baroness hayter
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Latest property news
21st Oct 20210 2,247Minister stalls once more on bringing in RoPA recommendations as Lords fume
Frustration was clear in Lords as minister was grilled on both his failure to implement RoPA, or ability to reveal next steps.
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20th Jul 20202 3,841Here it is! First draft of industry-wide Code of Practice revealed
Steering committee behind new RoPA-inspired code says agents now have two months to comment before it starts setting the code in stone.
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6th Jul 20200 1,488Looming industry Code of Practice to tackle ‘dual fees’ problems
Long-standing industry sticking point is one of several issues discussed by TPO-organised industry gathering last week about the code of practice, held on Zoom.
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Latest property news
1st Jul 20200 3,071Property industry Code of Practice is just six months away, agents are told
A RICS and TPO backed Steering Committee has started work on a single code for the whole industry that, when introduced, will change estate agency forever.
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6th Nov 20170 3,417Profile: The Baroness who championed compulsory Client Money Protection
The news that the government is to introduce compulsory Client Money Protection (CMP) for agents made the national newspaper headlines recently. But the strenuous attempts to have it introduced have been in full swing now for over three years. And it’s 68-year-old Diane Hayter (pictured, right), or to use her Lords title Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town, who has been instrumental in persuading the current government to bring in CMP. So how did it all happen? After a distinguished career in the Labour Party, her unexpected involvement began when she chaired the now-defunct Property Standards Board, which was set up in 2009 by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors with several other industry organisations including the NAEA and ARLA. It tried to bring in initiatives including proper regulation of agents but was disbanded a year later when it was clear the government was reluctant to get involved in regulating the industry. How times have changed. David Cox (pictured, left), Chief Executive of the Association of Residential Letting Agents, says he first came across Baroness Hayter at a lobbying meeting during the 2014 Labour Party conference in Manchester. “We were sat around on plastic chairs and I began my spiel on…
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7th Apr 20170 4,860Lettings fees ban WILL go ahead, says DCLG
The lettings fee ban is set to go ahead. The Government has announced its intention to introduce a total ban ands agents across the UK will not be able to charge any fees to tenants for their services, if the Government’s proposals are implemented. This isn’t a case of rattling cages to get the message through to agents that their fees may be disappearing, if they do not receive suitable responses from the consultation – today’s publication of the Consultation Paper leaves us in no doubt that there will be a total ban on lettings fees, as stated by Baroness Hayter (right) last week at the arla|propertymark Conference, it is just a matter of when and how it is implemented. Within the document, the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) says, “DCLG officials undertook some market research of letting agent fees. We randomly chose 50 agents of differing sizes and models (i.e. franchises, independents and national branches) across the country and searched their website for a list of letting fees charged to tenants. This exercise reinforced how difficult it is for tenants to both find and compare agent fees since it was not always simple to either find the fees…
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