House of Commons
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Housing Market
Renters’ Reform Bill: Industry reaction
No-fault evictions will be abolished and tenants will allowed to have pets with a new landlords ombudsman appointed to provide quick resolutions to disputes.
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Latest property news
Sofa, not so good! MPs urge new laws to regulate Airbnb rental properties
An influential parliamentary committe of MPs say Airbnb properties must meet the same standards of safety as those in the traditional lettings market.
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Latest property news
Universal Credit is “car crash” for tenants, landlords and agents, says MP
Universal Credit has been an “ideological error” for the 1.2 million tenants on housing benefit within the system as well as landlords and agents, it has been claimed by Stephen Lloyd, MP for Eastbourne (pictured, right). This is despite the Chancellor’s measures in his budget last November, which attempted to mitigate the financial stress of those moving to Universal Credit falling into rent arrears as they awaited payment. Stephen’s comments came during a debate he led in the House of Commons this morning during which speakers from all sides of the political spectrum savaged Universal Credit and its effect on the housing sector. As well as dramatically increasing the number of people presenting themselves to councils as homeless after being evicted from private rented properties for rent arrears, Universal Credit has made many private landlords reluctant to rent to claimants, he said. “Many years ago I warned that this would be a car crash, and it has become one,” he said. Quoting figures given to him by the Residential Landlords Association, he said 87% of landlords will not rent their properties to Universal Credit claimants and that among those who did, 38% have experienced rent arrears problems. He then called…
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Latest property news
Commons committee measures up property industry for Brexit risk
The effect Brexit is likely to have on the property industry has been revealed by a House of Commons committee. Its research, published today, shows that 3% of the UK’s 43,000-strong sales, lettings and property management related workforce are EU nationals and 1.5% are non-EU nationals – or nearly five percent of the workforce in total. Based on ONS figures, the committee therefore concludes that if many of these people were to leave the UK and return to their home countries, it would not pose a threat. “The work of UK-based estate agents is primarily domestic and is generally not highly dependent on EU labour,” the report by the House of Commons Committee on Exiting the European Union says. Brexit: EU renters More problematical is the high number of ‘other nationalities’ who rent properties in the UK, the Brexit report suggests. It quotes the most recent English Housing Survey, which points to nearly a quarter of all privately rented accommodation being inhabited by EU nationals or those from outside Europe. The ‘other nationalities’ highlighted in the report also own 3.4% of all owner-occupied properties, although this is much higher in central London’s prime districts, and 8.4% of local authority –…
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