Posts with tag: right to rent checks

Landlord Angry at Media Coverage of Right to Rent Checks

Published On: February 17, 2015 at 11:57 am

Author:

Categories: Landlord News

Tags: ,,,

A landlord has taken to the Landlord Referencing forum to discuss her concerns over media coverage of right to rent checks.

Mary Latham identified a specific story published in the Independent on Sunday that made her “really cross.”

She explained that the story made it seem that landlords are “shunning foreigners because of their accents,” due to the Immigration Act 2014.

The article stated: “Landlords are preparing to turn away tenants just because they have a foreign accent, as a consequence of new rules making it an offence to let rooms to illegal migrants.

Landlord Angry at Media Coverage of Right to Rent Checks

Landlord Angry at Media Coverage of Right to Rent Checks

“The new rules are already leading landlords to discriminate between applicants on the basis of their background, according to campaigners scrutinising the pilot scheme in the Midlands, where the policy is being tested before being rolled out nationally.

“The Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) is surveying landlords and tenants in the pilot area, where the rules have been in force since December 2014.

“It found that tenants are now being charged an extra £100 in administration fees, and landlords admitted they are less likely to offer a viewing to anyone who needed time to produce their paperwork.”1

Mary responded by describing the accompanying photograph to the article. She says that it was taken “in a road that I know very well, and where students from the University of Birmingham occupy most of the properties.”

She then explained that 10.5% of students at the University are from overseas, and are “welcomed by landlords.” She says she has not witnessed “evidence of discrimination and landlords have been letting since December, when right to rent legislation began in Birmingham for the academic year, which begins in September.”

Mary details how the changes affect landlords: “Landlords must take a copy of a document which shows that a prospective tenant has the legal right to be in the UK and we cannot discriminate; overseas visitors, particularly students, are used to producing their documents, and have no problem in doing so, therefore it is very unlikely that they will need time to produce their paperwork.

“In fact, from my experience it is more likely that a person who was born in the UK will not have the document to prove it, or at least will not have the document with them at viewing, and this may well cause delays for them while they send home for a birth certificate or similar document.

“The legislation is new and it will take time for tenants born in the UK to become used to carrying documents. It is because landlords are not discriminating that problems may occur and it certainly has nothing at all to do with applicants having foreign accents.”

She says that it is media coverage such as the Independent on Sunday article that “causes issues between landlords/letting agents and tenants, and it’s time that the media behaved in a more responsible way.”

She calls for more proof: “If and when there is evidence, I mean facts and figures, which show that overseas visitors cannot access the private rented sector, we would need to address the problem, but at this moment in the first roll out areas of the West Midlands there is not a problem, and we don’t need the media to cause one.”

Mary explains what she has done to help: “I have spoken at several events in the West Midlands, and I have run nine seminars to explain what landlords need to do to comply with this legislation, and at none of these events have landlords spoken about refusing overseas visitors; once they understood the legislation, landlords made plans to change their tenant referencing process to comply.”1

Right to rent checks are expected to roll out nationwide this year.

1 http://www.landlordreferencing.co.uk/forum/discuss/community-forum/right-to-rent-media-causing-issues-between-landlords-tenants/#p28488

Landlords Blamed for Housing Problems

Landlords have been held responsible for many different issues building in the UK.

The Conservative Party blamed landlords for illegal immigration, and has made right to rent checks a legal requirement before any tenancy agreements are signed.

Landlords Blamed for Housing Problems

Landlords Blamed for Housing Problems

Labour targeted landlords in the stand against climate change, by enforcing obligatory Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs). The current Government is also prohibiting the rental of low performance energy homes from 2018.

Landlords are also being held responsible for the troubles in the housing market, as London mayoral candidate Diane Abbott has suggested monthly rents be capped at half the annual Council Tax band. Think tank Civitas has also supported rent controls.

People may like the idea of landlords being greedy and profiteering, however, more than three-quarters of landlords in the UK rent out only one or two properties. In London, many also rent out rooms in their own house for more income.

Although rents in the capital have risen by 15% since 2011, house prices and mortgage costs have also increased by much more. The desperate shortage of housing is the cause of these issues.

Politicians do not seem able to come up with an innovative solution; with neither side planning more social housing or new builds to increase supply. Instead, they have created punishing regulations for just one group of people.

Landlords may have been accused of causing a lack of new builds, and a high housing benefit bill, however it seems that the private rental sector actually provides support against other shortcomings. Those who cannot afford a mortgage can afford to rent, or those who cannot get social housing live in private accommodation.

Landlords and tenants are also praised on making the best of a bad situation. People who rent out rooms in their homes will generally organise interviews to find a tenant who will be suited to their living arrangements.

The rise in private renting in London, to 670,000 households1, could also be down to the increase in groups such as students and temporary visitors, who prefer renting.

A rental cap could have detrimental and unpredictable effects. Landlords are calling for these measures to be opposed in the run-up to the general election.

1 http://www.cityam.com/208945/landlords-should-not-be-scapegoats-uninventive-politicians

 

 

Immigration Checks Launch in West Midlands

Published On: September 23, 2014 at 11:18 am

Author:

Categories: Landlord News

Tags: ,

The first phase of the Government’s controversial Immigration Act is due to be trialled in parts of the West Midlands from this December. Landlords in Birmingham, Walsall, Dudley, Sandwell, and Wolverhampton will be the first to enforce the new requirements.

A Home Office spokesperson said that the West Midlands was chosen as the trial area for the scheme due to its large population size and diversity.

The Immigration Act 2014

The Immigration Act 2014 is designed to stamp out and deprive illegal migrants from the UK and deprive them of any services that they are not entitled to. Under the Act, landlords are permitted to check the immigration status of all new or potential tenants. Failure to do so could result in fines of up to £3,000.

Code of Practice

Amidst an angry response from landlords, the Home Office issued an official code of practice, in an attempt to ensure that there is no discrimination when conducting checks. All new tenants should be subject to eligibility checks, apart from landlords’ immediate family members or tenants under the age of 18.

Immigration Checks Launch in West Midlands

Immigration Checks Launch in West Midlands

Landlords will be responsible for checking evidence of a person’s identity and citizenship, in order to comply with the new legislation. Permitted documents that can be used to prove eligibility to reside in the UK include passports or biometric residence permits. Documentation must be copied by the landlord and kept for a period of 12 months after the tenancy agreement has ended.

Despite opposition from landlords and leading industry organisations, the Government looks set to continue with their plan to roll out the scheme across the UK from next year. Landlords believe that they are effectively being asked to take on the roll of the UK Border Agency, something that they feel is grossly unfair.

There is also scepticism on the Home Offices’ promise that a landlord checking service will respond to status inquiries within two working days, for tenants who have outstanding immigration applications.

Students

Student tenants that have been directly nominated by local authorities, colleges or hostels are exempt from new immigration status checks. This is due to the fact that additional checks would duplicate existing research.

Crackdown

The Immigration Act 2014 and its attributed responsibilities are part of the coalition Government’s crackdown on immigration. More measures included in the crackdown include revoking driving licenses, reporting sham marriages and harsher fines for companies that knowingly employ illegal immigrants.

The immigration minister, James Brokenshire, defended the introduction of the bill, stating: “The right to rent checks will be quick and simple, but will make it more difficult for immigration offenders to stay in the country when they have no right to be here.” He also says that the new rules “will act as a new line of attack against unscrupulous landlords who exploit people by renting out substandard, overcrowded and unsafe accommodation.”[1]

Brokenshire also promises: “Landlords in the West Midlands will have all the advice and support they need in advance of the checks going live on 1st December.”[1]

[1] http://www.landlordexpert.co.uk/2014/09/23/landlord-required-to-check-immigration-status-of-tenants-in-west-midlands/