Sunderland Echo

Rentals quality a ‘postcode lottery’

Housing in private sector can be ‘non-decent’ and even dangerous, reports Vicky Shaw

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Private sector rental tenants face a “postcode lottery” over the standard of their homes, the chair of a powerful committee which scrutinise­s Government spending has said.

The comment was made by Dame Meg Hillier, chair of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC), as a report from the National Audit Office (NAO) said regulation in England is not effective in ensuring the sector is consistent­ly fair for renters or that housing is safe and secure.

There are an estimated 4.4 million privately rented households in England – and the system relies heavily on tenants being able to enforce their own rights, the NAO said.

While most tenants have a good experience of renting, some can end up suffering serious illness as a result of poor quality housing, financial issues due to overchargi­ng, or even homelessne­ss as a result of poor conduct by landlords and letting agents.

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s (DLUHC) does not yet have a detailed plan to address the problems that renters face, the NAO added.

Dame Meg said :“Private tenants face a postcode lottery over the standard of their homes, and it’s often society’s most vulnerable who suffer the most.

“The department’s approach to regulation has been piece meal and it’s been hamstrung by a worrying lack of data.

“The department needs to bring some order to the chaos and set out a clear vision for the private rental market and ensure that the growing number of tenants whose only prospect of long term housing is in the private rented sector are better supported.”

The NAO said privately rented properties are less likely to comply with safety requiremen­ts than other types of housing, and are more likely to be classified as nondecent.

An estimated 13% of private rented homes (589,000 properties) have at least one category one hazard – a serious threat to health and safety – with associated costs to the NHS estimated at £340 million per year.

This compares with 10% of owner-occupied homes and 5% of social housing.

In addition, an estimated 23% of private rented homes are classified as non-decent – meaning they potentiall­y have a hazard of immediate threat to a person’s health, they are not in reasonable state of repair, they are lacking in modern facilities or they are not effectivel­y insulated or heated.

DLUHC has taken a piecemeal approach – including requiring letting agents to be part of approved redress schemes, a ban on charging letting fees to tenants, and temporary restrictio­ns on evictions during the Covid-19 pandemic, the watchdog said.

But the Department does not yet have a strategy for what it wants the regulation of the sector to look like as a whole, it said.

It also lacks data on key issues where action may be required, such as on harassment, evictions, disrepair that is not being addressed, or on the costs to landlords of complying with obligation­s, the NAO added.

It also has limited data on what tools and approaches are used by local authoritie­s, and therefore cannot meaningful­ly analyse which are more effective at improving compliance and protecting tenants, the report said.

The system also relies heavily on tenants enforcing their own rights and negotiatin­g with landlords directly or going to court, the NAO argued.

In 2018, DLUHC introduced mandatory re dress arrangemen­ts for letting agency work, but landlords are not required to be members of a redress scheme.

Some households also experience discrimina­tion, with an estimated 25% of landlords in

England being unwilling to let to non-UK passport holders, and 52% unwilling to let to those on housing benefit, the NAO said.

The department is planning to introduce reforms to the private rented sector and has committed to produce a white paper in 2022.

Gareth Davies, the head of the NAO, said: “The proportion of private renters living in properties that are unsafe or fail the standards for a decent home is concerning. The Government relies on these tenants being able to enforce their own rights, but they face significan­t barriers to doing so.

“The Department for Level ling Up, Housing and Communitie­s should improve the quality of its data and insight into the private rented sector, so that it can oversee the regulation of the sector more effectivel­y. It should develop a clear strategy to meet its aim of providing a better deal for renters.”

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