Posts with tag: student accommodation

Agent who Conned Tenants Out of Deposits is Jailed

Published On: May 6, 2016 at 10:03 am

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A former estate agent who conned student tenants out of deposit money has been jailed.

Barinder Uppal, who worked for Reeds Rains in Coventry, conned overseas students and a man wanting to buy a property into paying deposits for housing that he could not offer them.

Uppal, 29, who allegedly turned up to property viewings in a Bentley, placed advertisements for the student accommodation online.

He would then arrange viewings before taking deposits from the students, some of whom were offered the same properties.

Prosecuting, Paul Dhami said: “All bar one were students who had come to study in the UK, so English was their second language and therefore there was a degree of vulnerability because he appeared to be bona fide.

“Some described him arriving in a white Bentley, giving the impression of being a successful businessman.”1 

Uppal made a total of £13,560 from the scam. He had already been given a conditional discharge for fraud in 2014.

After complaints were made to the police, Uppal said he had carried out the fraudulent activity to fund a gambling habit. He then lost his job.

The court was told that Uppal had only worked for Reeds Rains for six months, and is now going to Gamblers Anonymous.

Judge Sylvia de Bertodano jailed him for one year, after rejecting a defence argument that if he was given a suspended sentence, he could pay back the stolen funds with the help of his family.

The judge stated: “I don’t see why your family should bail you out – and this is not the sort of offence you can buy your way out of. There must be a custodial sentence that will be immediate.

“The message must go out that someone who uses their position to defraud vulnerable people in this way must go to custody.”1

There will now be a Proceeds of Crime hearing.

1 http://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/overseas-students-conned-out-thousands-11289948

Landlords, Be Aware of the Risks of Investing in Student Accommodation

Published On: May 4, 2016 at 9:23 am

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Student accommodation in the UK is a booming market, according to estate agent Savills. However, landlords are being warned to be aware of the risks involved in investing in this type of property.

Savills reports that £5.8 billion was invested into the student accommodation market last year, with private developments springing up in prime city centre locations.

These blocks of high-spec, boutique rooms, complete with en-suites and flat-screen TVs, promise the student a luxury experience.

Landlords, Be Aware of the Risks of Investing in Student Accommodation

Landlords, Be Aware of the Risks of Investing in Student Accommodation

Since 2006, the private sector has gone from providing 18% of rooms to a huge 41%. On top of this, the latest NUS-Unipol survey found that the average weekly rent for student accommodation in the UK now stands at £147 – up by 18% on 2012-13.

Student numbers are also expected to rise for the foreseeable future, thanks to George Osborne lifting the cap on how many students each university can take. A recent study by UCAS shows a 0.2% increase in applicants for 2016-17, in part due to a 6% rise in students from EU countries.

While demand and prices may remain high, a leading student property investment specialist, The Mistoria Group, is warning of the pitfalls associated with letting student rooms.

The firm’s Managing Director, Mish Liyanage, insists: “If investors are considering student rooms, otherwise known as student pods, they need to look at not only the opportunity, but also the risks too.

“Unfortunately, a major disadvantage of student pods is their resale value and capital growth potential. The value of property will fluctuate with the market and the pool of potential investors is much smaller than for other types of student accommodation, such as HMOs [Houses in Multiple Occupation] and flats.”

Liyanage continues: “With a normal buy-to-let, you can sell the property at any time on the open market through a reputable estate agent, and expect a reasonable capital appreciation. However, selling a student pod will encounter problems. For example, who decides the market value? As a piece of real estate per square metre, it is very expensive (double the average market value), there is no established resale market. Who will sell it? Is it an investment or is it a piece of real estate?

“There is also the issue of guaranteed returns of 7%. The guarantees are only as good as the person or firm that is promising it. Investors need to weigh up whether they think providers of student pods are robust enough to stand behind the guarantee. They also need to be aware that the 7% guarantee may not stand in five years’ time, when their investment could have devalued as new developments have been released.”

He adds: “However, despite the big pitfalls of student pods, student property is a very profitable asset class giving robust returns. For example, in the North West, a high quality HMO, which will house four students, can be purchased for £160,000. The return on investment is very attractive too, with 13% (8% cash rental and 5% capital growth). Unlike student pods, you can apply for a remortgage and there is a buoyant market for this type of student property. If you are building a portfolio, you can lend on your equity in the HMO to fund further investments.”

If you are considering an investment in the student accommodation sector, remember to fully evaluate the risks involved with this market.

London Students Protest Against Rising Accommodation Costs

Published On: January 30, 2016 at 2:42 pm

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Students at a university in London are refusing to pay rent in protest against spiralling accommodation prices and are demanding a 40% reduction in rent prices.

Over 150 students in two halls of residence at University College London (UCL) are refusing to pay rent amounting to more than £250,000. The Cut the Rent campaigners say they will not pay until UCL meets their demand for rent to be cut by two-fifths.

An accommodation representative and a campaign organiser, Angus O’Brien, explains: “The cost of rent has gone up dramatically and it’s preventing people from studying at university. This is a massive problem across London and the country. We are showing that something can be done about rising rent prices; our action could be the start of something much wider.”1

Campaigners claim that rents at UCL have increased by around 56% since 2009.

To rent a room in Ramsey Hall, one of the halls of residence affected by the strike, it costs £158.97-£262.43 per week. At the other building, Max Rayne House, rent is £102.97-£232.40. It is one of the cheapest halls at the university.

Nyima Murry is a 19-year-old first year History of Art student. She says: “I’ve struggled massively with the cost of rent. I’m not from a wealthy background and last term, I had to work two jobs, which really affected my studies. I can’t afford to eat if I don’t work. Studying is becoming about your background and how much you’re earning, rather than your ability.

“Many people I know are putting off moving to London because they can’t afford to study here. I’m striking so that future students have the opportunity to study at UCL on their academic merit, not because of their financial background.”1 

This latest protest follows another campaign at UCL last year, where students were collectively awarded £400,000 in compensation over a dispute against noise and a rat infestation.

The Cut the Rent campaign was set up last year. It says it previously raised the issue of increasing rents with the university, as well as setting up a petition and organising strikes against poor living conditions.

One of the campaigners, 22-year-old David Dahlborn, a third year Eastern European and Jewish Studies student, hopes to bring wider change.

He says: “This strike is extraordinarily significant. Education is becoming unaffordable because of tuition fees and rent. There’s also a housing catastrophe going on in London and a student debt crisis. It’s important that we succeed, because we need to change things.”1

The Vice President of Welfare at the National Union of Students (NUS), Shelly Asquith, also comments on the situation: “I take my hat off to the students at UCL who, for the best part of a year, have mounted a militant and successful rent campaign. Now they are taking their demands further and asking for a cut in rent. This is not unreasonable when the rent in London is more than 100% of the maximum loans and grants available for students. The UCL Cut the Rent campaign is right to point out that accommodation costs are equating to social cleansing of working class students from education. NUS fully supports the campaign.”1 

A UCL spokesperson has defended the rent rises, saying that the university’s prices are competitive for the capital: “We are seeking dialogue with the Cut the Rent campaign to discuss the issues and set out how the finances of UCL accommodation work. While we understand the concerns around the cost of accommodation in London, it is inaccurate to suggest that UCL accommodation is making a profit for the university.

“All of the money that UCL receives in rent is ploughed back into residences. While the proportions may vary year-on-year, we invariably spend more on residences than we receive in rental income.

“We make every effort at UCL to keep rents as low as possible, which is a difficult challenge considering our central London location. Our rents are competitive in comparison with equivalent London institutions and far less than for comparable accommodation in the private sector.”1 

Do you agree with the students’ campaign, or do you believe the university has set competitive rents?

1 http://www.theguardian.com/education/2016/jan/25/london-students-refuse-to-pay-rent-and-demand-40-cut

Students experience problems with landlords

Published On: October 31, 2015 at 9:13 am

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With millions of students back at  University for the new academic year, a report has highlighted that many have experienced problems with their landlord or accommodation provider.

Difficulties

The report reveals that alarmingly although somewhat unsurprisingly, 1.7 million students (74%) have had difficulties with their accommodation or utility supplier. Of this large number, 60% said that they had encountered a housing-related problem.[1]

Ombudsman Services, one of three schemes designated to regulate letting agents, said that a number of students did not know what to do when finding themselves in a dispute with landlords.

Common Gripes

The most common problems reported by students to their accommodation supplier were faulty fridges and boilers, damp and leakages. Unnervingly, over half of students said that they had to contact their landlord many times before measures were taken. More reason for concern was given as 5% of these students said that their landlord had become abusive or threatening in the face of a complaint. A third of students said that they struggled to even make contact with their landlord.[1]

Students experience problems with landlords

Students experience problems with landlords

Utilities

Research suggests that a number of students frequently encounter problems with utility suppliers. 31% of those questioned said that they had problems with telecoms supplier. Of those experiencing these issues, around half said their problems concerned substandard coverage. Another 26% complained of slow or no broadband connection, which is vitally important to their studies.[1]

25% of students experienced issues with their energy supplier. The most common cause of disputes was billing discrepancies, with 8% of students shockingly having to foot the bill for outstanding payments left from previous tenants. Rent can be inclusive of utility bills in some student properties, although one in twenty students said that they have never seen a breakdown of where their money is going.[1]

Powerless

Over a quarter of students (27%) confessed that they felt powerless against their landlord and conceded that they would be unlikely to win any dispute. Students generally have little experience of long-term contracts and coupled with living independently for the first time, many are unaware of their rights. This can lead to students paying much more than is necessary for undesirable and sub-standard accommodation.

Chief Ombudsman Lewis Shand Smith said, ‘starting university is an exciting milestone in every student’s life and for many it also means living away from home for the first time. While flying the nest has many attractions it can also be a daunting time and sadly this can result in some students having to deal with situations they may be unaccustomed to.’[1]

He goes on to say that students shouldn’t have to worry about amenities, professing that, ‘as a student, the last thing you want is to become involved in a dispute over the very basics, such as having somewhere to live and access to broadband and heating.’ He continues, ‘being a student doesn’t mean having to put up with poor quality accommodation, slow broadband connection speeds or shoddy customer service.’[2]

To try to assist vulnerable students, Ombudsman Services has released a guide which Lewis Shand Smith says contains, ‘everything students need to know to prepare for a smooth transition into life away from home.’[2]

Students can read and download the free guide by visiting http://www.ombudsman-services.org/student-guide.html

[1] http://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/news_features/A-quarter-of-students-feel-%E2%80%9Cpowerless%E2%80%9D-against-landlords

[2] http://www.ombudsman-services.org/students-powerless-against-landlords-and-utilities-suppliers.html

 

 

 

Shortage of Student Accommodation as Term Begins

Published On: September 21, 2015 at 10:00 am

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Students are being affected by a severe shortage of private rental accommodation, as the new academic year begins.

Shortage of Student Accommodation as Term Begins

Shortage of Student Accommodation as Term Begins

House and flat share website SpareRoom.co.uk reveals that despite high demand from students, many landlords in university locations prefer to let to young professionals.

Research found that 40% of rooms in private shares in the top 25 university towns and cities are not available to students.

The shortage of student houses is at its worst in Edinburgh and Oxford, says SpareRoom.

The website believes that the shortage has been caused by the amount of older individuals still sharing flats.

It adds that one third of sharers are now over 35-years-old and that the amount of sharers aged 45 and over has risen faster than younger age groups.

Director of SpareRoom, Matt Hutchinson, says: “Most freshers will expect accommodation to be ready and waiting. Even those who’ve been through clearing normally manage to find a place in time for the start of term.

“But those affected by the shortage of student accommodation in Oxford and Reading are now facing a mad scramble to find somewhere to live.”

He says that the high demand from professionals is “far from ideal”.

Hutchinson concludes: “You don’t have to be a genius to see the bottleneck in the rental market supply, particularly as it’s becoming all the more common for people to flat share well into their 30s and 40s.”1

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/student-tenants-facing-major-shortage-of-accommodation-as-term-starts/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Student Co-ops Challenge the High Cost of Accommodation

Published On: September 7, 2015 at 3:19 pm

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As students around the country prepare to move into new homes in new places, five students in Sheffield will move into the city’s first student housing co-operative.

Their home will have cheap rent, no letting agent fees and no landlord. The founding members of the Sheffield Student Housing Co-operative (SSHC) are pitching the idea as a way for students to escape sky-high costs and make their student house a home.

Housemates in the co-operative will manage the property themselves and pay £69 per week – this is around half the rent charged for some university-run accommodation in Sheffield.

SSHC is part of an expanding co-operative movement, which hopes to tackle the student affordability crisis. In some parts of the country, living costs are exceeding student loans. Housing charity Shelter reveals that half of students are struggling to pay their rent.

According to student housing charity Unipol, student rents increased by 25% between 2010-13, as universities sold off their own low-rent stock and private firms built luxury accommodation. The National Union of Students (NUS) has said that the cost of housing is at a crisis point.

Housing co-operatives, although not a new idea, are still relatively rare. And student versions are even more so.

The Sheffield co-op is only the UK’s third, with similar accommodation in Birmingham and Edinburgh.

The co-op is an incorporated body at Companies House and will control the property for the time that the students live there, who will become members of it.

The housemates are effectively the landlord and tenants, not only living in the property, but also managing it, setting the rent, managing the house’s finances and making democratic decisions about the property’s upkeep. The co-op makes no profit, with the income from rent going towards paying off the mortgage and maintenance costs.

Roy Clutterbuck, James Risner and Rosie Evered founded SSHC with the objective of providing cheaper and improved accommodation than private landlords. The venture began as a dissertation project and has taken three years to become a reality. None of the founding members will be moving into the property as they have all graduated and moved away.

The trio has spent the last year handing over the co-op to housemates who will move into the five-bedroom terrace at the start of the new term. The rent is fairly in line with that charged by private landlords in the area, but there are no other fees to pay.

Student Co-ops Challenge the High Cost of Accommodation

Student Co-ops Challenge the High Cost of Accommodation

Clutterbuck says: “We are being extremely careful with our estimates and projections.

“The most important thing is to prove that we are financially sustainable, so we are playing it on the safe side by setting extra money aside in anticipation of unexpected costs.”

One of the main benefits of a co-op is the transparency of the finances. The members manage the property’s finances themselves and the long-term plan is for other homes to be purchased later on.

However, the advantages are not just financial. Members have a say in how the property is decorated, furnished and maintained.

SSHC did need help from various groups to get the project kick-started. The body couldn’t get a mortgage itself, so instead, The Phone Co-op, a telecoms firm owned and run by its customers, bought the house and is leasing it to SSHC.

Long-term, SSHC hopes to build up its own financial track record and then purchase the property from The Phone Co-op.

North West Housing Services is assisting with the financial side of property management, although the co-op has full control over spending decisions.

Unlike non-student co-ops, where members often stay for long periods of time, SSHC has built a structure that works for the student members who will only stay for one or two years.

Clutterbuck explains: “The members will have to work closely together to build up information systems to pass onto the next members.

“This means extra work, but is central to our vision. We want the co-op to be specifically for students and we want as many students as possible to take turns living in the house and experience first-hand what communal, democratic, not-for-profit living is like.”1 

Typical student accommodation in Sheffield includes university-run self-catering rooms for £96-£136 a week with en suites and up to £155 per week for studio flats. Unite provides halls from £85-£144 a week. Students can also rent from private landlords who charge an average of £65-£75 per week.

Mike Shaw was involved in setting up the Edinburgh Student Housing Co-operative (ESHC) and has been living in one of its houses for the past year.

ESHC took over two neighbouring blocks of student halls, containing 106 bedrooms in 24 flats. A private firm previously ran these. ESHC dropped the rent from £470 to £305 per month including bills. The buildings are leased from a housing association and are completely self-managed with members controlling the finances and conducting a lot of the repairs and maintenance themselves.

Shaw says: “We wanted to demonstrate what student living should be about – affordable, secure and good quality accommodation that is democratic and self-managed.”

ESHC had 40 places available for this year and received 230 applications. These were assessed on a blind basis by a panel. Applicants had to explain what they would bring to and gain from community living.

Shaw continues: “The set-up means we all get to know each other from living and working together, so it’s very social – we also organise events and parties. We aim to build an institutional memory to pass on knowledge about how to run things to new people.”1

A smaller scheme has been running in Birmingham since summer 2014.

Like the SSHC, the Birmingham Student Housing Co-operative (BSHC) has worked alongside The Phone Co-op, which bought an eight-bed house in Selly Oak, on behalf of the BSHC.

All three co-ops are members of Students for Cooperation, a national body formed to develop and support student co-operatives around the UK.

The NUS Vice President for Welfare, Shelly Asquith, states: “It is incredibly positive to see students rejecting the status quo of profit-driven housing in favour of sustainable, mutual and affordable alternatives such as co-ops.”

However, she is cautious about their role as a mainstream alternative to typical student accommodation: “Co-ops can take a significant amount of time and investment to establish, and the number of tenants they are able to accommodate is limited.

“To address the affordability crisis we need to be seeking alternatives to the housing market as a whole.”1 

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/sep/07/student-co-ops-tackle-accommodation-costs-rent-property