There is to be a new high-level and independent review of the private rental sector in England.
The Nationwide Foundation is funding the University of York to conduct the probe to establish broadly whether the sector meets the needs of tenants, and whether the string of fiscal and regulation changes now underway will help the sector operate more effectively.
The Centre for Housing Policy at the University of York will carry out the work, which will be led by Julie Rugg and David Rhodes - authors of The Private Rented Sector: Its Contribution and Potential back in 2008, more popularly called the Rugg Review.
Interested stakeholders and industry experts will be invited to submit evidence to the review in due course. The completed work is expected to be published in the summer of next year.
In addition to the review, the Nationwide Foundation has also funded another separate piece of research to be carried out by the same academic team. This will assess the extent that the private rented sector meets the housing needs of vulnerable tenants. This will be published alongside the main review.
“It’s clear to me that while recent changes to the private rented sector have been significant, particularly around its size and the wide-ranging circumstances of the tenants living in it, unfortunately these changes are not at all well understood” says Helen Hayes MP, a member of the all-party parliamentary group on Housing and Planning.
“The 2008 Rugg Review work was extremely useful and well-regarded, so I warmly welcome this opportunity for it to be revisited, giving politicians and policymakers an up-to-date and robust picture. I expect this review of the sector to pave the way for meaningful policy changes and interventions” she adds.
Leigh Pearce, chief executive of the Nationwide Foundation says a new review is urgently needed “to provide a comprehensive picture of the private rented sector, as there is little agreement about what is truly happening.”
He says both landlords and tenants are demonised. ”We see a sector that is providing homes for those who have been homeless while at the same time, people are being made homeless from the sector” says Pearce.
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It might be helpful here to state what the objectives of The Nationwide Foundation are. They're maybe not quite as pro-landlord and lettings industry as this piece makes them sound.
All Landlords want a level playing field I am sure of this.
Also an end to bad Landlords who are giving the industry a bad name.
Tenants seems to have more rights than Landlords ! they don't move when a court order tells them to go and wait until the poor Landlord pays out yet more money for high court etc(even the local councils advise tenants not to move out !)
Its time the law stated,that when a court order is in place the tenant who does not move out,is considered a squater! and the police can be called to remove them.
Why on earth is it necessary to pay out more money to the high court? this simple law change will save millions(the high court enforcers wont like it however)but this nonesense needs to stop!
BTL can be very simple but its getting so complicated now and unnecessary pressure from the government.After all, we landlords just want to rent out a home,get our rent and look after the tenant who looks after the property and pays the rent,simples!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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