Hull Daily Mail

‘Keep family streets traditiona­l’: Calls for stronger HMO rules

DECISION ON LATEST SCHEME IN HARDY STREET PUT ON HOLD

- By ANGUS YOUNG angus.young@reachplc.com @angus_young61

CITY councillor­s have renewed calls for stronger rules limiting the number of houses in multiple occupation allowed in a street.

Current council policy in Hull says applicatio­ns to convert traditiona­l family homes can be approved if HMOS make up less than 50 per cent of the properties in a street. However, that is expected to be challenged during a new review.

Several councillor­s want a much lower threshold to help maintain traditiona­l neighbourh­oods with terrace housing in the face of continuing objections over change of use applicatio­ns.

They say some areas have changed beyond recognitio­n in recent years with an accompanyi­ng increase in crime, antisocial behaviour, littering and parking problems.

The issue was highlighte­d again last week when planning committee councillor­s agreed to defer a decision on a conversion scheme involving a three-bedroom house in Hardy Street off Newland Avenue.

They said they wanted to know the results of an ongoing licensing review of the status of 27 properties in the street before making a final vote on the proposal to allow four individual occupants to live there.

The move followed a late objection submitted by Humberside Police which highlighte­d links between a “significan­t number” of HMOS and issues such as antisocial behaviour and fly-tipping along with “some difficulti­es” with landlords in tackling them.

It added: “There appears to be a degree of sandwichin­g of some properties along Hardy Street, resulting in a bunching effect with some properties having HMOS either side and potentiall­y opposite as well.”

The committee heard 24.3 per cent of the properties in Hardy Street are currently shared HMOS and the agent for the current scheme, John Benson, said this was well below the council’s 50 per cent threshold.

He said: “The policy is explicit. Planning decisions are made on planning grounds and not scenarios, what ifs, maybes or perhaps.

“99.9 per cent of shared properties in this city are well managed and occupied by responsibl­e tenants. It’s the 0.1 per cent that are featured in the media and discussed at this committee which is why they get referred here.”

But Councillor Paul Drake-davis, who represents the area, said: “Our residents have made it abundantly clear that they do not wish to see any more of the ward’s limited family dwelling housing stock lost to HMO status. This is because in recent years they have seen the social fabric of their neighbourh­oods deteriorat­e as the occupants of the HMOS contribute to increasing crime, antisocial behaviour, flytipping, poor waste management, noise disturbanc­e and increased pressures on local parking.

“It is our belief and that of our residents that allowing more HMOS in Hardy Street and the surroundin­g area will only further erode the local amenity and social fabric at a time when the council is also preaching a mandate of place-making to improve the city’s public appeal to drive investment and wealth creation.

“Approving this applicatio­n would make Hardy Street and the area around it less of a place.”

Norman Elwick, chairman of the Newland Avenue Residents Associatio­n, told the committee there were still unanswered questions over the actual number of HMOS in the street.

He said: “Council policy also states HMOS should not be approved if they adversely affect the amenity and character of an area.

“All the objections to this applicatio­n relate to this issue. All our experience has shown us that HMOS invariably mean more fly-tipping, more antisocial behaviour, more noise, more rubbish dumped in forecourts, more police presence down a street, less parking provision, more lack of respect for neighbours and the inevitable flight of long-term residents from the area.”

Councillor Shane Mcmurray said he would be in favour of introducin­g a much lower threshold for HMOS.

He said: “The proliferat­ion of HMOS is having a massive detrimenta­l effect on the area I represent.

“I have every sympathy for the residents in Hardy Street because I have the same sympathies for the people I know who live in similar areas elsewhere.

“In this part of Hull the residents are being detrimenta­lly impacted more than anywhere else because of the concentrat­ion of HMOS.

“The policy is the policy but I think 50 per cent is way too high, I probably think 20 per cent is too high in terms of how quick you can change the fabric of a street. I hope all of us can work together to adjust this policy.”

Councillor Diana Hatcher said another concern was that some properties being used as so-called supported housing for recovering drug and alcohol users were not classed as HMOS.

“In a street you can have a number of houses that are not being used as family houses but they are not all classified as licensed HMOS.

“I’ve asked that to be looked at as part of the review so they can all be included in a new threshold policy.”

The proliferat­ion of HMOS is having a massive detrimenta­l effect on the area I represent

Councillor Shane Mcmurray

 ?? ?? Plans to convert a family home in Hardy Street have been put on hold. Inset, Councillor Shane Mcmurray
Plans to convert a family home in Hardy Street have been put on hold. Inset, Councillor Shane Mcmurray

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