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Written by rosalind renshaw

Labour leader Ed Miliband has called for the national regulation of private landlords and letting agents.

He wants to see a national register of landlords, while he wants agents to be transparent and upfront about their ‘confusing’ fees.

In a speech to the Fabian Society, Miliband said: “We cannot have two nations divided between those who own their own homes and those who rent.
 
“Most people who rent have responsible landlords and rental agencies. But there are too many rogue landlords and agencies either providing accommodation which is unfit or ripping off their tenants.

“And too many families face the doubt of a two-month notice period before being evicted.

“Imagine being a parent with kids settled in a local school and your family settled in your home for two, three, four years, facing that sort of uncertainty.”

Miliband said the private rented sector is now bigger than the social rented sector for the first time in almost 50 years.

In total, 3.6 million households – including one million with children – privately rent, “often in accommodation deemed well below standard”.

Miliband said: “We would introduce a national register of landlords and greater powers for local authorities to root out and strike off the rogues.

“We would end the confusing, inconsistent and opaque fees and charges regime, making fees easily understandable, upfront and comparable.

“And we will seek to remove the barriers that stand in the way of longer-term tenancies.”

Miliband’s speech came as Baroness Hayter tabled a proposal in the Lords that would make letting agents as accountable as estate agents in the eyes of the law.

The Labour party, while in government, was committed to the idea of regulating the private rented sector – although never actually doing anything about it. There was an apparent U-turn last year when shadow housing minister Jack Dromey rejected regulation.

Miliband’s ‘one nation’ speech does, however, appear to commit the Labour party to a manifesto promise for the next election.

But the Residential Landlords Association, while backing regulation of letting agents, rejected the proposed register of private landlords, saying it would be expensive and unworkable.

Chairman Alan Ward said: “When in office, Labour estimated the cost of a national register of landlords to be £300m and its own impact assessment described full licensing as onerous, difficult to enforce and costly.

“Imposing such a charge on the private rented sector would amount to a further tax on landlords and tenants when we need more homes, and people across the country are feeling squeezed.

“According to figures from Shelter, just 487 landlords in England were prosecuted last year – a figure that is remarkably low out of an estimated 1.2m landlords in total.

“This is despite there being 100 individual pieces of legislation and regulations containing around 400 individual measures affecting the sector.

“The problem is not a lack of powers, but the willingness and ability of local authorities to enforce their existing powers whilst under financial pressure.

“The RLA is calling on all parties to support local authorities to improve the skills available to environmental health officers to more swiftly bring prosecutions against the minority of criminal landlords who bring misery to tenants’ lives. Accreditation schemes would enable councils to better target those who operate under the radar.”

Ward added: “Whilst we support Ed Miliband’s calls for the regulation of lettings agents, which would be good for landlords and tenants alike, it is scaremongering to talk of families being kicked out with two months’ notice. A landlord would rather have a reliable tenant paying rent than face the costs of finding new tenants.”

Comments

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    Another poorly thought out idea by Ed Moribund. Needs to stick to looking after Gromit. We have an open economy - fees are up to the free market to decide.

    • 16 January 2013 15:28 PM
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    Another thought......why doesn't the government take over the entire responsibility for providing and managing rented property?
    Oh yes! it used to be called council housing - too expensive for them now so let others pay?.
    (Do I have a jaundiced view on all of this)

    • 15 January 2013 10:50 AM
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    Typical 'Big Brother' socialist guff pandering to a core of politicians and much of the public who have no idea of the industry. Mind you, all politics is becoming just the same, for many a job with a huge stage to prance about on and having the certainty of good retirement benifits - doesn't matter which side of the fence one is on!

    • 15 January 2013 10:43 AM
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    Given that the last labour government left the country on the verge of bankruptcy, and mismanaged the country's finances on a disastrous scale, the thought of what they could do to the letting industry scares me rigid.

    • 15 January 2013 10:19 AM
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    “We would end the confusing, inconsistent and opaque fees and charges regime, making fees easily understandable, upfront and comparable."

    Is that the thin end of a very long wedge I see just starting to come into view?

    As Labour is almost certain to win the next election, mainly due to the collapse in the LibDem vote as their supporters punish them by voting UKIP, I'd suggest the industry sits up and takes notice of this speech, silly though much of its content is.

    If this becomes a manifesto pledge it is serious stuff.

    Register and not licensing - only a small step but every journey starts with a single step.

    • 15 January 2013 09:56 AM
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    A vote for Milliband is a vote for socialism and all that entails!
    You have been warned,

    • 15 January 2013 09:28 AM
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    Nonsense idea - another list, another fee,

    Read Eric Walkers blog - a much better idea than the same old same old.

    • 15 January 2013 08:50 AM
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    "Strike off the Rogues" thats bloody rich coming from a Labour MP

    • 15 January 2013 08:42 AM
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