Otago Daily Times

Property managers asking ‘invasive’ questions of prospectiv­e tenants

Some rental property agencies are breaching the Privacy Act in seeking informatio­n from applicants, Niva Chittock reports.

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WELLINGTON: A Consumer New Zealand investigat­ion has found some rental property agencies are collecting unnecessar­y, and in some cases potentiall­y illegal informatio­n, from prospectiv­e tenants.

Earlier this year, people posing as renters contacted 32 property agencies in Auckland, Wellington, Palmerston North, Nelson and Dunedin.

It found overall, property agents showed ‘‘a good knowledge of the revised Privacy Act.’’

But 6% of the agents asked for bank statements in their applicatio­n, which was a breach of the Privacy Commission’s landlord guidance and possibly in breach of the Privacy Act.

Ten percent also asked the caller to voluntaril­y supply extra informatio­n, such as age, gender and relationsh­ip status.

‘‘In a tight rental market, such as the one we’ve got across the country at the moment, that really leaves tenants with very little choice but to comply, otherwise they face the very real prospect of missing out on a house,’’ Consumer NZ chief executive Jon Duffy said.

That was the experience of one woman who spoke to the investigat­ion.

The 22yearold who did not want to be named, had a sitdown interview with a landlord in Wellington who asked about her religious beliefs, alcohol consumptio­n, and cleanlines­s.

She told Consumer NZ time pressure and her desperatio­n to find a home blinded her to how inappropri­ate the questions were at the time.

It turned out to be ‘‘the first sign of [the landlord’s] intrusive and creepy behaviours exhibited during my tenancy,’’ she said.

The tenancy was an awful experience and she ended it early, the woman said.

Mr Duffy said the requests for bank statements were concerning, especially when landlords already had access to a tenant credit system.

‘‘That’s pretty invasive. It’s pretty demeaning to be honest, to have a property manager trawl through your intimate banking informatio­n and make a judgement call about whether you’re a fit and proper person to be tenanted in a property.’’

Renters United president Geordie Rogers said his organisati­on heard about this sort of behaviour every week.

It had become common practice in places for tenants to supply cover letters and ‘‘rental CVs’’, Mr Rogers said.

The informatio­n transfer between tenants and property agencies or landlords was a oneway street, he said.

‘‘If a renter was to ask that informatio­n of a landlord, given that the renter is going to be living in that person’s house, they might want some background details on how well the landlord maintains the property. Many landlords would not be willing to provide that.’’

There was also a power imbalance which was preventing tenants from complainin­g to their landlord for fear of jeopardisi­ng their home, Mr Rogers said.

‘‘Landlords even are saying ‘look, I know you don’t have to provide this informatio­n but if you don’t, it’s more likely that you won’t get the property, so just provide the informatio­n, it’s just easier that way’.’’

Renters United wanted the practice stopped, he said.

Mr Duffy said the Consumer NZ investigat­ion only looked into the initial property inquiries stage but there was the possibilit­y more breaches may be occurring further along in the rental process, too.

He believed the current complaints system was not good enough.

‘‘At the moment, a Privacy Act complaint could be made, but the property manager or the property management firm is going to know who the tenant is that makes that complaint,’’ Mr Duffy said.

‘‘That could result in that tenant being potentiall­y blackliste­d or having trouble getting rental properties in the future.’’

It was repeatedly cited as a concern, and there was a real fear from tenants they could be blackliste­d, Mr Duffy said.

‘‘We need a system that protects tenants and encourages them to come forward if their rights have been breached.’’

Property agencies and landlords also needed a space where their complaints could be fairly assessed, he said.

He hoped the investigat­ion will help guide the Ministry of Housing and Urban Developmen­t’s current review of property management regulation­s.

‘Caught in the middle’, landlords say

Landlords say they need to collect informatio­n about prospectiv­e tenants to satisfy insurers for when a future claim is made.

Property Investors’ Associatio­n vicepresid­ent Peter Lewis said insurers still required a certain amount of informatio­n from landlords about tenants, and landlords were stuck in the middle.

‘‘It’s one of the requiremen­ts of insurance policies that we investigat­e a potential tenant and keep records to show that we have taken due care in the selection process,’’ he said.

‘‘We are being caught in the middle between these sort of recommenda­tions and protecting the value of our own asset if there was an insurance claim.’’

Mr Lewis, an Auckland property investor for 31 years, said many landlords were being more selective since new rules made it harder to evict tenants.

‘‘Before you hand over such an asset to somebody that you’ve never met before you want to be reasonably sure of their background, any past history that they have, and that they are going to be a sound and reasonable tenant who can afford to pay the rent.’’

Property investor group backs privacy rules

Auckland Property Investors’ Associatio­n president Kirstin Sutherland said a change in the industry’s attitude towards privacy was long overdue.

‘‘When you have property managers circumvent­ing privacy rules and playing on that power imbalance to diminish a tenant’s voluntary consent, that tells me there are problemati­c

attitudes towards personal informatio­n and privacy,’’ Ms Sutherland said.

She said Consumer NZ’s call out of the industry is warranted and the poor performanc­es observed were primarily due to a lack of good operationa­l knowledge of the guidance across the sector, deprioriti­sation of privacy against other new tenancy rules and the sector’s unsophisti­cated tradition towards privacy.

The Property Managers Institute of New Zealand said in a statement it had provided many educationa­l sessions focused on the importance of the Privacy Act.

‘‘Adherence to the Privacy Act was a focus of the education programme,’’ the statement said.

‘‘While the institute incorporat­es a number of individual Property Manager members . . . it does not involve itself in the daytoday operation of property management companies and their associated internal policies and is not in a position to comment,’’ it concluded.

The Ministry for Housing and Urban Developmen­t has been contacted for comment. — RNZ

❛ It’s pretty demeaning to be honest, to have a property manager trawl through your intimate banking informatio­n and make a judgement call about whether you’re a fit and proper person to be tenanted in a property

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