Only 16 councils say
they know many properties meet new overcrowding regulations
Only a
handful of English councils have said they know now many properties in their
area are covered by new regulations governing safety and overcrowding, leaving
potentially tens of thousands of flats and bedsits to continue operating
illegally, new research has revealed.
The Government
has estimated that new rules governing dangerous and overcrowded properties,
introduced on October 1, will affect more than 100,000 private rental
properties not currently licensed.
However, of
326 councils in England with responsibility for housing, only 16 reported that they
are aware of how many properties in their area currently meet new Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMO)
regulations.
Several
large metropolitan authorities including in London, Manchester, Leeds,
Newcastle, Bristol and Norwich said they were unaware of how many properties in
their areas were operating in breach of the regulations.
The National Association of Landlords (NLA) has been contacted by several
members who tried to apply for licenses, but their local authority purported
not to know anything about the changes or didn’t have a system in place to
process their applications.
The regulations are intended to allow
councils to crack down on landlords renting out substandard and overcrowded
homes. Licensing requirements cover
issues such as emergency lighting, soundproofing and fire proofing and they
also set new minimum sizes for bedrooms.
They require properties with five or
more occupants in two or more households to be licensed, including houses converted into bedsits where tenants share toilets
and cooking facilities. Any such
property that does not have an HMO license
is operating illegally and the landlord could face a fine of up to £30,000.
A 2008
Government report estimated there were 56,000 HMOs licensed under the previous
definition, those of three storeys or higher.
They will automatically
be passported over to the new arrangements, but the Government estimates a
total of 160,000 properties could be covered by the new regulations.
Research
carried out by Doncaster-based Touchstone, a company that runs property
investment courses across the UK, has revealed massive gaps in local
authorities’ knowledge of where these properties are and who owns them. Most
are relying on landlords to submit license applications.
Of the 238 authorities
that responded to a Freedom of Information request, sent at the start of
September, asking how prepared they were for the changes, 93 said they had
carried out research to establish how many properties in their area require an
HMO license.
Only 16 said
they had conducted research to establish how many of those properties were in a
condition where they could expect to be granted a license. They are Worthing,
West Lindsey, Tonbridge and Malling, Staffordshire Moorland, St Albans, South Kesteven, Rochdale, Oadby
Wigston, Nuneaton and Bedworth, North Hertfordshire, Dudley, Craven,
Chichester, Bournemouth, Basingstoke and Babergh.
It is
estimated the HMO changes will cost buy-to-let landlords £79m, according to research
carried out by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr).
Touchstone CEO Paul Smith said: “It’s clear the Government
has passed legislation without any clear idea about the scale of the issue and
we could be sleepwalking into a housing disaster,” said Smith.
“We’re aware of one local authority with 1800 properties classed as HMOs
and privately it told us that only around 40% will meet the new regulations. If
that’s happening across the country, we could be looking at a major problem.”
Smith said
many landlords, faced with paying an average of £1,027 for HMO licenses as well
as the cost of upgrading, may simply sell-up, exacerbating an already chronic
shortage of homes in some areas.
The buy-to-let market is already
slowing down following the recent
introduction of a 3% residential property levy on landlords, the ending of
mortgage interest tax relief and new stress tests for home loans.
“Ministers have estimated 160,000
properties could be affected but I would be interested to know how they arrived
at that figure as most local authorities have not conducted any research,” he
said.
“Clearly properties cannot continue to operate illegally and so the
human cost of this is potentially thousands of people being made homeless.”
Of the councils that responded to the FoI request by Touchstone, only 14
had carried out research to establish how many properties in their area were
likely to be affected by the changes as well as into how many were likely to be
granted a license.
Manchester City Council estimated it had 5000 properties in its area now
classed as HMOs, but it hadn’t researched how many were in a condition to meet
the new regulations.
North Somerset Council said it had 2940 properties affected,
Peterborough and Bournemouth put the number at up to 2500 while Cambridge, York
and Hull city councils estimated they had more than 1000 HMOs. None was able to
say how many were currently operating illegally.
Leeds, Bristol and Norwich were among the majority of authorities who
said they had not carried out any research to establish how many properties in
their area might be affected or how many might pass or fail.
Richard Lambert, CEO of the NLA, said: “This is an unacceptable failing
on the part of the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, which
should have ensured all local authorities were up to speed with the changes.
It’s disappointing that more consideration hasn’t been made for the
significance of this change and the challenges local authorities face in
implementing it.
“HMO
licensing was originally introduced to address fire safety in properties with
three or more floors. Smaller HMOs don’t have the same issues, so it’s
difficult to see what the Government aims to achieve with this blanket
approach.
“Some
landlords will have to reduce the number of rooms they let as smaller rooms may
not meet the new minimum room sizes. They also must cover the increased costs
and so are likely to pass these on to tenants. This alone won’t see landlords
leave the market, but when combined with the other regulatory changes, the
costs are affecting the viability of running lettings businesses.”
He added: “We‘re
also concerned that local authorities appear unprepared for the changes and
have, anecdotally, heard that landlords may be being given advice which could
put them at risk of breaking the law.
“Our advice to all landlords is to check if your property falls under the new regulations, and if your local authority does not yet have a process in place, make sure you apply using the existing mandatory HMO licensing scheme and receive an acknowledgement of your application.”
For a regional breakdown of results please email carlos@carlosalbamedia.co.uk or telephone 0141 637 6399 or 07880505647