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More than 50 councils to benefit from nearly £2.4
million to ramp up action against the minority of irresponsible
landlords who make tenants’ lives a misery
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Money to be used to boost short-term staffing and
create new digital tools to help councils better protect
tenants
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Measures build on action taken by government to protect
renters and drive up standards across the sector
More than 50 councils across the country will share nearly £2.4
million of extra funding to crack down on rogue landlords,
Housing Minister has announced today (14
January 2019).
Whilst the majority of landlords provide decent homes for their
tenants, the cash boost will enable local councils to step up
action against the small minority who continue to flout the law
and force vulnerable tenants such as young families to live in
inadequate or unsafe housing.
Councils across the country from Allerdale to Watford will
receive a share of the funding for projects to take tougher
action against unscrupulous landlords.
Among the councils to benefit from the funding are:
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Walsall - to improve cross-agency enforcement work, including
the innovative use of drones and thermal mapping to identify
problem properties
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Lancaster - to create a training programme for existing
enforcement staff across the Lancashire region
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Greater London Authority (GLA) and Greater Manchester
Combined Authority (GMCA) –
allocated over £330,000 between them to carry out coordinated
work to tackle rogue landlords who operate across multiple
local authorities in their regions
Housing Minister MP said:
Everyone has the right to live in a home that is safe and
secure, and it is vital we crack down on the small minority of
landlords who are not giving their tenants this security.
This extra funding will further boost councils’ ability to root
out rogue landlords and ensure that poor-quality homes in the
area are improved, making the housing market fairer for
everyone.
The government has already equipped local authorities with strong
powers to tackle criminal landlords, ranging from fines to
outright bans for the worst offenders.
The new funding will be used to support a range of projects that
councils have said will help them to ramp up action against
criminal landlords – for example, to build relationships with
external organisations such as the emergency services, legal
services and local housing advocates.
Councils may also decide to support tenants to take action
against poor standards through rent repayment orders, or develop
digital solutions, helping officers to report back and make
decisions quicker.
Councils that receive funding will be encouraged to share best
practice and examples of innovative approaches, to help improve
enforcement in other areas.
This builds on ongoing government action to drive up standards in
the private rented sector – ensuring millions of hard-working
tenants can live in the homes they deserve and creating a housing
market that works for everyone.
There are 4.7 million households in the private rented sector in
England, with recent statistics showing that 82% of private
renters are satisfied with their accommodation.
The fund will help councils to take on the most common challenges
that stand in the way of tackling poor standards in the private
rented sector, including:
- the need for better information - on housing stock and on
landlords and agents operating in their areas
- data sharing between authorities and agencies – identifying
and bringing together different data sets to enable better
enforcement targeting
- internal ‘ways of working’ - improving housing-specific legal
expertise, in-house communication between teams, and tools and
strategies to effectively implement policy
- innovative software - for enforcement officers to record
their findings, gather evidence and streamline the enforcement
process.