troubled families, who have tried to find
a way for themselves. The situation they are in is not
their fault. They rely on housing benefit. Even if housing
benefit is not cut, Crossroads may close because Lancashire
County Council may pull the funding. Local authority cuts
may undermine supported housing even if housing benefit for
under-21s is protected. I ask the Minister to clarify what
he is going to do about housing benefit for under-21s to
prevent further homelessness.
5.15 pm
-
(Hammersmith)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship this
afternoon, Sir Alan. I thank the hon. Member for Newbury
(Richard Benyon) for raising this important subject. I will
say a little more at the end of my speech about his
specific proposals, which are worth while and which I
commend to the Government—we will see what the Minister
says about them.
However, I hope the hon. Gentleman will not mind if I take
my cue more from the contribution of my hon. Friend the
Member for Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain McDonagh), who
spoke with extraordinary passion and knowledge. I have
known her long enough to know that she is one of the most
assiduous constituency MPs in the House and that she speaks
from absolute experience. I am sure that her experiences
have been shared by all London Members, including my right
hon. Friend the Member for East Ham (Stephen Timms), and
increasingly by other Members from around the country.
Let us start by making it clear where the problem started.
It started, to a large extent, with the Localism Act 2011
and the permanent discharge of homelessness
responsibilities into the private rented sector, alongside
lack of security for social housing and an almost complete
cut of capital expenditure. Suddenly, the private rented
sector was on the frontline, faced with problems that it
was neither ready nor able to deal with.
In an intervention, the hon. Member for Airdrie and Shotts
(Neil Gray) mentioned housing benefit cuts. We could add
the benefit cap or the freeze on the local housing
allowance, which the hon. Member for Newbury himself
acknowledged. Those are among the reasons why, as my hon.
Friend the Member for Mitcham and Morden said, more than
40% of homelessness cases are principally caused by the
eviction of people on assured shorthold tenancies, largely
because of landlords simply wanting higher rents or not
wanting to deal with people who are on benefits. Those are
the real problems.
There is also the problem of shared accommodation. In 2012,
the shared accommodation rate for under-25s was extended to
under-35s. In its briefing for this debate, Barnardo’s
asked that those who are leaving care be protected from
that at least until the age of 25. The Minister may respond
to that request, but it will still not resolve the
principal problem.
The budget of the Supporting People programme for
vulnerable people was cut by 45% between 2010 and 2015.
These are huge sums. I appreciate that the hon. Member for
Newbury is asking for relatively modest sums by comparison,
but they will have relatively modest results.
-
Does the hon. Gentleman concede that there are some
landlords in London—I speak with a little experience—who
are in it for the long term? They want to build a
relationship with their tenants and they have never evicted
somebody at the end of their lease, because they want to
continue that relationship. I want to work with Members on
both sides of the House to create a longer-term offer to
tenants so that they can have certainty, whether it is
about the education of their children or about their own
retirement. There are opportunities to work together to
find solutions.
-
Nobody denies that the majority of landlords are good
landlords, but I ask the hon. Gentleman: why has rough
sleeping more than doubled—it has gone up by 133% since
2010—and why is statutory homelessness increasing hugely?
He mentioned that the White Paper might give some detail. I
do not know whether he has had time to look at what the
White Paper says about the private rented sector, but he
will not get much detail from it. There are five paragraphs
with three proposals, two of which are ideas pinched from
us but watered down, and one of which the Secretary of
State has already pooh-poohed.
On letting fees, which are an important issue, the White
Paper states:
“We will consult early this year, ahead of bringing forward
legislation as soon as Parliamentary time allows”.
I thought that we were going to get something rather more
quickly than that. The White Paper also states:
“The Government will implement measures introduced in the
Housing and Planning Act 2016, which will introduce banning
orders to remove the worst landlords”.
Again, that is good, but I heard the Secretary of State say
in the House yesterday that looking for greater
restrictions to deny houses unfit for human habitation was
“frivolous”. I think that was the word he used. That does
not show particularly good intentions. What on earth does
it mean that we are simply going to encourage landlords to
have longer tenancies? We need to legislate. We need longer
tenancies if we are to stop the terrible curse of insecure
accommodation.
The Homelessness Reduction Bill has the support of the
Opposition, but we are waiting and taking our cue from
local authorities, who know what they are talking about in
this respect, on whether the funding will be adequate to
the task. All the indications are that that will not be the
case, despite the funding that the Minister announced. As
my hon. Friend the Member for Mitcham and Morden said, we
are just putting more burden on local authorities, which
are already charged with the responsibility, without having
the resources to deal with the problem.
This is a real housing crisis. I appreciate the intention
of the debate and the specific measures. We are blessed
with some extremely good, very sophisticated organisations
now. I have a lot of facilities from what used to be
Broadway and is now St Mungo’s Broadway in my constituency.
It previously ran a scheme very much of this kind off its
own bat. People went out and identified private sector
accommodation, took vulnerable people and matched the
landlord to the tenant. They gave that degree of support,
as well as supporting people with deposits. That is an
excellent thing to do and it is what the organisations do
well, but it does need support and some funding.
I fear that we are not going to address the key issues. It
is not just me who thinks that. Yesterday, at the launch of
the White Paper, I did media with the former housing
Minster, the right hon. Member for Welwyn Hatfield (Grant
Shapps). I never thought that I would agree with him on any
matters in relation to housing, but his view did not differ
much from mine, which is that the Government proposals are
a sticking plaster and a missed opportunity. I do not say
that with any pleasure, because this is the biggest social
problem of our age. It is a problem that has accumulated
over time. It is extraordinarily difficult for everybody,
but it is particularly difficult for vulnerable people,
young people and people who are made homeless through no
fault of their own.
I hope that we are going to hear something from the
Minister today. I welcome the engagement of all parties,
including the landlord organisations. [Interruption.] I do
not particularly want to be heckled; I am taking half of my
time, which I am entitled to do. If the hon. Member for
Newbury thinks that I am dealing with “frivolous” issues,
as the Secretary of State does, he is welcome to say that,
but let us have some home truths about what the real
problems of the housing crisis in this country are.
-
(in the Chair)
Minister, I know time is going to be very tight, but if you
could leave a minute for Mr Benyon to wind up, I am sure
Members would be appreciative.
5.23 pm
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Communities
and Local Government (Mr Marcus Jones)
I will do my best, Sir Alan. It is a pleasure to serve
under your chairmanship. I congratulate my hon. Friend the
Member for Newbury (Richard Benyon) on securing this
important debate. I know that tackling homelessness is a
priority for him. It is certainly a priority for me and the
Government. I say at the outset that nobody should find
themselves without a roof over their head.
Yesterday, the Government’s housing White Paper was
published, which makes it clear that we are determined to
make the private rented sector more affordable and secure
for people. We have taken action to increase the supply of
affordable and secure rented properties through the
promotion of Build to Rent homes. That and other measures
proposed in the White Paper will ensure that local
authorities put more emphasis on planning for those rental
schemes. We will certainly encourage the take-up of
longer-term tenancies.
On the point made by my hon. Friend the Member for Newbury
about securing private rented sector accommodation, as he
set out in his speech, we have made a significant
investment of £14 million from 2010 to 2016, working with
Crisis, to develop a programme for single people to access
private rented accommodation. More than 9,000 people were
helped and 90% of those maintained a tenancy for more than
six months.
My hon. Friend also mentioned the banning of letting
agents’ fees for tenants. As he knows, we have brought
forward proposals on that in the White Paper. We will
consult on those proposals before we bring the policy
forward. We have also set up a private rented sector
affordability and security working group. On that working
group, we have Shelter, Crisis, Generation Rent and
landlord and letting agent representatives, and it is in
the process of finalising its report. We have asked those
organisations to work with us to see how we can reduce the
costs and barriers people face in accessing private rented
accommodation.
Homelessness, as has been discussed, is not just a housing
issue. I am proud that we are giving our full support as a
Government to the Homelessness Reduction Bill, the private
Member’s Bill brought forward by my hon. Friend the Member
for Harrow East (Bob Blackman). The Bill has benefited from
the support of Members, many of whom are here today. My
hon. Friend the Member for Newbury spoke passionately about
the Bill on Second Reading. We are also bringing forward
£50 million of homelessness prevention funding. That money
has been awarded to 84 projects that will work across 225
local authority areas in England. A number of those
projects include working with the private rented sector. We
hope, through that funding, to support more than 1,000
private rented tenants and help those who are at risk of
losing their tenancies.
Turning to some of the specific questions that have been
asked, my hon. Friend the Member for Newbury mentioned the
complexity of homelessness, particularly in terms of mental
health. He rightly said that there should be a line of
Ministers here to respond to the issues. In that spirit, I
chair a ministerial working group that brings together
various Departments and Ministers to see what more we can
do to deal with the underlying issues that relate to
homelessness. My hon. Friend will know that in the
Homelessness Reduction Bill is a duty to refer. That is an
important first step in putting an obligation on public
sector bodies to refer people who may be at risk of
becoming homeless to the relevant local authority.
My hon. Friend mentioned schemes and the proposals from
Crisis. We continue to discuss a number of issues with
Crisis on an ongoing basis. He also mentioned giving areas
the ability to get people into private rented tenancies and
out of temporary accommodation. That was a very good point.
We are devolving the temporary accommodation management
fee, which we believe will help local authorities to move
people out of temporary accommodation and into settled
accommodation more quickly.
My hon. Friend the Member for Central Suffolk and North
Ipswich (Dr Poulter) mentioned the challenges with people
who are not in the right place. They may be in a hostel and
need to move on. He will be glad to know that the
Government have committed £100 million to move-on
accommodation. That will create places for up to 2,000
people to move on from hostel accommodation.
The hon. Member for Mitcham and Morden (Siobhain McDonagh)
mentioned tenancies. The average tenancy is four years, but
there are challenges in areas where affordability is an
issue. The bottom line is that we need to significantly
increase supply, and we are doing that in London, as she
will know, by giving £3.15 billion to the Mayor to bring
forward a significant number affordable housing units.
To conclude, I will write to Members who have asked any
other questions, in particular the right hon. Member for
East Ham (Stephen Timms), who made a very good point about
licensing schemes. I will leave it there, but we are
absolutely committed to tackling this important issue. I
thank my hon. Friend the Member for Newbury for the debate,
albeit a short one, although that was not his fault.
-
(in the Chair)
Mr Benyon, I understand that you have ceded your one minute
to Mr Burrowes behind you.
5.29 pm
-
No, Sir Alan, I was conceding the time to the Minister, but
if I may have the 30 seconds I would appreciate it.
There is an all-party group in this House called the
all-party group for ending homelessness. Some people roll
their eyes when we talk about ending homelessness, but it
is only with such ambition that we can address the kind of
outrage we all feel when we see someone who is homeless. I
am grateful to the Minister for what he said. I hope he
will work with Crisis, the Centre for Social Justice and
other organisations to try to bring some of the ideas
forward. Together, we can achieve a lasting solution.
5.30 pm
Motion lapsed, and sitting adjourned without Question put
(Standing Order No. 10(14)).
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