The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Student chief says moratorium on HMOs has made bedrooms unusable.

Student leader and economist clash over the proliferat­ionof houses in multiple occupancy

- Cheryl peebles cpeebles@thecourier.co.uk

St Andrews bedrooms locked by HMO moratorium add to housing pressure

Bedrooms in St Andrews have been rendered unusable as a result of the failed HMO moratorium, according to a student leader.

Lewis Wood said rooms lie locked and unoccupied as landlords had been unable to get licences to let them, pushing rents up further for tenants.

Licences are required for houses in multiple occupation – properties with three or more individual tenants – but because of the proliferat­ion in the university town, a ban was placed on planning permission for any more HMOs in the town centre.

Mr Wood, St Andrews University Student Associatio­n president, said the closing of rooms had been one of several negative repercussi­ons.

He said: “I would wager that every student reading this can find a friend with a bedroom locked off in their house; essentiall­y, a bedroom that is perfectly functional, but not legally leasable.

“This is because the HMO moratorium currently in place has prevented the landlord from acquiring a licence, with the intention of this property therefore being rented to a family or local, instead of students.

“All that this has accomplish­ed is wasted bedrooms, increased rent prices due to increased demand and students continuing to occupy these unlicensed properties regardless of the moratorium.

“The math is simple. Two students can and will be willing to pay more to rent a property than a young family, which the moratorium is intended to entice into the centre of town.”

Writing on his blog, he said a landlord could charge two students around £750 each for a flat on Market Street, which would cost a family £1,500 to rent.

He said: “All that the HMO moratorium has accomplish­ed is fewer individual­s being allowed to live in these properties where extra rooms are available, thus leaving these rooms unoccupied.”

As a result, he said the moratorium had exacerbate­d the problem of rising rents, greater demand and less incentive for landlords to treat tenants and properties with respect.

His predecesso­r Owen Wilton warned when the moratorium was imposed in 2011 that it would simply disperse students to areas outside the town centre, which were more suitable for families.

An independen­t review found that was what had happened and the moratorium had failed in its aims to maintain a population of permanent residents in the town centre.

Fife Council’s north east Fife committee has recommende­d caps be set on the number of properties which can be HMOs of 17% in the town centre, 5% in the east and 3% in the west of the town.

 ?? Picture: Kim Cessford. ?? Dr Ross Brown of St Andrews University’s School of Management says it is right for Fife Council to limit the HMOs in the town.
Picture: Kim Cessford. Dr Ross Brown of St Andrews University’s School of Management says it is right for Fife Council to limit the HMOs in the town.

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