regulation
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Agencies & People
‘Estate agents should be licensed and regulated’ says leading industry figure
Russell Quirk will be headlining the colossal Propertymark One conference tomorrow chairing a heavyweight industry panel talking about fees, stock levels and pipelines.
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Latest property news
About time! Conveyancing trade body gets tough on poor service
The Council for Licensed Conveyancers is bulking up its enforcement powers to be a better regulator following the post-pandemic bottleneck.
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Features
Nurture and culture
Attracting and retaining staff in estate agency is the key to success, says Tiffany Marmion, Director of Recruitment at Chestertons – but how do you do it?
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Latest property news
New regulations to cover overseas and online agents, auctioneers, property guardians and rent-to-rent firms
ROPA working group proposals to government published today reveal much wider scope of regulation that just high street sales and lettings agents.
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Latest property news
Regulation is coming! Minimum qualifications and code of practice a step closer today
Following delivery of working group's report on how agents should be regulated including minimum qualification standards, next step towards legislation is due today.
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Features
“Gimme shelter!” Is franchising the friend of tough housing markets?
It’s a tough life for agents right now. Both independents and the big corporates are under pressure, so, says Andrea Kirkby is franchising the way to weather the storm?
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Features
Summed up: letting industry legal changes
The Government chose April Fools’ Day to announce stricter regulations for letting and managing agents – but, says Jeremy Leaf, it’s being taken very seriously.
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Latest property news
Lettings sector to face huge reforms designed to weed out rogue agents
A new compulsory code of conduct for agents backed by mandatory qualification for at least one member of staff and a new independent regulator have been announced for the lettings and property management sectors by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (DHCLG). The details of the new code will now be thrashed out by a working group of lettings, tenant and regulatory representatives, with proposals nailed down by early 2019. The DHCLG announcement, which was released during the Easter break, revealed that it wanted to protect the UK’s nine million private renters from the unexpected costs, vague bills and poor quality repairs offered by rogue agents. “Most property agents take a thorough and professional approach when carrying out their business, but sadly some do not,” says Housing Minister Heather Wheeler (pictured, left). “By introducing new standards for the sector, we will clamp down on the small minority of agents who abuse the system so we can better protect tenants and leaseholders who find themselves at the end of a raw deal. Other measures outlined by the DHCLG include the promised reform of leasehold including a new system to help leaseholders challenge unfair fees, help to switch managing agents…
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Features
Raising standards in the property industry
The Property Ombudsman is helping to raise standards in the property industry, says Katrine Sporle, The Property Ombudsman.
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Our Events
The Negotiator Conference & Expo 15
Opening the event was Brandon Lewis, Minister for Housing and Planning, who said he was delighted to return to talk to us for the second year running, having survived the General Election in between and managed to stay in post as Minister for Housing and Planning. “Housing featured more prominently in the last election campaign than in any other within living memory. We made it clear that increasing supply and home ownership would be a top priority… a fully functioning and efficient housing market is vital for meeting the aspirations of working people and raising the productivity of our country,” he said. The Minister went on to comment on the new Government schemes that have been launched since the election – the Build to Rent Fund; the £10billion Housing Guarantee Scheme; Help to Buy and the Help to Buy ISA. All popular moves with delegates. He emphasised the Government’s intention to support all tenures, saying, “So whoever you are and wherever you live, you can benefit from a home of your own, whether you buy or rent. “While the right to buy and starter homes may have secured the lion’s share of attention since the election, I can assure you…
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