Housing Minister to tell landlords about rental reform – maybe…

Housing Minister to tell landlords about rental reform – maybe…


Todays other news
"We’re concerned thousands of criminal landlords will dodge the new...
The survey looked at landlords managing some 2,000 properties...
He's been ordered to pay £2,710 after being found guilty...
The firm says landlords and tenants are hit by the...
Competition hots up to win landlord clients....


The National Residential Landlords Association says housing minister Andrew Stephenson will give a key-note address at its annual conference.

The only problem is, with another Tory leadership race underway, the new Prime Minister to be elected this week will almost certainly replace Stephenson in the traditional government reshuffle.

If he does cling on, Stephenson will give landlord delegates an update on the long standing pledge by government to reform the private rented sector.  

Hosted by BBC Radio Four broadcaster, Moneybox presenter Paul Lewis, the Landlord Conference takes place at the Coventry Building Society Arena on Tuesday November 15 – three weeks after a new PM takes over.

Also at the event, a barrister at Landmark Chambers – Justin Bates – will examine housing law reform while David Smith, partner at JMW Solicitors, will deliver an  update for landlords on housing law and legislation change. 

With government proposals for rental properties to have an EPC rating of C or above by 2025 (for new tenancies) and 2028 (for existing tenancies), energy efficiency also features heavily on the conference agenda. 

Delegates will have the opportunity to learn more about upcoming energy efficiency requirements for rental properties, from both political and legal perspectives.

Speakers on this topic include Derek Horrocks of the National Insulation Association, Jonathon Werran, CEO of think tank Localis and Russell Smith, MD of Retrofit Works. 

There will also be a panel discussion and Q&A on this topic, with ‘shock jock’ contrarian Russell Quirk. 

The event is run by the National Residential Landlords Association in partnership with Landlord Law. 

Share this article ...

Join the conversation: Login and have your say

Want to comment on this story? Our focus is on providing a platform for you to share your insights and views and we welcome contributions. All comments are screened using specialist software and may be reviewed by our editorial team before publication. Landlord Today reserves the right to edit, withhold or delete comments that violate our guidelines, including those that harass, degrade, or intimidate others. Users who post such content may be banned from commenting.
By commenting, you agree to our Commenting Terms of Use.
Recommended for you
Related Articles
Agents must report suspicions to the Office of Financial Sanctions...
The Planning and Infrastructure Bill was published this week....
These are next week on May 12 and May 14....
The publication is from the House of Commons Library...
The most vulnerable tenants may pay the highest price...
A consultant says councils are becoming sharper at licensing enforcement...
A tax rise coming in just five weeks’ time will...
Recommended for you
Latest Features
HMOs are increasingly popular with landlords because of their high...
‘Grey belt’ land is a subset of green belt identified...
Barclays gives a state of the nation housing report every...
Sponsored Content

Send to a friend

In order to send this article to a friend you must first login. Click on the button below to login or sign up.

No one likes pop-ups ...
But while you're here