|
Landlords
criticise HMO licensing regime differences
Landlords have criticised the
differences in approach taken by local authorities in enforcing the houses in
multiple occupation licensing rules introduced in England and Wales
in July. A survey by website residentiallandlord.co.uk found that fees for
licensing varied between £150 in the Isles of Scilly to £1,750 in Dartford with an average of £515. This they claim could
deter landlords from investing in the buy to let HMO market reducing supply of
accommodation and choice for renters.
Karl Hopkins of residential landlord
commented “introduction of HMO licensing was supposed to combat the problem
caused by a tiny minority of "rogue landlords", it rather looks as if the
government now needs to do something to stop "rogue councils" fleecing landlords
by charging well over the odds. Inevitably either landlords are going to shy
away from HMO properties, making this type of let harder to find, or the costs
will be passed to tenants - probably both.”
Dartford Council defended their high
prices saying that they dealt with few licences so their costs were high and
they did not wish to pass on the costs to council tax payers. Landlords have
also expressed concerns over the fact that some councils charge on a per
landlord basis whilst others charge per property, some councils offer licences
for five years whilst others only offer three or one year licences and also that
councils vary in their surcharge regime for landlords who have failed to obtain
a licence.
Nick Goble of estate agent Winkworth who works in an office dealing
with four London
boroughs commented “the procedure and enforcement of HMO licences is completely
different from council to council: different guidelines, different timelines,
different criteria emphasised by each, and different ways of ensuring
compliance. It has left landlords, many of whom are average punters saving for
retirement, in a state of confusion.” Despite the criticisms many landlords are
still in favour of the licensing as they believe over the longer term it will
stamp out bad landlords.
Observer
24/09/2006
|