Otago Daily Times

Call for testing, licensing of property managers

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OTAGO advocates for tenants are calling for the rental industry to be regulated further, and unscrupulo­us property managers made to sit a test or get a proper licence.

Last week, Real Estate Institute chief executive Bindi Norwell told RNZ about the need to reregulate and penalise property managers who were letting tenants down.

Community lawyer Caryl O’Connor said: ‘‘There have been tenancy issues throughout Otago, but the first pressure point was Queenstown.

‘‘Some of the practices there were really beyond the pale — trying to squash as many people into a house as possible.

‘‘A lot of it has now grown into sheer ignorance or absolute inability to bother with any of the rental laws,’’ Ms O’Connor said.

Housing pressure had increased across the region and some practices were ‘‘dubious’’.

‘‘It is not a student issue. It’s families and it’s the elderly who are also affected by pretty dodgy practice by some property managers.’’

She said more advocacy was needed, so tenants knew their rights in the face of substandar­d accommodat­ion.

There was a mix of where such property managers come from, she said.

‘‘Sometimes — as with a lot of places — it can be a rogue individual in an organisati­on, but at least accountabi­lity measures can be taken to pull those people into line.

‘‘When it is a small independen­t operator who is not registered or in any way a member of anything, they are the most difficult to deal with because they simply know that there is very little that can be done to moderate their behaviour.’’

The key factors of a housing shortage, fixedterm tenancy, poor housing stock, joint and several liabilitie­s across tenants, the fear of being blackliste­d for complainin­g against a property manager to the Tenancy Tribunal, left tenants in a difficult situation, she said.

A tenancy advocacy network is being set up by social service agencies and advocacy organisati­ons in relation to tenants in particular. It has been running in Auckland for some time.

One of its key aims is to advocate on a general basis for tenants and their issues rather than an individual tenant having to go through a process. It is also to minimise the blacklisti­ng process and bring issues to attention in a public way.

She said the industry should be regulated and hoped property managers had the knowledge of tenancy at least.

University of Otago student magazine Critic editor Charlie O’Mannin, who has done some extensive investigat­ion into local property managers, agreed with Ms O’Connor.

‘‘We’ve looked into several kinds of operators — small and large — you definitely see the difference.

‘‘Oftentimes its just a single property manager who can be managing a lot of flats and they can be having problems that take months to fix, having difficulti­es with the bond.’’

While individual landlords could manage two to four residences on average, property managers could have up to 100 flats to look after.

He said flats were not always made up of four people and sometimes it could be up to 16 and 18 people, who were all individual tenants with different complaints.

‘‘Trying to deal with the problems of up to 1000 students is just too much.’’

He said one problem with property managers that came up often was ‘‘the amount time of time it takes to fix something’’.

‘‘If you’ve got a major problem with your property . . . taking three months to fix the problem or being uncontacta­ble, it’s not good enough.’’

Some property managers were not keeping up the standard, he said. He said when students left for home in OctoberNov­ember, there was noone to dispute the state of the property during an inspection, eventually leaving them losing their bond over something like high cleaning fees.

‘‘Ninetyfive percent of people wouldn’t challenge that.’’

Noone from outside Dunedin would go back to dispute it in the tribunal, he said.

He said it would help if property managers were made to sit a test or get a licence, showing the number of property managers and the properties they were managing.

‘‘You want to know that you’re choosing someone who’s going to take care of it [the rented house].

‘‘If that property management agency is already looking after thousands of flats or has individual property managers looking after hundreds, then you don’t want to go with them.’’

 ?? PHOTO: ODT FILES ?? The student housing zone in North Dunedin.
PHOTO: ODT FILES The student housing zone in North Dunedin.

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