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Written by rosalind renshaw

Landlords who refuse to comply with requests to improve their properties should be charged a £400 admin bill when orders are made against them. These would include improvement notices, prohibition orders and management orders.

The proposal is from Southend Council, which is set to incorporate it into next year’s budget.

Jacqui Lansley, the council’s head of community strategy and development, said it would have a dual effect of raising money for the authority, which has a £10m black hole in its budget, and encouraging landlords to act.

She said: “Wherever possible we seek to work co-operatively with landlords and managing agents to resolve problems informally.

“However, in those cases where landlords refuse to comply, these charges should help deter them from not maintaining their properties.”

She added: “The new charges relate to enforcement work undertaken by the council where informal enforcement and liaison with a landlord has proved unsuccessful and a formal enforcement notice or order has proved necessary.”

She said that the £400 had been calculated in terms of officer hours involved in serving orders and notices.

Comments

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    Jacqui Lansley, the council’s head of community strategy and development, said it would have a dual effect of raising money for the authority, which has a £10m black hole in its budget, and encouraging landlords to act.

    She said: “Wherever possible we seek to work co-operatively with landlords and managing agents to resolve problems informally.

    “However, in those cases where landlords refuse to comply, these charges should help deter them from not maintaining their properties.”

    Firstly, notice the mention of 'the black hole' that needs filling !!!, and it's landlords that are aimed to fill it for them.
    Also, if a landlord if forced to comply with maintaining there property to levels set, I guess that costs money, and will be passed on to tenants with rent increases. Sounds good to me, not sure the housing association and shelter would think so !!.
    Finally, if cheap housing and cheap rental properties were all improved to a high level and so increase in rent, would the government increase there housing benifit payments to meet ??, erm....nope. They will remove housing benifits all together, and spend millions of pounds starting a new scheme that costs a fortune to start and run, and pay out less money direct to the tenant, so making life harder for both tenant to live and harder for landlord to collect there rent owed.

    Is it just me !!, or can anyone else see the whole private rental sector collapsing in the near future ?

    • 29 January 2013 17:02 PM
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