The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Landlords can be fined £30k

- By Joel Lamy joel.lamy@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @PTJoelLamy

Fines of up to £30,000 can now be handed out to landlords in Peterborou­gh by the city council.

The authority has taken advantage of new government powers as it continues to target rogue landlords following the introducti­on of a licensing scheme in December 2016.

The introducti­on of ‘civil penalties’ means the council can avoid taking landlords through court if it believes they have committed certain offences under the 2004 Housing Act.

However, government guidance states that the maximum £30,000 fine be “reserved for the very worst offenders”.

The council said: “The use of civil penalties should provide the council with a more cost effective and proportion­ate alternativ­e to prosecutio­n for the specified housing offences, whilst retaining the option to prosecute for the most serious offences or for repeat offenders.”

Landlords can be fined for: failing to comply with an Improvemen­t Notice, failing to comply with management regulation­s of an HMO, contraveni­ng an overcrowdi­ng notice or offences in relation to licensing of HMOs or houses.

Money collected in fines can only be spent on enforcemen­t in the private rental sector. The landlord or property agent will have the right of appeal against a civil penalty to the First-Tier Tribunal which can confirm, quash, vary, or cancel the civil penalty imposed by the council.

The same criminal standard of proof is required for a civil penalty as for prosecutio­n. This means that before taking formal action the council should satisfy itself that if the case were to be prosecuted in the magistrate­s’ court there would be a realistic prospect of conviction.

The authority would need to demonstrat­e beyond all reasonable doubt that the offence had been committed.

The new civil penalties follow the introducti­on of selective licensing which forced landlords in Central, North, East, Park, Fletton, Bretton North, Stanground Central, Walton and Orton Longuevill­e parts of the city to pay for a five-year licence for each of their properties.

Selective licensing came into force in a bid to tackle rogue landlords, but its introducti­on was met with dismay from many Peterborou­gh landlords who felt they were being unfairly penalised.

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