Hundreds Of Councils Awarded Share Of £4m To Crack Down  On Rogue Landlord

Hundreds Of Councils Awarded Share Of £4m To Crack Down On Rogue Landlord

Charlotte Webster-

Over hundred councils across England have been awarded a share of over £4 million to crack down on criminal landlords and letting agents, Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick MP has announced today

The funding is aimed majority  at the small minority of landlords who persist in breaking the law, making tenants’ lives a misery by offering inadequate or unsafe housing. The Housing Department say that a majority of landlords provide decent homes for their tenants

The new funding will be used by councils to take enforcement action against these landlords. This action will continue the government’s ongoing work to make the private rented sector fairer and stamp out criminal practices for good.

21 councils across Yorkshire and Humberside are set to train over 100 enforcement officers across the region to ensure standards are being met by landlords Northampton – to create a ‘Special Operations Unit’ to enforce against the very worst landlords responsible for over 100 homes in the town.

Thurrock  to work with the care service to ensure the most vulnerable young tenants are in decent, well-maintained homes. Greenwich – to trial new technology to identify particularly cold homes to ensure renters are warm over the winter period

Housing Secretary Rt Hon Robert Jenrick MP said:

This government will deliver a better deal for renters. It’s completely unacceptable that a minority of unscrupulous landlords continue to break the law and provide homes which fall short of the standards we rightly expect – making lives difficult for hard-working tenants who just want to get on with their lives.

Everyone deserves to live in a home that is safe and secure and the funding announced today will strengthen councils’ powers to crack down on poor landlords and drive up standards in the private rented sector for renters across the country.

Councils already have strong powers to force landlords to make necessary improvements to a property through use of a range of measures, including civil penalties and banning orders for the worst offenders. The grants will support a range of projects to enable councils to make the best use of these powers. This will include trialling innovative ideas, sharing best practice and targeted enforcement where we know landlords shirk their responsibilities. Today’s announcement demonstrates the government’s commitment to helping good landlords to thrive, and hard-working tenants across the country get the homes they deserve – creating a housing market that works for everyone.

This government has committed to delivering a fairer deal for renters and empower them whilst also giving greater peace of mind. We will end no fault evictions, so that landlords can’t remove tenants without good reason, and introduce Lifetime Rental Deposits so renters don’t have to save up for a new deposit while their money is tied up in an old one.

There are more than 4.5 million households in the private rented sector in England, with recent statistics showing that 82% of private renters are satisfied with their accommodation.

CHALLENGES

The fund will help councils take on the most common challenges that stand in the way of tackling poor standards in the private rented sector, including encouraging positive landlord/tenant/local authority relationships, particularly with vulnerable groups such as care leavers, the need for better information – on housing stock, and on landlords and agents operating in their areas, including data sharing between authorities and agencies that identifies and brings together different data sets to enable better enforcement targeting which protects the most vulnerable tenants internal ‘ways of working’ – improving housing-specific legal expertise, in-house communication between teams, and tools, and strategies to effectively implement policy innovative software , and for enforcement officers to record their findings, gather evidence and streamline the enforcement process

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