Lloyd Russell-Moyle (Brighton, Kemptown) (Lab/Co-op) I beg to move,
That this House has considered the White Paper A fairer private
rented sector. I thank my co-chair of the all-party group on
renters and rental reform, the hon. Member for Dover (Mrs
Elphicke), who is the co-lead sponsor of today’s debate, and the 30
other MPs from across the House who supported it. I also thank the
Backbench Business Committee for ensuring that we have such a
timely debate on...Request free trial
(Brighton, Kemptown)
(Lab/Co-op)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the White Paper A fairer private
rented sector.
I thank my co-chair of the all-party group on renters and rental
reform, the hon. Member for Dover (Mrs Elphicke), who is the
co-lead sponsor of today’s debate, and the 30 other MPs from
across the House who supported it. I also thank the Backbench
Business Committee for ensuring that we have such a timely debate
on the matter. Of course, I direct Members to my entry in the
Register of Members’ Financial Interests and declare that I am
the chair of that all-party group.
Many commentators have said that the private rented sector is
really three markets. The first is the luxury and high-end
market, where people wish to pay high amounts for quality
housing. To some extent, that market does not need the regulation
we are discussing here. It will not be harmed by it, but this
regulation is not aimed at it. The second is the market for
people who are unable currently to buy a home or wish to have the
flexibility of renting. This White Paper is about making their
market a feasible, long-term, sensible one that they can live in.
The third is for people who need social housing and often wider
wraparound support. They should not really be in the private
rented sector, as it will never be appropriate for them, but the
White Paper still must protect them while we deal with the social
housing problems that the Government, in the Bill they are
bringing forward on Monday, recognise we need action on.
The core of the debate is about how we create a private rented
sector that is stable, affordable and safe, and where all parties
have access to justice. I do not think that is a controversial
thing. If it is not, the question is: how do we go about
achieving those principles? It is not about whether those
principles are desirable. Again, I believe there is broad
consensus on the ways of doing it, most of which are laid out in
the Government’s White Paper, “A fairer private rented sector”,
published in June. It not only covers the points I have
mentioned, but discusses information, enforcement, children and
pets in the home, and giving people the protections they
need.
The chief executive of the National Residential Landlords
Association said, on the release of the White Paper, that the
“headline commitments to strengthening possession grounds,
speedier court processes and mediation are helpful”.
The renters’ campaign group Generation Rent said:
“This is a serious set of proposals that will help to raise
standards in private rented homes and restore some balance to the
relationship between tenants and landlords.”
The charity Shelter said:
“This White Paper promises people safety and security in their
home”.
I could go on with the countless other ringing endorsements of
the White Paper and its proposals that are coming from across the
sector, with everyone wanting to go further on one bit or
another, but welcoming the core.
That is why it came as such a shock to many of us when it was
briefed to The Times at the beginning of last month that all of
that was being dropped. In Prime Minister’s questions on the same
day, the former Prime Minister—I know it is hard to keep up with
which one we have at the moment, but I am referring to the right
hon. Member for South West Norfolk ()—recommitted to a ban on
section 21, but the full status of the rest of those proposals
remains unclear. I hope that the Minister will continue in the
good vein that the Minister but one initiated. I put no blame on
her immediate predecessor, who did not have the brief long enough
to make a difference one way or another. This is about how we
make the pledges that we all put in our manifesto a reality.
Let me deal with the substance of this issue. I start with the
root of so many of the problems in the private rented sector: the
issue of people’s stability and security in their home. Section
21 provides the ability for a landlord to evict without any
reason a person from their home—that structural power imbalance
is hugely consequential and exists in almost no other form of
contract that we have today.
On safety standards, I know of many cases in which renters do not
wish to complain about the condition of their property, through
fear of revenge evictions. The law at the moment is not good
enough on revenge evictions; it currently requires a council to
have made an assessment that the home is unsafe or in poor
condition, in accordance with the housing health and safety
rating system, in order for someone then to have the protections
from eviction. That sets the bar well beyond where it is
practically useful if it is to protect a renter who complains
about something such as a boiler not working or the windows
jamming.
On affordability, section 21 is creating a crisis that is
spiralling out of control, where we see a wave of assured
shorthold tenancies coming to an end and section 21 being used to
get higher rents, pushing up inflation, to above 20% in some
areas. I know of a schoolteacher who received a demand for a 40%
rent increase at the end of their lease. Unable to pay, he is now
sofa surfing and homeless. A school teacher who is working full
time is homeless not through any fault of his own but due to the
state of the housing market today.
Shelter commissioned research to show that some 230,000 private
tenants have been served with section 21 notices since the
Government made their first pledge in 2019—that is one every
seven minutes. But that does not even show the scale of the
problem, because a notice is not usually required; knowing they
have no rights, renters will often just leave when the landlord
asks them to do so, at an inconvenience to themselves. Section 21
provides no real recourse, no appeal and no exemptions, and even
if it did, we know that the current court system has delays
coming out of its ears, so taking things to court will not be an
answer to these problems.
Last week, in preparation for this debate, I asked renters to get
in touch with me with their stories. One of the many replies I
received was from a young couple who said that before they moved
in the landlord agreed to carry out a deep clean, but when they
entered the flat they found that it had an insect infestation and
it had not been cleaned for months. Both the agent and the
landlord refused to do anything. Later, the couple found that two
windows were broken and so they asked for repairs, but, again,
there was a refusal to do anything. They contacted the council,
but it did not carry out an in-person inspection—we all know the
pressures on councils—and in the end, on the balance of things,
it just accepted the landlord’s word against that of the tenants.
At the first possible instance, in November 2021, the couple were
issued with a section 21 notice. They had a three-month-old baby
and they were homeless.
I have countless other such examples, and I am sure many other
Members do, so it is no wonder that the commitment to deal with
this was a cross-party commitment in all manifestos, but we
cannot allow the abolition of section 21 to be in name only. We
must not allow the next crisis to be the use of section 8
evictions due to rent arrears. If we simply abolish section 21
but allow landlords to increase rents uncontrollably, we will
create a loophole that a lorry could be driven through. If a
renter complains about the state of a property and the owner
wants them out, the owner will just raise the rent to £10,000 a
month and evict the tenant. The current rental increase
protections are inadequate for protecting renters. When I last
looked, the only way to make an application to the tribunal was
by fax. That is ridiculous.
Potential economic evictions were foreseen by the Renters Reform
Coalition, and I am pleased that the White Paper addresses the
issue. It states:
“We will only allow increases to rent once per year... We will
end the use of rent review clauses, preventing... rent increases
that are vague or may not reflect changes in the market price…
where increases are disproportionate, we will make sure that
tenants have the confidence to challenge unjustified rent
increases through the First-tier Tribunal”.
Those are the Government’s words. If that works, it will be a
game changer for stability in the rental market. Personally, I
would like the Government to take on more rental controls. I know
that they have ruled that out, but I hope that others will press
them on the matter. My friend the hon. Member for Dover will say
more about rental controls. However, the proposal in the White
Paper is a sensible compromise on which we can start to make
progress.
I note the concerns of the National Residential Landlords
Association about moving from periodic tenancies and the effects
on student housing. It points out that both landlords and
students need to know that a property will be available many
months ahead. I am sure that the Government are working on
solutions to that perceived problem, but if I could offer one
piece of advice, it would be, please leave the proposals in the
White Paper as they are. More loopholes will be taken advantage
of.
I offer a solution. Dare I say that there should be an
opportunity, if not a duty, for universities to house all their
students who wish to be housed? Universities could engage in
tenancies with the private rented sector. They would be permanent
periodic tenancies, and universities could license rooms to their
students. That would give the private rented sector the security
it needs and students the wraparound support they often require.
In our communities, we often hear complaints about people not
coming forward. Such a solution would give universities the
knowledge that their students were in safe and secure
accommodation. It could also work for other institutions and
would still mean that the decent homes standards that the White
Paper requires had to be fulfilled in such accommodation.
Security of tenancy is particularly urgent. We are facing a
difficult time, with many landlords selling their properties.
Mortgage rates are going up and many landlords may wish to leave
the market. That is fine. Some say that landlords leaving the
sector means that rental provision leaves the sector. However,
for every landlord who leaves the sector, there is another
homeowner or private rented landlord entering it. My fear, which
is shared by many, is that turmoil in the housing market will
mean that renters are evicted so that landlords can sell property
to another buy-to-let landlord, who would often be more than
willing to allow a renter who had been paying rent for a long
time to stay there.
The Government stated:
“We encourage any landlord who wishes to sell their property to
consider selling with sitting tenants, which may provide an
easier and faster solution.”
However, most mortgages do not allow that. I ask the Minister to
sit down with mortgage providers and work out a way in which
buy-to-let tenancies could facilitate that. It might mean a
slightly higher premium in some circumstances or some conditions,
but it needs to happen now.
Ideally, we would have a system such as TUPE, whereby when an
employer is taken over, the employees continue in employment. If
a landlord is taken over, the tenants should continue to live in
the property. We should aim for that. Of course, a new buyer
might choose to move in and renovate the property. The existing
clauses allow them to remove a tenant as they see fit.
There is broad agreement on both side of the House and in the
sector on access to justice. Unless we take enforcement and the
ability to access redress seriously, this is all a waste of time.
The rogue landlords list was set up in 2018 with a great deal of
fanfare. It was meant to be a game changer. Earlier this year,
the Government were asked how many landlords were on the list.
The answer was 61. That makes a joke of the entire system. I
could probably name more than 61 in my constituency, let alone
the country. That is even more reason why the White Paper’s
proposed property portal, which would require all landlords and
properties to be registered, is the only way forward. I think
that the Government have come to realise that. I genuinely
believe that they have seen the error of their ways. That is why
they talked about establishing an ombudsperson to
“provide fair, impartial, and binding resolutions for many issues
without resorting to court.”
The White Paper goes on to say:
“The Ombudsman will have powers to put things right for tenants,
including compelling landlords to issue an apology, provide
information, take remedial action, and/or pay compensation of up
to £25,000.”
That is spot on. It empowers renters and gives them a body to
seek redress, but it also means that landlords know that there is
a place where they will be fairly heard. That, combined with the
removal of section 21, is a life changer for many. It will give
people the ability to complain about poor housing.
One person told me:
“One electrician said that the wiring was the worst he had ever
seen. The poor wiring led to us having a power cut, which was
only repaired with a temporary fix. The landlord admitted that
they were aware of the oven being faulty at the start of the
tenancy but refused to fix or replace it.
Our hot water didn’t work when we moved in—the landlord had a
friend (who wasn’t a qualified gas safety engineer) disconnect
our heating from the boiler without telling us. We had to call
out emergency gas and electrical technicians to fix these issues
and shortly after” —
surprise, surprise—
“we were served with a Section 21 notice.”
If the Government enact their proposal, renters could go to the
ombudsperson and get their home fixed to a decent standard, and
they would not have to fear a section 21 eviction notice.
It is vital to include deposit protection schemes in the
responsibilities of the ombudsperson. Decisions about such
schemes should be published on the property portal. At the
moment, they are not and they are only sporadically enforced.
Last year, the APPG heard from a young woman in her early 30s.
She said that she was still sharing a house in an insecure
renting arrangement, despite earning £35,000 a year. She spoke
about wanting to start a family with her partner, but said that
she could not because she could not provide a stable home. The
system has robbed that young woman of the ability to start a
family. The White Paper could not just address some of the
imbalances in the system but restore dignity to millions of
renters.
As is customary, I will finish with some questions for the
Minister. Will she commit to implementing all sections—that
12-point plan—of the White Paper? Does she recognise that the
pledge to abolish section 21 is not about getting rid of a clause
called section 21 but about providing stability, security, and
justice in the housing market? Will she commit to introducing the
draft legislation this year? If not, when will that happen? Will
she commit, as I have asked, to meeting mortgage lenders to
discuss buy-to-rent mortgages with sitting tenants?
2.28pm
(Dover) (Con)
I thank my friend and co-chair of the all-party parliamentary
group for renters and rental reform, the Member for Brighton,
Kemptown () for his opening
speech.
Housing is a long-standing interest of mine, and I draw Members’
attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial
Interests.
Reforming the private rented sector is an important area of work
for all Governments, and I and other Conservative Members signed
up to that in the 2019 manifesto on which we were elected. The
vehicle for that important pledge is the White Paper, “A fairer
private rented sector”, which was published in June. There has
been much change in the short time since the White Paper’s
publication. I welcome the Under-Secretary of State for Levelling
Up, Housing and Communities, my hon. Friend the Member for
Kensington () warmly to her place, and
I hope she will not mind if I place on record my considerable
regard for the work that her predecessor at the time of the White
Paper’s publication, my hon. Friend the Member for Walsall North
(), undertook.
I wish to illustrate the pressures of capacity in the private
rented sector by reference to my own constituency and across
Kent, before turning to why these reforms are so important and
need to be progressed urgently.
Today, the Home Secretary is visiting Dover. The situation of
housing people who have crossed the channel illegally in small
boats is putting a huge strain on housing and local services. It
is not unheard of for local people to be turfed out of
accommodation by landlords who want higher rents. There are
concerns that landlords are looking to cash in on lucrative,
long-term Home Office contracts. That is why we must push forward
on these reforms.
It is a great pity that the Home Secretary had not planned her
visit to Dover and to Kent so that she could meet Kent MPs and
Kent council leaders to discuss at first hand the serious local
impact on residents, including the struggle to access affordable
private-rented housing. I hope that she can meet us urgently to
discuss these issues. The extent of the issue was laid bare in a
strongly worded letter to the Home Secretary from Kent council
leaders yesterday. They said:
“Put simply, Kent is at breaking point. Our public services,
including health, social care and schools are already under
extreme pressure. We have approaching 20,000 households on the
waiting list for social housing, soaring costs, limited
availability of private sector rented housing and temporary
accommodation all fuelled by being in an expensive south-east
London periphery, while having pockets of severe deprivation and
low average earnings… Kent’s housing sector cannot absorb further
asylum places on top of those existing burdens over and above
local demand.”
How does the concern expressed by the council leaders translate
to my constituents on the ground? Let me give an example of its
impact in my constituency. My constituent, who I shall refer to
as Emily, is a mother with seven children. She was required to
leave her privately rented property on no notice, under section
21, and there was no suitable accommodation. In the end, she was
offered accommodation in Leeds, some 280 miles away. She has
ended up living with her mother in a two-bedroom house, sleeping
on the sofa and the floor. Her grandmother told me how upset she
was that migrants were housed in four-star hotels while her
granddaughter and great grandchildren faced these conditions and
impossible choices.
In an attempt to shut down debate, too often such concerns can be
labelled as extreme or even racist. There is nothing extreme for
a person to be concerned about their family; that is about as
mainstream as it comes. In my area, inevitably, given the scale
of the small boats crisis, it is the issue of accommodating
migrants and asylum seekers that puts this additional strain on
the private rented sector and services. In other areas, it might
be holiday lets, Airbnbs or student accommodation. But the
underlying point is the same: there needs to be reform of the
sector, which needs to be implemented as set out in the White
Paper, and consideration of all these different housing markets
and drivers.
Building on the White Paper, there is other work that could drive
improvement and understanding of local market dynamics further,
and that might require supplementary solutions—be that Airbnb
registration or other measures. I would be happy to meet my hon
friend the Minister to discuss this further.
Pages 7 and 8 of the White Paper set out a 12-point plan of
action for private renters. In effect, it is a 13-point plan, as
page 8 references that this plan is a support for the journey to
home ownership. I shall shortly be developing an argument for a
14th point to that plan: support on the journey to council
housing and social housing.
There are three types of housing tenure in England: owner
occupation; social rented; and private renting, which is property
owned by a person who is different from the tenant and let out at
rates and on terms and conditions that are different from those
that apply to registered social landlords.
The private rented sector has grown rapidly in recent years. As
it has become more dominant, it is inevitable that that has been
at the expense of both the social rented and home ownership
sectors. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, and right into the early
2000s, the proportion of total housing in private rented stock
was around 10%. Between 2008 and 2017, it mushroomed to more than
20% of all stock, before settling to its current level of around
18.5% of stock. That translates into a doubling from about 2
million to more than 4 million households in private rented
homes.
In the context of this debate, housing stability means that a
person knows where they stand; that if they pay their rent or
mortgage and they do not behave outrageously, they have the
choice as to whether to stay in their home. That is not the case
for private rented tenancies. The landlord chooses whether a
person can stay or must leave, no matter how long they have been
in a property or how good a tenant they have been. That is what
these reforms are trying to address—otherwise, the expense, time,
disruption, distress and uncertainty caused by a section 21
notice all falls on the tenant.
Improving housing stability is at the heart of abolishing section
21 no-fault evictions. The reform is intended to take away the
immediate day-to-day worry and concern for tenants that they will
wake up one morning to a notice saying that they have to go. The
longer-term solution is to introduce more affordable
accommodation and council housing as well as promoting home
ownership.
Dover District Council is a Conservative council that is
compassionate and active in many ways. It has embarked on a
council house building programme to help prioritise local need. I
wish to give a couple of examples. Walter Hammond Close is a
development in Dover, which comprises 16 studio flats, all let at
social rents, providing interim housing for local people facing
homelessness. It complements the Elizabeth Carter Court project
in Deal. Completed in August, it provides eight one-bedroom
flats, which are also let at social rents, providing interim
accommodation for local people facing homelessness. Those two
excellent examples of the work being undertaken by the council
are encouraging, but the council cannot build enough to keep up
with demand. That is why we need a large-scale affordable and
council housing programme across the country.
Helping constituents with private-rented housing is a staple of
our work as MPs. I want to refer to one of my constituents, who I
shall call Natasha. Her granddad asked for my help. He said:
“My granddaughter and her child have been given notice to quit by
a private landlord in Dover and have been desperately looking for
alternative accommodation without success… She has suffered
domestic abuse, ensuing mental health difficulties”—
for which she has had counselling and has recovered amazingly
well. He went on to say that she lives in a property with a
dangerous electricity system and that they had battled with the
landlord about this for months. He said:
“The current situation is that we are now 52 days away from
Natasha’s eviction date, which, ironically, is Christmas day…
Here is a young single mother and her two-year-old child who have
been given the most awful situation to face when all they wanted
to was…to live in a safe environment.”
It is vital for Natasha and all the others in Dover and Deal and
all over the country that these measures are brought forward into
legislation promptly. I had been concerned that there had been
some hesitation about this, so I would be grateful if the
Minister could confirm when we can expect these measures to be
brought forward.
In Natasha’s case, as hon. Members will have heard, there was an
electrical safety issue in her flat. She battled for months, but
it did not get fixed. Natasha is now in flat two and her child is
three. This is her current position:
“The property is a privately rented flat. The area where she
lives affects her three-year-old child’s health due to traffic
fumes. He now has a constant cough. The area is overrun by rats,
which can be heard scratching and scurrying in the walls of the
property and can be seen in the surrounding areas.”
I look forward to seeing how the proposals in the White Paper
will help Natasha and the many other cases that fill my inbox
and, I am sure, the inboxes of many other Members across the
House.
There is good intent in the ombudsman’s proposals for redress,
but that redress needs to be extremely swift and enforcement
robust. In order for that redress to happen, landlords need to be
identifiable as well as accountable. At the present time, we do
not know how many landlords there are. In addition to potential
revenue loss to the Exchequer, this makes accountability and
traceability of landlords very difficult and expensive for
councils in instances where they wish to take public health or
other enforcement action.
I welcome the proposed measures for the property portal, but I
ask the Minister to consider what steps may be taken to ensure
that the information contained in it is validated as to ownership
and management, and that it can support efforts to ensure that
all taxes are paid where they are due, and that the new proposed
ombudsman, local authorities and other enforcement agencies may
be able to access the portal in order easily to fulfil their
obligations.
I wish to move on to the White Paper’s plan around rent
management and challenging excessive rent rises. Even before the
current cost of living crisis, rent levels were unaffordable for
many. The Local Government Association’s view is that the best
way to increase housing security is to address the
unaffordability of housing, which is the key reason why people
lose their tenancies and become homeless.
I agree completely that affordability is a vital ingredient of a
good home. In the longer term, there is a need to rebalance the
housing market through a tenure strategy to make sure we balance
affordable and council housing and increased home ownership
alongside a reduction in the private rented sector, but in the
near term, there is increasing pressure on rents, making them
unaffordable and unsustainable for many.
In the White Paper, the Government rule out rent controls to set
rents at the outset of the tenancy. In recent weeks I have
proposed controls to freeze current rents for up to the next two
years, while the current economic pressures are expected to reach
their peak. The proposal would comply with the premise set out in
the White Paper because it affects only rent rises, not base rent
levels. The measure would be deflationary, not inflationary, and
would be to the wider benefit of everyone, including
landlords.
A case may be argued for managing rents more widely, but to some
extent high rents are the symptom, not the cause. As the hon.
Member for Brighton, Kemptown eloquently set out, the private
rented sector has expanded to become all things to all people. It
is providing both homes to those who can and should be home
owners with a mortgage, and a roof over the head of those who
have none, who should be in affordable housing.
I understand that many landlords want to be compensated for any
costs they pass on to tenants—indeed, some of them are very vocal
on that subject—so the nature of the landlord and their
relationship with the property is important. The UK landlord
market is unusual compared with some other countries, dominated
as it is by individuals, not by housing organisations and
institutional landlords. The latest English private landlords
survey shows that some 94% of landlords are individuals
representing 84% of tenancies, so they are strongly dominant.
About half of them are longer-term landlords of more than a
decade. When people were asked to describe themselves as a
landlord, over half said they considered their properties to be a
long-term investment to contribute to their pension, and 27% said
they considered them to be an investment for capital growth. So
while for the tenant the property is their home, for the landlord
it is first and foremost an investment, and as we all know,
investments can go up and down.
Just as there are longer-term structural issues around tenure,
there are longer-term issues with savings and investment
vehicles, including property. In that context, I ask the Minister
to consider whether the financial management proposals on rents
set out in the White Paper could be developed further, and
whether there should be more robust measures to assist renters
during this cost of living crisis. Communications I have received
from landlords seem to suggest that they are unable to weather
changing market conditions in the way that other businesses are
expected to. The assumption seems to be that the tenant should
bear all the financial costs and risk; otherwise, the landlord
threatens to sell, even in a falling market.
In that context, I ask the Minister what work has been undertaken
to assess resilience to market changes in the landlord market
with the mortgage lenders, as happens for individual owner
occupiers, and whether stronger mortgage market regulation is
needed for landlords with buy-to-let mortgages, to make sure they
have sufficient planning and affordability to weather different
market conditions. Is the Minister considering interest support
or greater interest deductibility to support under-capitalised
landlords in the near term? I would be grateful if she also
considered whether such support could be linked to, for example,
landlords committing to keep their rents in check during this
cost of living crisis.
There is strong evidence that the inherently insecure nature of
the private rented sector has an adverse impact on people living
under that type of tenure. There are measures in the White Paper
that will incrementally move the private sector forward, and I
welcome them. I look forward to working with my hon. Friend the
Minister on this important aspect of her work.
2.44pm
(Stockport) (Lab)
Thank you for calling me so early in the debate, Madam Deputy
Speaker. This is a very important issue in my constituency and
across England. More than 7,000 households—households, not
people—are on the waiting list at Stockport Homes, which is one
of the main providers of housing in my constituency, and 11
million people rent privately in England. That underlines the
importance of this debate, and I am grateful to my hon. and good
Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown () for securing it.
We heard about reforms the Government were going to bring in some
three years ago; unfortunately, in the three long, hard years
since, we have seen very little progress. I will describe two
separate cases that have recently come into my inbox. The first
involves a family of three—a single mother with two teenage
children, one of whom has severe autism. They were served with a
section 21 notice of no-fault eviction. The mother had always
paid her rent and kept the house spotless, and the family had
lived in the property for 12 years. When they were served the
section 21 notice, the landlord said they wanted to sell, but my
constituent suspects that the landlord was seeking a higher rent
in the market.
Sadly, the family were evicted. They were rehoused in a hotel
outside the borough of Stockport, which caused massive problems
for the family, including the 16-year-old son with a medical
condition. The three of them were accommodated in a small hotel
room, and Stockport Homes has had to extend the six-week period
for hotel costs because the son is unable to cope with the trauma
of moving into temporary accommodation before being rehomed.
Stockport Homes is also paying the storage costs, which the
family will have to reimburse, increasing the pressure on the
family. The mother is flexible about where the family can be
rehoused; she is just desperate for a permanent home. There has
been a mental impact on the entire family, but particularly on
the son who has autism. It is a serious case and I wanted to
highlight it in the Chamber.
The other case is also quite tragic. I was contacted by a
recently bereaved constituent who was on a protected tenancy. Her
private landlord’s agent had asked for her rent to be increased
from £350 a month to £800 a month. She had been living in that
one-bedroom flat with her late partner for 44 years on a
protected tenancy, with very little upkeep and maintenance of the
property undertaken. The valuation office was approached and the
formal rent valuation process was gone through. The rent for the
property was determined to be £450 a month, not £800 a month as
the agent was demanding. This tenant was fortunate to have
protected tenancy status at a time when she was most vulnerable,
after the loss of her partner of 44 years. Sadly, most people are
not so fortunate. Those are two serious cases, but I could go on.
My inbox is filled with similar cases of people who are desperate
to get housing.
I am grateful to several organisations, but particularly Shelter,
which provided an important briefing for the debate. Research
from Shelter conducted in April 2022—three years after the
Government first committed to scrapping section 21 no-fault
evictions—shows us that every seven minutes a private renter is
served with a section 21 notice and that more than 200,000
renters have been evicted in the three years since the Government
first said they would scrap no-fault evictions. These figures are
staggering and very worrying. Other colleagues have mentioned
Generation Rent and other organisations, including Shelter, which
conduct important research and act as a lifeline for many people
in that desperate situation.
While we are debating housing, I want to mention Mrs Sheila
Bailey, a local councillor in my constituency who very sadly
passed away recently, and highlight early-day motion 428, which I
tabled in this House to pay tribute to her work. She was a
champion for housing in particular, and played an important role
in creating Viaduct Housing Partnership, a local housebuilder,
when she was cabinet member for that portfolio.
I know there are several other speakers, so I will not take much
more time. I want to mention the inadequacy of local housing
allowance. I have raised this matter on several occasions via
both oral and written questions. According to the Office for
National Statistics, the median rent for a one-bedroom flat in
the private rented sector in Stockport borough is £600, yet, by
the Government’s own admission in answers to written
parliamentary questions I have tabled, in the two broad rental
market areas that fall under that local authority, 71% and 52% of
households respectively have a gap between local housing
allowance rates and their rent. That needs to be looked at.
I could say a lot more; a vast amount of casework comes through
my office via letters, emails and telephone calls from people
desperate to find housing in my borough. Stockport, I would say,
is the best place to live out of the 10 boroughs in Greater
Manchester—in fact, I would say it is the best place to live in
England—but that means that the housing market is very
competitive. People are facing hardship as it is because of the
failed economic policies of this Government, but in addition, in
Stockport, we have a problem where housing is in a dire state. We
must ensure that people are not left behind.
Lastly, I must mention Stockport Tenants Union, which was set up
just over two years ago and provides support to people across the
borough; Jonathan Billings, who is a long-standing campaigner
against homelessness and has set up a charity named EGG, or
Engage Grow Go; and the Wellspring in Stockport, which has been
serving the local community for decades. My hon. Friend the
shadow Minister will speak later on, but I want to congratulate
my hon. Friend the Member for Liverpool, Wavertree (), who has just been appointed
to the role of shadow Minister for homelessness and rough
sleeping.
The Opposition are taking this issue very seriously. We cannot
wait three more years for action, or even three more months—we
must ensure that it is delivered quickly.
2.51pm
(North Devon) (Con)
I thank the hon. Member for Brighton, Kemptown () and my hon. Friend the
Member for Dover (Mrs Elphicke) for securing this important
debate.
Apparently I have mentioned this in the House before, but North
Devon has a housing crisis. The enormous growth in short-term
holiday lets and second homes has resulted in an unsustainable
shortage of houses for local residents to live in. Matters are
now at such a stage that many businesses and public services are
simply unable to recruit and numerous businesses are unable to
operate full time.
Many will say, “Well, don’t you welcome your tourists?”. Indeed
we do welcome our tourists, but we would like them also to eat in
our local pubs and restaurants, which are unable to open full
time because they cannot get staff, because there is nowhere for
anyone to live.
The private long-term rental sector across Devon has declined by
more 50% in the last two years and by more than 60% in my own
North Devon constituency. Unfortunately, Government policy has
not helped. The changes to landlord tax relief made it
preferential to have a short-term furnished holiday let rather
than a long-term rental tenancy.
Although the changes were introduced in 2017, they only became
fully effective in 2020, when most of us were rather consumed
with the pandemic, and came into effect at the same time that
people were suddenly desperate to escape to wide-open spaces such
as my beautiful constituency. Moreover, as soon as we were
allowed to go on holiday, people rushed to North Devon and the
prices paid for our holiday lets soared.
In addition, the legislation we passed only last week to raise
stamp duty thresholds still applies to second homes and holiday
lets. That is more complicated, because we desperately need more
people to become long-term landlords again—we must find a way to
reverse the demise we have seen in that area. I recognise the
challenges, but I hope that we will be able to consider how some
of the policies designed to help people to get on to the property
ladder are just facilitating more people’s buying second homes or
short-term holiday lets that sit empty for half the year.
The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport’s
consultation on a registration scheme for second homes or
short-term holiday lets is now complete, but we still have no
date for when the results will be released, which leaves councils
with few tools available to them to tackle the surge in
properties that lie empty for months of the year, yet are still
more profitable to their landlords than a long-term rental. We
must ensure that there are change of use clauses for properties
made into holiday lets. Those properties were built as homes and
should be lived in. If they are a business, they should have to
declare a change of use and be taxed accordingly.
This situation is made even harder by the increased requirements
on landlords with regard to energy performance certificates, with
rural and coastal properties often requiring huge amounts of
investment to achieve the necessary rating. That is resulting in
even more rental properties being sold or converted to less
regulated short-term holiday lets. While I agree that we must
ensure properties do not leak, we need to recognise that rural
housing stock is very different from urban housing stock and find
other, more creative ways to tackle this, so that landlords do
not take the logical way out of selling or moving on to a
different type of tenancy.
Swathes of long-term tenants in my constituency have found
themselves evicted under section 21 notices, so that landlords
could take advantage of the tax breaks available to them when
their property is let out as a short-term holiday let. Post
pandemic, a small two-bed long-term rental in my patch may cost
£800 a month, whereas a short-term holiday let will cost at least
that per week, and probably double.
Because of the lack of rental properties in my patch, when people
are evicted, there is simply nowhere to go. The council housing
list is so long that people are being rehomed as far away as
Bristol. Some families stay in the area for their children’s
schooling, and we now have multiple children being bussed or
taken by private taxi 10 to 15 miles each morning to their
primary school. At a time when council resources are under
pressure, we are adding layer upon layer of extra cost, simply
because we do not have enough homes for people to live in.
For tenants, section 21 notices have been horrific—we all have
awful stories of people’s experiences—but not all landlords are
bad. Many find themselves struggling to evict people who have not
paid rent, for example, and section 21 notices are taking up to
18 months to get through the courts in my constituency. I hope
that, as we see some progress in this area, landlords are not
demonised, because we need more landlords to come forward, so
that we can tackle this section of the market. It is the
relationship between landlord and tenant that drives a successful
rental relationship. Although we feel that that relationship is
unbalanced at present, I hope we can support both sides of this
delicate balance. We need to find a way to give security to
tenants but also give landlords the ability to evict when they
genuinely need to. The concern with some of the proposed
legislation is that we are already seeing landlords choosing not
to risk not being able to evict a tenant. When a landlord could
have a short-term holiday let in my patch, why would they have a
long-term rental?
We need the housing stock we have to be better utilised and not
sat empty for half the year, but I do not disagree that we need
to build more homes. Over 16,000 people are currently on Devon’s
housing lists, and even if those lists closed now, at the current
rate of building, it would take over 32 years to clear the
backlog. We need urgent intervention in the housing market in
Devon and many other places around the coast. The demise of
long-term rentals makes moving to remote, rural and coastal
locations to work nearby impossible, and we have so many job
vacancies that many companies are simply not operating at full
capacity. If we want economic growth, we need workers who can
live close to their place of work and find affordable
accommodation.
For communities to thrive, they need people living there all year
round, so that we do not have the winter ghost towns that blight
far too many of our popular tourist destinations. We warmly
welcome tourists, but the balance between visitors and workers is
now not there, and urgent intervention is needed. MPs in seats
like mine have been raising these issues for years with multiple
Ministers, and I hope that this Minister will remain in post long
enough to deliver substantive change and find a way to reverse
the demise of the long-term rental sector.
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I call .
2.58pm
(Vauxhall)
(Lab/Co-op)
Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker.
“Being a new and first time mum is hard and challenging without
having your foundations stripped from you, evicted with no
warning, in the middle of winter, when other rent is hard to
secure”.
Those are the words of my constituent Katherine, who gave birth
to her baby boy in June. Last December, Katherine signed a
two-year contract with her landlord, informing them that she
wanted a longer contract to give herself stability during her
pregnancy. Unfortunately, she received an email in October saying
that the owner had noticed that market prices had increased a lot
recently and would like to adjust the rent. After she explained
the situation to the letting agent and landlord, however, she was
told that the landlord was now moving back into the
property—surprise, surprise—and there was no room for
negotiation. That has left her and her young family without the
security of a home and facing eviction just weeks before her
child’s first Christmas.
Sadly, having listened to other examples this afternoon, I know
that Katherine is not alone in Vauxhall or across the country in
facing the sharp end of our imbalanced rental market. My hon.
Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown () outlined the similar
situation of a young woman in her 30s who is hoping to start a
family. Katherine has started her family, but now faces that
difficulty in the rented sector.
It cannot be right that tenants are expected to find thousands of
pounds in moving costs in the space of just two months after a
landlord serves a section 21 notice. It cannot be right that
tenants, who are paying ever-increasing rents, are denied the
most basic security of knowing whether they will have a roof over
their head in a matter of weeks. It cannot be right that, during
the sharpest cost of living crisis in decades, tenants are
expected to bid extortionate amounts against each other to secure
even the most basic of properties, as happened recently to a
constituent in Clapham.
My hon. Friend the Member for Stockport () mentioned that rents in
his constituency total about £600; in my constituency, the
average rent for a one-bedroom flat starts at £2,000. A tenant
recently contacted me to say that they had contacted an online
letting agent to go and view a property, only to be informed that
35 people were already in the queue waiting to view and that they
should expect to bid for the property.
The Government announced an end to section 21 notices in April
2019. Since then, we have had four Prime Ministers and six
housing Ministers, but not a single act to end section 21
notices. During his short period out of the role, the recently
revived Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities reportedly urged the previous Prime Minister, the
right hon. Member for South West Norfolk ()—stay with me now—to stick
to a commitment to ban section 21. I will be honest that I am
glad to see him back in that role, because I think that he was
making some headway in key areas on housing, including cladding.
Now, however, I hope that he will put his money where his mouth
is and bring forward a date for a renters reform Bill today.
Rents in London have risen by an average of 15%, and across the
country by an average of 11.8%. That is not sustainable for our
constituents. Sadly, any reforms will come too late for my
constituent Katherine in her current property. As the Government
delay and dither, more people will be left in a desperate
situation as a result of section 21 notices. It is within our
grasp to fix this issue. I am grateful to the hon. Members for
Dover (Mrs Elphicke) and for North Devon () for raising the issue, but
I hope that they will push their Ministers to make sure that we
see reform come through now.
3.03pm
(Harrow East) (Con)
It is a pleasure to follow my co-chair on the all-party
parliamentary group for ending homelessness, the hon. Member for
Vauxhall (). I draw the House’s
attention to my entry in the Register of Members’ Financial
Interests.
As my hon. Friend the Member for Dover (Mrs Elphicke) said, the
private sector rental market in this country has expanded not
just to cover what it was intended to provide—a way for people to
let out houses as they choose—but to take into account what is
needed for social rented housing. I will start with our biggest
problem, which is that all political parties have failed for 30
years to build enough socially rented homes in this country. The
reality is that we need to build 90,000 socially rented homes a
year to provide what is required. At the moment, we expect the
private rented sector to pick up that slack, so we have to then
interfere with the market.
I counsel my hon. Friend the new Minister to ensure that we do
not look at the issue in a piecemeal way, because we need to
reform the whole market, not just bits of it. As I have said on
many occasions, the biggest cause of homelessness in this country
is the end of a private sector tenancy through the serving of a
section 21 notice. However, if someone gets a section 21 notice
now, they can, thanks to the Homelessness Reduction Act 2017, at
least approach the local authority and seek help and assistance,
whereas previously they could not.
We have the challenge that, if all we do is abolish section 21,
we will force private sector landlords to move to section 8
evictions and all that involves. The problem then is that it not
only becomes an expensive process across the board, but lands the
tenant, who is probably completely innocent, with county court
judgments against their name, and when they go for another
private sector tenancy, they get told, “Sorry, you’re a bad risk
and we’re going to up the deposit or impose conditions on you to
get the private sector tenancy.” That is wrong in principle. What
we have to do is to look at the complete area of the market.
One other issue, which my hon. Friend the Member for Dover
mentioned, is the changes that have taken place in the promotion
of the private rented sector by previous Governments. When was Chancellor of the
Exchequer, he promoted the concept of buy to let, which has of
course continued to expand across the piece. When was Chancellor, he put
brakes on the incentives to do that, which of course did not kick
in for several years after he proposed them. The result is that
many private sector landlords are leaving the market because it
is no longer as profitable as it once was. Where do they go? They
go to the Airbnb market or the completely unregulated sector,
which my hon. Friend the Member for North Devon () mentioned.
The risk is that, unless we look at the whole ambit of this, all
we will do is reduce the size of the sector, increase rents
overall and make sure that tenants are put in a worse position
than they were in the first place. So there has to be a complete
revolution in this regard. I commend the White Paper for offering
a menu of choices, but I think we still need to go further in
looking at the entirety of the sector to prevent that from
happening.
The hon. Member for Brighton, Kemptown () made the point about a
landlord being able to sell a property with a sitting tenant. Why
not? Many mortgage providers will now allow that to happen—not
enough, I would accept, but many do. As we have heard, 94% of
landlords have one or two properties, and they dominate the
market. Most landlords want the position of having a good tenant,
who pays their rent and does not misbehave. If that happens, why
should they not continue on that basis?
The model in this country is a six-month assured shorthold
tenancy, with limitations on renewing that tenancy and, indeed,
conditions on both sides that the landlord and the tenant should
honour. My view has been this. The Housing, Communities and Local
Government Committee—the predecessor to the current Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities Committee—did an inquiry on this, and we
recommended long-term tenancies of three years or more, so that
people had security of tenure. A capability was enshrined within
that about how rents could be increased—in other words, once per
year and in line with inflation—so that both sides knew, with
predictability, how that should be. That, to me, is a way
forward.
We also suggested having a specialist housing court. Rather than
have the expensive processes we currently have, we could have a
housing court that would concentrate purely on these subjects. We
have to face up to the fact that, every single day in this
country, there are 300,000 people sofa surfing who cannot get
anywhere to live. Also, 7%, at least, of private sector tenants
are in severe rent arrears. Some people say, “Well, 7% isn’t too
bad”, but that means 300,000 people or families in severe rent
arrears who face eviction through the courts at any one time.
Unless we address this problem—I have warned successive
Ministers, and we have mentioned how many Ministers we have
had—we are going to face a homelessness crisis the like of which
this country has never seen before. The reality is that the
moratorium on evictions during the covid pandemic was the right
thing to do—without question. There were people who could not
afford to pay the rent during that time. Perhaps their jobs
disappeared, or the benefits system did not catch up with them or
they did not apply properly. Others just refused to pay because
they knew they could get away with it. I have no sympathy for
those people. I have several examples in my constituency where
tenants just refuse to pay their landlords; from their
perspective, they are reprehensible.
As things have unwound and the economy is coming back into
fruition, we are seeing rents and pressures on tenants rise, and
a rush by certain unscrupulous landlords to try to increase rents
dramatically before the renters’ reform Bill comes into play. We
need measures immediately to counter those issues. I have a
question for the Minister. I understand that she is new to the
job, but there were strong rumours that the renters’ reform Bill
would be delayed and postponed, and perhaps even kicked into the
long grass. I hope that the Bill will be published and brought
forward as rapidly as possible, with, if necessary—I do not
normally agree with this—retrospective measures to prevent what
could happen while the Bill completes its passage through
Parliament; in other words, unscrupulous landlords evicting
tenants or hiking their rents to get them out, and causing
further problems. We must include within that Bill what to do for
the entirety of the market: both the Airbnb market and short-term
lets. If we do not, we will drive private sector landlords to the
more profitable end of short-term lets without any regulation,
and without anything to assist people who desperately need
accommodation.
I welcome my hon. Friend to the Front Bench. One quiz question I
often have is, “How many Housing Ministers have we had since
1997?” I think we are up to 32 in 25 years. I am afraid that
demonstrates the problem we have in this country: a lack of
long-term planning in terms of the Ministers at the Department. I
welcome the Minister to her position and hope she can give us
some good news.
3.12pm
(York Central)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Harrow East
(). I sat on the levelling up Bill Committee, and
seven Ministers served us during that time, so I share that
frustration. We need a long-term strategy to ensure we address
the housing crisis we face.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Dover (Mrs Elphicke) and my
hon. Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown () on securing this
important debate, which has caused hon. Members to stay behind on
a Thursday because we care so passionately about housing. I also
welcome the new Minister to her place. I trust she will produce
the goods that we are all longing for: not just a fairer private
rented sector and a 12-point plan, but the first step of a
comprehensive strategy to address once and for all the housing
crisis that we see.
The private rented sector has now become the backstop to housing,
as opposed to local authorities, which traditionally had that
role. As a result, power has shifted from the state into the
hands of private landlords, which is why we face some of these
deep-seated crises. In York, 20.4% of people live in the private
rented sector. I have looked at the number of class 1 measures
that need to be taken because of a failure to keep those homes in
good condition. A quarter of homes have trip hazards, poor
wiring, mould, rodents—the list goes on. That is why today’s
measures on raising those standards are so important. But that
can be only a first step.
Most landlords are there to serve a community in their own way,
but also to realise the value of their estate and investment.
Much extraction of property and money removes those opportunities
from anybody else. For any tenant I speak to in the private
rented sector, renting is not their choice. It is a matter of
needing a home and for many people that home is not satisfactory
for them. Since the year began, we have seen a plethora of
section 21 notices; they are rising in number. I will talk about
that because we are seeing a rise in costs and a decline in
conditions. Looking at costs, my constituents spend 32% of their
income on rent, which means that, with the cost of living crisis
and energy costs, there is little left to start saving for that
longed-for home. Property prices are rising in York at a rate
that is running away from people, so they are trapped, with no
assets, in the private rented sector. We must facilitate people’s
ability to break out from that.
Some costs fall heavily on people who receive local housing
allowance. I really hope that the Minister will talk to
colleagues about that—I appreciate that there is crossover of
interest in housing—and how the broad rental market is evaluated.
The average rental cost in York is £945 per calendar month, and
yet someone would receive only £650 in their LHA for a two-bedded
property. That gap means that people cannot afford to live in the
private rented sector and have nowhere to go. Ultimately, we see
that many people with the vital skills needed to ensure that our
economy can function are leaving our city. There are deep-seated
challenges because the rental market covers a much broader area
than York, which has a particular hotspot in property
expense.
We also see people taking real advantage of section 21 notices
because of the short-term holiday let market. The hon. Member for
North Devon () focused her speech on that,
and I will do so, too, because it is hitting holiday hotspots
across the country at such an alarming rate. Private landlords
are flipping their properties over from the private rented sector
to short-term holiday lets. In York, a landlord can get £700 from
a property for a weekend. In the light of the measures spoken
about by the hon. Member for Harrow East and the changes first in
buy-to-let mortgages and then when pulled back some tax
advantages, landlords say that their margins are too tight to
maintain their properties in the private rented sector so, to
make any profit on their assets, they need to flip their
properties.
We have more than 2,000 short-term holiday lets just in my
constituency and the surrounding area, which are hollowing out
streets and communities. Ultimately, because of that market,
people are being kicked out of their homes and having to leave
the area and their jobs, and children are being taken out of
school. That is why I have a private Member’s Bill—the Short-term
and Holiday-let Accommodation (Licensing) Bill—before Parliament.
I hope that the Department will work with me to bring it into
being and regulate and license short-term holiday lets. It is due
to have its Second Reading on 9 December, and it could transform
our ability to regulate that market. That is where the inequality
sits and where we need to see significant change.
I welcome the measures in the White Paper for greater
accountability and for greater power for tenants—something that
has been so absent. That is why I very much hope to see those
measures brought forward in a Bill at the earliest possible
stage. An ombudsman is a way of bringing powers to book, but it
needs to be properly resourced. If it is not, it will be
ineffective in bringing about the changes that we need to see and
to put curbs on landlords wanting to exploit the system.
I turn to students. My hon. Friend the Member for Brighton,
Kemptown mentioned the challenges in student accommodation. I met
York Residential Landlords Association to discuss the matter as
well as the universities in York. Purpose-built student
accommodation has an exemption and can issue just one-year
tenancies to students. However, in the private rented sector,
there is not that option. That will cause real challenge. Next
year’s students are already seeking out their accommodation.
Landlords are saying that if the legislation comes in, they will
simply start looking for their accommodation during the exam
period. That, clearly, would not be in anyone’s interests. My
hon. Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown came up with a
really sensible and positive suggestion, and I hope the Minister
can look at it, but we do need to solve this issue for the sake
of students. I have 40,000 students in one form or another in
York, so it is a major issue for us.
I hope the Minister, in her time in the role, will look
internationally at good practice, as there is much to learn from
across the globe. In particular, I am attracted to measures taken
in Finland where tenants are provided with resourcing, instead of
just a local housing benefit, to start being able to access the
property market themselves. It is an interesting model that
should be considered as an opportunity.
I concur with hon. Members from across the House on the need to
build social homes. We really do have a crisis, and when there is
a crisis urgent measures need to be taken. The problem with
housing is that it is still seen as a short-term fix for
developers trying to make their revenue. We have to think far
more long-term about it. I urge the Minister to think about the
opportunities her Government have to use public land for public
good. I am talking about disposals of Ministry of Defence land,
NHS property services, Network Rail and so on—significant
estates. If we can build social housing and affordable housing on
those estates, as opposed to housing to market, it could be a
real game changer. The interest of the spending Department is to
receive a capital receipt, but if we can find that as a mechanism
to deliver the housing our communities need it could be really
important.
I will close on this point. When Nye Bevan sat where the Minister
is and had the opportunity to deliver housing—I think we all
recognise that he delivered more for social housing and more for
housing in our country than any other Minister ever has, and I
certainly pay tribute to him—he said that the only way to deliver
the housing the country needed was to empower local authorities,
municipal authorities, to have the authority to go ahead and
build. He built and he delivered. I trust the Minister will,
too.
3.22pm
(Putney) (Lab)
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown () and the hon. Member
for Dover (Mrs Elphicke) for securing this very important debate.
It is definitely one of the biggest issues in Putney, Southfields
and Roehampton in my constituency. I thank the London Renters
Union, Generation Rent and Shelter for their campaigning work to
raise concerns that are very common across my constituency, but
also for their work in supporting renters. I commend Wandsworth
Council for its 1,000 Homes scheme, which are all going to be
council housing. That is the right way forward, because, as so
many Members have pointed out, the housing crisis across our
country needs to be addressed and can only be done so with more
homes.
I speak today on behalf of the 41,000 renters in Wandsworth,
especially those who feel they are stuck in a rental system that
is overheating, burning through their finances and taking an
emotional and mental health toll on their lives because of the
imbalance of power. We look to the White Paper and to legislation
to address the imbalance of power between landlords and renters.
Renters are spending so much money, yet still have an insecure
system.
There is much in the White Paper that is welcome, but I am
beginning to lose faith in whether any of it will be delivered. I
hope to hear warm and encouraging remarks from the Minister
today, but also pledges for action. The long-awaited renters
reform Bill has still not been brought to the House. I therefore
ask the Minister: where is it and when will we see it? The
Government promised renters reforms in the 2021 Queen’s Speech,
but as yet have failed to deliver. The private rented sector did
not even get a mention in the most recent Queen’s Speech, yet the
stories told today, and there are many more that I know of,
really highlight the need for change.
To give one example, I was evicted from my rented home 20 years
ago. The landlord told the three of us that we would have to
leave because they were going to sell the house. Someone visited
who claimed to be a solicitor—I am still not sure whether they
were. They made sure that we paid our rent right up to the end,
rather than using our deposit for the last month, so we did that
quite properly. However, the landlord then gave some spurious
reasons for not paying back our deposits and took them all. By
then, we had moved on to different places. We could not afford to
go to the small claims court. It was all too difficult. We then
went back to the property only to find out that it had been
re-rented to another group—and on went the landlord. That was so
unfair, and it has stayed with me ever since.
The other day, on the way to see a constituent, I went past a
house where the family were moving out. They were absolutely
furious. They—a nurse and a policeman—had been given a section 21
notice to leave, because they had complained about the mould in
their flat. It was a revenge eviction, or—as I hear about so
often—an eviction because of complaints to the landlord. They
were asked to leave and could not afford to move to any other
property in the area, so they were going to have to move north of
London and come back every day to their local jobs in south-west
London. Their lives were being upturned and, to them, it seemed
so unfair.
I also heard from someone locally who described herself as a
“beginner teacher”. She moved into a flat that seemed to be
absolutely fine, but very soon after moving in, she found that
there was damp and spreading black mould in the bedroom. That had
an impact on her health. The landlord did not acknowledge the
complaints for a long time, took no action to get rid of the
mould, and then, after 10 months, served her with a section 21
notice. She had to leave. I have no doubt that the next tenant
then moved in, found the same thing and the whole cycle
continued, allowing the landlord to leave alone the black mould
and the health and safety concerns.
I have also heard from many survivors of domestic abuse, for whom
the state of the private rented sector has a huge impact. The
fear of abuse versus the fear of homelessness ensures that many
women who should move out for their safety do not. Women’s Aid
reported that the high costs of the private rented sector create
a barrier for many women who want to leave their abusive
partners.
The Conservatives pledged to ban section 21 evictions in 2019,
and I have raised that issue several times in the House since
being elected. They have still not been banned. The latest Prime
Minister has yet to confirm whether it is his policy to do so, so
I hope to hear from the Minister that the legislation will end
no-fault and revenge evictions.
Since the Government first promised to end section 21 evictions
in 2019, around 230,000 private renters have been served notice.
As has been mentioned, that is an eviction every seven minutes.
The introduction of the legislation is very urgent for so many
people. Renters need the Government to legislate now to provide
them with immediate protection. There have been lots of nice
words and aspiration but no delivery. That is perhaps not
surprising as there have been five Housing Secretaries —or is it
six?—since I became an MP.
Too many people are stuck in a system with no power to challenge
rogue landlords and no savings to get on the housing ladder, and
they are in housing that falls well below acceptable standards.
Renters need a deal that gives them the security and dignity that
they deserve, yet the system’s problems are getting more and more
acute. Everyone has been vying to give the highest costs of the
private rented sector in their constituency, but I thank I can
beat all the previous hon. Members. In Putney, the average rent
for a two-bedroom flat is £3,900 a month. That is nearly £47,000
a year. [Interruption.] A one-bed flat is about £2,700. That is
astronomical. A rented property will go on to the market first
thing in the morning. By 11 o’clock, there will be many visits.
By 1 or 2 o’clock, offers will be put in and those ratchet up
through the afternoon. I have heard of landlords asking for three
years’ rent up front and increasing monthly costs. Respective
renters have to outdo one another in what they can offer to a
landlord, when they are not entirely sure what will make a
difference in the sector. I know many people who are having to
move out, move to a different place and entirely change their
life. They also know, as I do, that their children will not be
able to afford to rent in the area they live in.
The insecurity of the sector is having a huge impact on the
social housing sector, where many people are living in
increasingly overcrowded homes with more and more children. Their
fear of moving into the private rented sector is so great that
they are living in those overcrowded homes far longer than they
otherwise would. It is not just for the private rented sector
that we need reform.
Four in 10 under-30s now spend more than 30% of their pay on
rent, according to the data. That is a five-year high, and it is
absolutely shocking. The Minister knows exactly what the
situation is like, especially in London. Demand for homes to rent
privately in London has exploded post pandemic, and the ratio of
prospective tenants to rooms available is 7:1. The private rented
sector also has the highest prevalence of category 1 hazards,
which are those that present a risk of serious harm or death.
Poor housing costs £1.4 billion a year to the NHS and £18.5
billion to society as a whole.
There are more than half a million more households with dependent
children in the private rented sector than there were in 2005;
they make up 30% of the sector. Eviction from private tenancy is
the second leading cause of homelessness in England. It is all
happening in the context of an unprecedented cost of living
crisis. I am so worried about what it will mean for my
constituents in Putney through the winter ahead.
As I say, much of the White Paper is welcome and will make a huge
difference, but it makes no promises about in-tenancy rent
increases. It lacks detail on the decent homes standard and makes
no mention of the previously promised lifetime deposit. There is
a lack of legislation to help renters to afford legal advice when
using the new PRS housing ombudsman.
I welcome hon. Members’ comments about students. Will the
Minister meet Universities UK to look at ways to make the student
rented sector far more secure? I have an interest: I currently
have two students in my family, and I have had three, so I have
spent a lot of my own money on the student private rented sector.
I know that lots of student unions are running campaigns to say,
“You don’t have to rush into getting your tenancy very early in
the academic year, signing up to unaffordable conditions and
paying huge amounts during the summer.” Any way in which
universities could take on a larger amount of the private rented
sector and ensure that it is stable and fair for students would
be welcome and revolutionary.
There is lots of work to do. As a minimum, legislation needs to
include increased security of tenure, including longer notice
periods, a longer period of protection from no-fault eviction,
and an assurance that tenants will be compensated when forced to
move. Secondly, there needs to be increased protection from
abuse. In particular, landlords must provide unequivocal evidence
when they are selling or moving back in. There needs to be a
longer no re-let period, with increased resources for local
authorities to investigate abuse. Finally, there needs to be a
focus on affordability, a limit on unaffordable rent increases, a
rent tribunal system that is easier to access—in fact, easy to
access—and an end to automatic eviction for arrears. Most of all,
we need clarity from the new Prime Minister on whether he will
honour the 2019 manifesto pledge to end section 21 evictions.
Renters in my constituency and up and down the country deserve
safe, secure and affordable homes. It is time for the Government
to put their money where their mouth is and deliver for them.
3.33pm
(Westminster North) (Lab)
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown
() and the hon. Member
for Dover (Mrs Elphicke) on securing this debate, but I must be
honest: I find it disappointing that we are having a general
debate on the private rented sector yet again, three years after
we were promised legislation. The time is overdue for us to get
beyond discussing policy in the round and on to discussing the
substance of legislation and amending it.
Having said that, we have had some really strong speeches. I was
struck by the speeches of Conservative Back Benchers, who
sounded—well—like us, really. I am pleased that it seems to be
appreciated that there are limits to deregulation and we have hit
the bumpers in that regard—particularly in respect of short-term
lets, which have had a devastating effect on lettings in a number
of towns and coastal communities and, of course, in inner London,
notably my own constituency, which has the largest private rented
sector in the country.
In the years during which we have been waiting for the Government
to enact the promised legislation, we have been plunged into a
deepening affordability crisis for renters, who are facing an
increasing squeeze on their incomes. London rents are now
averaging £2,000 a month, and since last year have increased by
20% in inner London and just over 15% in London as a whole.
Nationally, one in five renters have faced an increase of £100 a
month. As 45% of renters have no savings at all, the fact that
they have managed to survive for this long is a miracle. However,
as we go into the winter with a cost of living crisis, there is a
real risk that a catastrophic number of people will be tipped
into homelessness, and certainly into poverty. Even more than any
other tenure group, these people will face a choice between
keeping a roof over the heads, eating and heating.
It needs to be said that there is an inequalities dimension to
this. My hon. Friend the Member for Brighton, Kemptown was right
to say that there are three different rental markets. We are most
concerned with the average renters, people who would otherwise be
buying but are deferring buying because of the cost of rents, but
we must also consider the third or so who constitute the poorer
renters. Of those, a disproportionate number are women-led
households and black and minority ethnic communities. It is
members of black and minority ethnic communities who are least
likely to have mortgages, and who are therefore most
likely—especially given the squeeze on social housing—to find
themselves trapped in the poorest-quality private rented
accommodation and the most expensive in proportion to income,
with all the consequences that will have for those communities.
It is important for the Government to understand the inequalities
dimension, and to frame the legislation accordingly.
The Evening Standard, which has rightly had a continuing focus on
the private rented market, recently ran a piece headed “London’s
renting crisis: brutal choices, heartbreak and escalating costs
faced by renters at breaking point”. That is absolutely accurate.
The competition for rental properties is unprecedented. We hear
stories of auctions with people having to bid against each other,
and of deposits and other up-front costs. Every time someone has
to move, not only do they have to deal with a deposit, but the
moving costs are piled on top of that. It is no wonder that
younger renters cannot afford to buy, and are locked out of the
housing market that most wish to join, as a result of that
combination of rents and recurring one-off costs which eat into
their incomes.
Today’s interest rate rises will feed into mortgages, which is
entirely due to the Government’s mishandling of the economy, and
which means that people will be trapped even deeper and for even
longer. Those at the lower end of the market who, in any normal
and healthy system, would have been enjoying the security and the
fair rents of social housing appropriate to their circumstances
and their income are locked out as well, because the number of
lettings in social housing has plummeted by more than 100,000 in
the last 10 years alone.
Why is that? It is because over the past 12 years the Government
have deliberately chosen not to build social housing. One of the
first acts of the 2010 Government was to halve the housing
investment grant, making it impossible for local authorities to
build. But it is also because—this has not been understood by
successive Ministers—there always used to be a flow out of social
housing and into home ownership, and that has effectively
stopped.
People end up trapped in the social housing that we do have. They
are unable to move into the home ownership that they aspire to,
and that they would have been able to afford a decade or 15 years
ago. They are keeping those social housing properties and tenures
for longer, so there is not a flow into them from other
households, and that of course bleeds into increasing
homelessness.
We have an affordability crisis and a security crisis—a section
21 notice is issued every seven minutes. We also have a standards
crisis and a decent housing crisis, particularly at the bottom
end of the market. Close to 1 million households are in
substandard accommodation. The private rented sector is the
tenure with the worst standards; more than 500,000 premises have
category 1 hazards, which represent serious threats to health or
life. We have a growing crisis for older renters, who are trapped
in the private rented sector. They never expected to be without
the means to improve their accommodation.
Hon. Members have cited case studies, and I too want to read one
into the record. This is the kind of story that we hear in our
surgeries about people in inappropriate and substandard
accommodation:
“I have a special needs boy. He has hypoxia, ischaemic brain
injury, epilepsy, global development delay, hepatitis… my flat in
the last two months was flooded with rainfall bcz the roof has a
big leak. We sleep on the floor, so mattress, furniture, clothes
get wet… Recently the ceiling light exploded, so now there’s no
power in the property. Our flat is only electric supply, no gas.
So now there’s no food, no heater, nothing I can do. We are
struggling financially bcz my child needs 24-hour support and he
has lots of appointments so that’s why”
my constituent
“can’t go to work… So it’s difficult to survive like this…no one
will understand my pain.”
I am afraid that that is not uncommon. This kind of case comes
before us time and again. People with no power, and no purchasing
power in the private rented sector, get stuck in properties, and
landlords—I do not call them rogue, because there are far too
many of them for us to regard them as exceptions—will exploit
that for their own purposes.
We need the promised legislation, but we need more than that. I
want to flag up two other issues that need to be seriously
addressed. We have heard reference to enforcement; it should not
be an empty word. Enforcement requires resources. If the
Government do not resource a policy change, and do not give local
authorities the resources to take enforcement action against bad
landlords in cases of substandard accommodation, that will be
exploited. When a landlord is seeking an eviction under section 8
rather than section 21, it is even more important that the
tenants have power, or somebody who is on their side and can
support and assist them.
Local authorities prosecute in only 1% of cases in which
poor-quality accommodation is brought to their attention. Why is
that? Sometimes it is because local authorities do not focus on
the issue, but it is also a question of resources; councils in
London in particular have lost 20% of their resources in the last
10 years. The Government must address the issue of capacity to
deal with environmental health matters, and capacity in legal aid
on housing, because once again we see evidence of advice deserts,
and of people being unable to access housing lawyers.
I want to raise one more issue, which I do not think the
Government have addressed. In a post-section 21 environment, if
we get there, there will be even more risk of illegal evictions.
I come across illegal evictions in my casework; people ring my
office to tell me that a landlord is inside their property
illegally, and is driving them out. Unfortunately, we have very
little data on this, because the Government do not collect data
on the extent of illegal evictions. The Greater London Authority
and the Mayor of London are doing very good work teaching the
police how to handle illegal evictions, and teaching them not to
step back and regard an illegal eviction as a civil matter
between two parties. However, that work is not done nationally,
and a great deal more needs to be done about that.
There is a lot that we can do. If we ever get the legislation, we
would look to amend it to improve protection of tenants from
illegal eviction; I hope that the Government can address
that.
Renters deserve security, affordability and decency. At the
moment, far too many do not have any of these things. They all
have to be addressed together and in a wider context that
includes advice, representation and enforcement. Above all, they
all have to be addressed now.
3.44pm
(Greenwich and Woolwich)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to wind up this important debate on behalf of
the Opposition. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
Brighton, Kemptown () and the hon. Member
for Dover (Mrs Elphicke) on securing the debate, and I thank the
Backbench Business Committee for allowing time for it.
I also thank my hon. Friends the Members for Stockport (), for Vauxhall (), for York Central
(), for Putney () and for Westminster North
(Ms Buck), and the hon. Members for Harrow East () and for North Devon (), for their excellent
contributions and powerful case studies. Collectively, they
highlighted both the particular challenges facing private renters
and how these challenges vary across the country, and that,
irrespective of geography, there is a need to overhaul the
private rented sector and to better regulate both short-term
holiday lets and excessive rates of second home ownership as a
matter of urgency.
I put on record our thanks to all the organisations that have
made the case for rental reform over so many years, including
Generation Rent, Crisis, Citizens Advice, the Joseph Rowntree
Foundation, Shelter, Z2K, the New Economics Foundation, the Law
Centres Network and various renters unions, as well as all the
private renters who bravely shared their experiences publicly and
the journalists who provided them with space to tell their
stories. Their collective efforts have been integral to ensuring
this issue is kept firmly at the top of the political agenda.
Labour strongly supports fundamental reform of the private rented
sector, and we have called for it for many years. Regardless of
whether they are a homeowner, a leaseholder or a tenant, everyone
has the basic right to a decent, safe, secure and affordable
home. Yet as this afternoon’s debate has reminded the House,
millions of people renting privately live day in, day out with
the knowledge that they could be uprooted with little notice and
minimal, if any, justification.
On an individual level, the lack of certainty and security that
is now inherent to renting privately results not only in
ever-present anxiety about the prospect of losing one’s home but,
for those at the lower end of the private rental market who have
little or no purchasing power and who are increasingly
concentrated geographically, as my hon. Friend the Member for
Westminster North said—there is an equalities dimension to this,
too—a willingness to put up with often appalling conditions for
fear that a complaint will lead to instant retaliatory eviction.
That is why some of the worst housing standards are to be found
in the private rented sector and why, despite the existence of
many good landlords and a steady, if glacial, improvement in
conditions overall, one in five private rented homes still does
not meet the decent homes standard and one in 10 has a category 1
hazard posing a risk of serious harm.
For tenants forced to live in such substandard properties,
whether they wake up every day to mould, vermin or dangerous
hazards, what should be a place of refuge and comfort is instead
a source of daily unease and, in many cases, torment and misery,
which takes a huge toll on their physical and mental health.
Far too many tenants are evicted each year from a private tenancy
without due cause, which is why so-called no-fault section 21
notices are a leading cause of homelessness in England. This
broken system can no longer be tolerated, not least because the
numbers affected have risen markedly over recent decades, as the
hon. Member for Harrow East said.
This House last legislated to fundamentally alter the
relationship between landlords and tenants in 1988, when I was
just six years old—I suspect you were not that much older, Mr
Deputy Speaker. The private rented sector has changed beyond
recognition in the more than three decades since. Some 11 million
people now rent from a private landlord. As well as the young and
mobile, the sector now houses many older people and families with
children, for whom greater security and certainty is essential
for a flourishing life.
To ensure private renters get a fair deal, we need to transform
how the sector is regulated and finally level the playing field
between landlords and tenants. That is why, with important
caveats, Labour welcomed the proposals in the White Paper when it
was published in the summer. We unequivocally support the
proposed ban on section 21 evictions. There is no justification
for such notices, and they should have been scrapped long ago. We
support the introduction of minimum standards in the private
rented sector through the extension of the decent homes
standards, although we have real concerns about how it might be
enforced in practice given that it is not an enforceable standard
in the social rented sector, where it already exists.
We recognise that landlords will need recourse to robust and
effective grounds for possession in circumstances where there are
good reasons for taking a property back, for example, because of
antisocial or criminal behaviour. However, we want assurances
that such grounds cannot be abused unfairly to evict tenants and
that they will be tight enough to minimise fraudulent use of the
kind we have seen in Scotland.
We welcome the proposed limit of rent increases to once per year,
but we take issue with the inadequacy of the proposed measures in
their ability to address unreasonable within-tenancy rent hikes
of the kind that are likely to increase markedly once section 21
is scrapped and with the absence of any measures to tackle
illegal evictions, a point that has been raised by my
colleagues.
Labour would go further in several important respects,
introducing a more comprehensive new renters’ charter, but we do
want to see all 12 of the proposals set out in the White Paper
translated into primary legislation as a matter of the utmost
urgency. I cannot emphasise enough the need for that urgency, a
point we have pressed time and again with successive Ministers,
to no avail. There is a desperate need for the Government to act
quickly, because the problems inherent in a sector that for far
too many renters has always been characterised by insecurity,
high rents and poor conditions, have become acute in recent
months, as those renting privately struggle to cope with the
impact of high inflation and rising prices.
As hon. Members will know, and as we have heard this afternoon,
in many parts of the country rents in the private rented sector
are surging and the costs involved with moving are soaring. With
the Government having decided, once again, to shamefully freeze
local housing allowance, millions of hard-pressed tenants are now
being stretched to breaking point, with the risk of mass arrears
and evictions that entails. What is so frustrating for Labour
Members, and for those outside campaigning for renters’ reform
and for private tenants themselves, is that instead of
introducing legislation that we could have fast-tracked through
this House to address this looming winter crisis, all we have,
despite years of promises from successive Conservative
Administrations that they would enact renters’ reform, is the
White Paper and a vague promise, one that I had from the
Minister’s predecessor just last week, to introduce a Bill at
some point during the more than two years that remain of this
Parliament.
On urgency, figures from the Local Government Association show
that the ending of a private rented tenancy is the most common
reason for homelessness, with this being responsible for 37% of
homelessness between January and March this year alone —in those
three months. Does my hon. Friend see that this urgent crisis
needs solving now?
I absolutely agree with my hon. Friend on that, and I will come
on to say why I think the situation is particularly urgent and
what has happened in terms of the delay that has been caused. It
is not good enough that the Government have taken so long to make
progress on this issue. It is not as though they have not had
ample time to legislate, even accounting for the impact of the
pandemic. It is now well over three years since the Conservative
Administration of the right hon. Member for Maidenhead (Mrs May)
promised to abolish section 21 no-fault evictions. In that time,
not only have hundreds of thousands of tenants been evicted
through a section 21, but more than 45,000 households have been
threatened with homelessness as a result of being served such
notices. As my hon. Friend just mentioned, the figures released
so far this year suggest that possession claims resulting from
them are increasing markedly as the cost of living crisis
intensifies.
Faced with a phenomenally difficult winter, private renters
cannot wait until 2024 for the Government to act. I say to the
new Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities, the hon. Member for Kensington (), whom I welcome to her
place, that every extra month the Government delay bringing
forward the renters’ reform Bill they have promised means
thousands more private renters suffering. The Government must
act, and they must act now. If they introduced emergency
legislation enacting the proposals set out in the White Paper,
Labour would support it and work with the Government to ensure it
made rapid progress. But it is the Government alone who control
the business of this House and only they can ensure the necessary
legislation is given the priority it deserves. As I have put to
Ministers before and sadly suspect I will have to do so again, it
is high time the Government stopped talking a good game about
private rented sector reform and finally got on with delivering
it, because private renters have waited long enough for the
protections that they deserve and that they rightly expect.
3.54pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities ()
I thank the hon. Member for Brighton, Kemptown (), my hon. Friend the
Member for Dover (Mrs Elphicke) and the Backbench Business
Committee for securing this important debate on the proposals in
our White Paper. I thank Members who have spoken for their
considered and constructive tone and for speaking powerfully on
behalf of their constituents. I also thank hon. Members for their
warm words about my hon. Friend the Member for Walsall North
(), who worked so hard on the
White Paper. I pay tribute to my right hon. Friend the Member for
Pendle (), who took that work
forward.
The Government are determined to deliver a new deal for tenants
and landlords in the private rented sector. Hon. Members have
made a number of points about reform and I hope to address as
many of them as possible in the time I have. If I do not reach
some of the points, I am happy to sit down with hon. Members on a
one-to-one basis.
I want to make a couple of observations about the sector as a
whole. As Members know, the private rented sector has grown
significantly in recent decades. It has doubled in size since the
early 2000s, with landlords and tenants becoming increasingly
diverse. The sector provides a home for 11 million people—19% of
all households. At least 1.3 million of those are families with
children. However, the sector is also the least secure and has
some of the lowest-quality housing. Too often, the current system
does not work for tenants, or for the many good landlords
operating in the sector.
Everyone in our society deserves to live somewhere decent, warm,
safe and secure. The Government are determined to make that
vision a reality.
Hon. Members will know that the White Paper sets out a 12-point
action plan, and I note that it has received support from Members
on both sides of the House. The changes that it sets out amount
to a significant shake-up of private renting. We know how
important it is to get it right. We are grateful to our partners
across the housing sector who have worked closely with us on
developing the reforms. We will continue to consult them closely
as we move the process forward.
Several hon. Members raised the issue of the poor quality of some
privately rented homes. The majority of landlords and agents
treat their tenants fairly and provide good-quality, safe homes,
but that is not always the case. Too many of the 4.4 million
households who rent privately live in poor conditions and pay a
large proportion of their income to do so. Poor-quality housing
undermines renters’ health and wellbeing. It can affect their
educational attainment and it reduces pride in local areas.
I am proud of the action that the Government have already taken
to put things right. We have strengthened local authorities’
enforcement powers by introducing fines of up to £30,000,
extending rent repayment orders and introducing banning orders
for the most serious and prolific offenders. We have introduced
new regulations, which require landlords to install smoke and
carbon monoxide detectors and ensure that the electrical
installations in their properties are safe. We are concluding our
overhaul of the housing, health and safety rating system, which
is the tool used to assess hazardous conditions in rented homes.
That will make it more accessible to tenants and landlords and
allow more efficient enforcement.
The Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018 empowered all
tenants—private and social—for the first time to take their own
action against landlords who let unfit properties. As a result,
conditions have improved over the past 10 years, but we know that
there is more to be done. Alongside this we have consulted on
introducing a legally binding decent homes standard in the
private rented sector. That consultation closed on 14 October and
we are currently reviewing responses.
Many hon. Members talked about tenancy reform and, clearly, that
is critical. Our reforms will provide tenants with security. They
will also ensure that good landlords are still able to gain
possession when necessary.
Hon. Members have rightly mentioned the insecurity caused by
section 21 no-fault evictions. It is not right that a landlord
can ask a tenant to leave without giving a reason. The Government
are clear that they want to support the majority of landlords who
act responsibly, but it is not right that tenants live in fear
that their lives may be uprooted at the whim of the minority of
rogue landlords. That is why, as we have set out in our manifesto
and confirmed in this House, the Government have committed to
abolishing section 21 of the Housing Act 1988 and giving millions
of private renters a secure home.
At the same time, the White Paper proposes to simplify complex
tenancy structures. It will move all tenants who currently have
an “assured” or “assured shorthold” tenancy on to a single system
of periodic tenancies. Periodic tenancies will allow either party
to end the tenancy when they need to. That will enable tenants to
leave poor-quality properties without remaining liable for the
rent, or to move more easily when their circumstances change—for
example, to take up a new job opportunity. Landlords will always
have to provide a specific reason for ending a tenancy.
Good landlords play a vital role in providing homes for millions
of people across the country. We want to reassure them that the
new system will continue to be a stable market for landlords to
invest and remain in. No one will win if our reforms do not
support landlords as well as tenants. It is only right that
landlords should be able to get their properties back when their
circumstances change, or when tenants break the rules. A number
of hon. Members mentioned the real issues attached to antisocial
behaviour. We will reform grounds of possession so that they are
comprehensive, fair and efficient, and we will streamline the
possession process, removing unnecessary restrictions on
landlords seeking to recover their property.
Alongside that, we will continue to listen to landlords and
students, as mentioned by a number of hon. Members —landlords
provide much-needed accommodation to thousands of students every
year—to ensure that the sector continues to work for those in
higher education, and I will continue to have those
conversations.
I am sure that hon. Members will agree that going to court should
be a last resort, when all other avenues have been exhausted. But
we know that sometimes it is unavoidable, and that court
proceedings can be costly and time consuming for landlords. That
is why we are working with the Ministry of Justice and HM Courts
and Tribunals Service to streamline the process and ensure that
the most serious cases are prioritised. I just checked on the fax
point and can assure Members that people can email or make paper
submissions. Alongside that, we are reviewing the bailiff
process. That is currently a big source of frustration and
delay.
Many Members have mentioned issues surrounding the cost of
living—
Will the Minister give way on the legal question?
indicated assent.
Does the Minister not recognise that the lack of legal aid is a
huge problem for people in the private rented sector? In the last
Session, I introduced a Bill that would have cost the Government
nothing but provided £20 million in legal aid and early legal
support for private renters by taking the interest from the £2
billion- worth of deposits held in this country and putting it
into a special, reserved fund for legal aid for renters. Would
she look at that measure, so that the court process is
supported?
The hon. Gentleman will recognise that legal aid does not fall
within my remit, but I am happy to meet him and have a
conversation.
We empathise strongly with those affected by the cost of living
issues. That is why the Government have provided over £37 billion
in cost of living support this year to those who need it the
most. We have given unprecedented support to protect households
from high energy prices. For tenants who are unable to afford
their rental payments, there is a range of potential support
available through the welfare system.
My hon. Friend the Member for North Devon () and the hon. Member for
York Central () both raised the issue of
second homes and holiday lets. I am aware of the pressures in
their constituencies. The White Paper contains a proposal on that
issue, and I point both hon. Ladies to the Department for
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport’s call for evidence on the
topic.
The DCMS call for evidence has closed, but I have a private
Member’s Bill before the House. Will the Minister’s Department
work with me to ensure that we can regulate short-term holiday
lets?
Specifically, that falls under the DCMS, but I am happy to have a
conversation with the hon. Lady.
The DCMS consultation took months to see the light of day, and my
local council submitted pages of evidence. I recognise that the
issue falls within the remit of the DCMS, but one of the reasons
constantly given for the inability to tackle it is that it lies
with a different Department, either LUHC or DCMS. If anything can
be done to bring the Departments together to enable progress to
be made, we would be most grateful.
I hear my hon. and good Friend, and I will do everything I can to
facilitate that.
I hope that all Members present today recognise that this
Government are committed to reforming the private rented sector
in a fair and balanced way, abolishing no-fault section 21
evictions and strengthening and clarifying landlords’ rights when
seeking possession.
Will the Minister give way?
I am sorry, but I have been told that I need to conclude.
The Government are committed to giving tenants the security and
peace of mind they need to settle down with confidence and make
their house a home. We are committed to empowering tenants so
that they can make informed choices and raise concerns, and to
supporting responsible landlords. As I said at the outset, we
stand by our manifesto commitments to abolish no-fault evictions
and to ensure that landlords have rights to repossess when that
is required. We published the White Paper in June and we are
discussing it with interested parties. The consultation on the
decent home standard closed on 14 October, and we are reviewing
the responses. We will publish the next steps in this extremely
important sector in due course.
4.09pm
I am very pleased with the contributions we have had today. I
again thank the co-chair of the APPG, the hon. Member for Dover
(Mrs Elphicke), and we heard good responses from my hon. Friends
the Members for Stockport (), for Vauxhall (), for York Central
(), for Putney () and for Westminster North
(Ms Buck) and from the hon. Members for North Devon () and for Harrow East ().
I will not repeat what other hon. Members have said, but my
greatest disappointment is that I still do not really know when
something is going to come forward. We all know that “in due
course” in Government and parliamentary language means the
never-never. That is what the Minister has promised us: the
never-never. It might come or it might not—we do not know. I am
afraid I do not think that is good enough because only last week
there was a debate in Westminster Hall on a similar topic, so it
is not as though the Department was not forewarned that these
questions would be asked. It is not good enough because at least
a timetable, even an amendable one, could have been put down.
I am disappointed that we have not had that, but I am pleased
that the Government are still committed to reforms. I just want
them to get on with it, because we have heard of the desperate
need and the proposals in the White Paper are not enough. We did
not quite hear a commitment to every single one of the 12 points
in the White Paper; we just heard a reiteration of the evolution
of section 21.
I will take the Minister’s words in good faith. I am sure we can
meet about some of these issues in person, one to one, but I want
to see that timetable and I hope she will commit to updating the
House “in due course”, in due course.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the White Paper A fairer private
rented sector.
|