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London’s rogue landlords ‘named and shamed’

Created on
22 May 2018

All London boroughs have signed up to Mayor’s rogue landlord checker

2.4 million renters can now check their prospective landlord and agent

Londoners now able to report rogue practices online

Sadiq also publishes London Housing Strategy

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has hailed a major milestone in his efforts to ‘name and shame’ the capital’s unscrupulous landlords and letting agents with all 33 London local authorities signing up to his online database.

This comes as the Mayor also published his London Housing Strategy, which sets out his approach to tackling London’s housing crisis. The strategy will be considered by the London Assembly at its next meeting.

Among the entries now included on the Mayor’s Rogue Landlords and Letting Agents Checker is a high street estate agent chain which was fined a record £35,000 following a prosecution brought by the London Borough of Tower Hamlets1 after it failed to provide the council with the correct documentation – including gas and fire safety – for a rental property in Whitechapel.

Working voluntarily in partnership with the Mayor, the 32 boroughs and the City of London have committed to submitting records of successful prosecutions and fines to the Checker, a free online tool which allows Londoners to check if the landlord or letting agent of a rental property has been convicted of any housing offences.

Ten boroughs have already submitted their records, and the remaining boroughs’ records will now be uploaded to the database. In addition, the Checker has a simple ‘report a rogue’ tool, giving renters a central portal to make a complaint about a landlord or agent for the first time.

The Mayor believes the database, published on the City Hall website, will give Londoners greater confidence in renting a home, as well as acting as a clear deterrent to the small minority of landlords and letting agents who behave dishonestly.

Among the records already available is a case involving a residential landlord which was fined a record £150,000 after being prosecuted by London Fire Brigade2 in May 2017, following a major fire at a block of flats it owned in Westminster in 2011. The fire was so serious 13 people had to be evacuated and the subsequent investigation found a string of fire safety breaches.

The Checker – the first of its kind in the country – was launched last December with the support of 10 boroughs, fulfilling one of the Mayor’s manifesto commitments and four months in advance of the Government’s National Rogue Landlord Database.

Compared with the Mayor’s Checker, the Government database contains a very limited range of offences and it is available only to local authorities – and, unlike the Checker, it cannot be accessed by members of the public.

The Checker forms a key part of the Mayor’s approach to helping private renters in his London Housing Strategy. The strategy also includes policies to help social tenants and leaseholders, with a further call on the Government to appoint an independent Commissioner for Social Housing Residents, who would act as a watchdog and ensure the voices of those living in social housing are heard at a national level.

This proposal was in the Mayor's draft strategy and has been strengthened as a result of Londoners’ views from the consultation process, through which a number of respondents called for this Commissioner to be a social housing resident themselves.

The document also:

  • outlines plans to spend the additional £1.67 billion the Mayor negotiated with Government to deliver more genuinely affordable homes by 2022 – with the majority being for homes based on social rent levels;
  • sets out the Mayor’s intention to require the use of resident ballots in estate regeneration schemes which want Mayoral funding where existing affordable homes are being demolished; and
  • commits to working with community-led housing organisations to identify a pipeline of schemes by 2021 which could deliver at least 1,000 new homes.

The strategy is being published following a successful public consultation, to which more than 2,000 people responded – more than any statutory housing strategy in the history of the London mayoralty.

The Mayor believes that every Londoner has a right to a home they can afford – and he is doing everything in his power to make it happen. To find out more about what the Mayor is doing to tackle London's housing crisis and the affordable housing opportunities Londoners can take advantage of, visit the Mayor’s brand new housing hub at www.london.gov.uk/building-a-london-for-everyone.



The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “When I launched the Checker I made it clear unscrupulous landlords and agents would have nowhere to hide. Now, with all local authorities signed up, we have reached an important milestone in protecting London’s renters.



“The rental market in the capital is difficult enough to navigate without a small minority of rogue operators exploiting their tenants. This tool will empower Londoners to make an informed choice about where to live.

“I’m extremely grateful for the support of all the local authorities and other bodies which have signed up to contribute their records to the database. I’m confident this will be a major step in tackling unscrupulous and illegal practices in the rented sector.

“I’m also proud to today publish my London Housing Strategy, in which I once again call on the Government to appoint a Commissioner for Social Housing Residents. In line with the views of many Londoners, I believe this role should be fulfilled by someone who is a social housing resident themselves.”

London Fire Brigade’s Assistant Commissioner for Fire Safety, Dan Daly, said: “We welcomed the rogue landlord checker when it was launched and it’s great news that all London boroughs have now pledged to submit their records to the database.

“Now that all boroughs have signed up, it means every Londoner who rents, wherever they live, will be able to find landlords and letting agents who have been successfully prosecuted or faced civil enforcement for housing offences, including those prosecuted by us for fire safety breaches.

“It should also act as a deterrent for the small number of dishonest landlords who pose a large risk to their tenants.”

Councillor Meric Apak, Cabinet for Better Homes at Camden Council, said: “A large proportion of Camden’s residents rent privately and the Mayor of London’s database is an invaluable resource to help them make informed decisions when they are considering agreeing a new tenancy, by giving them greater awareness of the landlords and letting agents that have previously been convicted of housing offences.

“We take a dual approach of protecting our residents’ housing rights and making landlords aware of their responsibilities. We have no hesitation in seeking to prosecute irresponsible landlords but we are here to work with and provide advice to all landlords to ensure they are able to meet their obligations, before we take this step.”

Policy Chair at the City of London Corporation, Catherine McGuinness, said: “I’m pleased that all London boroughs have now come together to support the Mayor of London’s efforts to improve the rental market.

“It’s vitally important that all Londoners have high quality housing in which to live. This milestone will make landlords more accountable and is a step forward in protecting tenants.”

Director of the Residential Landlords Association, Carrie Kus, said: “We all want to see criminal landlords rooted out of the rental market completely.

“It is good news therefore that the Mayor’s database of rogue landlords is now in operation across the whole of London. This will give tenants the support they need to properly distinguish between the majority of law-abiding and decent landlords and those landlords who bring the sector into disrepute.”

Director of Generation Rent, Dan Wilson Craw, said: “Landlords and agents already require references from renters before starting a tenancy, so it’s only right and fair that renters have a chance to vet their prospective landlords and agents.

“Private renters in London will be able to make more informed decisions when moving home through this tool, and greater transparency should help to reduce the number of criminals operating in the capital’s rental market. This resource should be should be rolled out nationally to help drive up standards in the private rented sector across the country.”

ENDS

Notes to editors

Notes

 

The largest fine for a letting agent currently on the Checker.

 

The largest fine for a landlord currently on the Checker.

  • The Mayor’s Rogue Landlord and Agent Checker is available here: www.london.gov.uk/rogue-landlord-checker
  • The London Housing Strategy is available here: https://www.london.gov.uk/housing-strategy.
  • The London Fire Brigade, all three letting agent redress schemes (the Property Redress Scheme, Ombudsman Services – Property and The Property Ombudsman), as well as the London Boroughs are all now submitting records to the online database.
  • All residential letting agents are legally required to register with a ‘redress scheme’: the Property Ombudsman, Ombudsman Services and the Property Redress Scheme (all of which provide a free and independent way of resolving disputes between tenants and landlords).
  • The Checker has three elements:
    • a public online database of landlords and letting agents who have been prosecuted or fined by London boroughs or the London Fire Brigade, or expelled from letting agent redress schemes;
    • a private online database for local authorities and the London Fire Brigade to share more detailed information about landlord and letting agent offences;
    • a reporting tool to allow tenants and other Londoners to report rogue landlord and agent activity more easily.
  • On the public database records will be available (in most cases) for 12 months, due to restrictions in the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974.

 

High street estate agent

  • The high street estate agent was prosecuted by the London Borough Tower Hamlets in November 2017 after failing to provide a number of documents relating to a property in Newmark Street, Whitechapel.
  • The documents including tenancy agreements, fire alarm certificates and gas certificates. The company failed to provide them despite the borough issuing repeated warnings.
  • The company was fined £35,000 – a record amount for a letting agent.

 

Residential landlord

  • The residential landlord was prosecuted by the London Fire Brigade in May 2017 and fined £150,000, following a major fire at flats the company managed in Ecclestone Square.
  • The company subsequently pleaded guilty to a number of fire safety breaches, which put tenants at risk of death or serious injury.
  • Last December the London Fire Brigade submitted information about the company’s offences to the Mayor’s Checker, to ensure that renters across London can access this information.
  • The failings established through the legal process included:
    • the doors to the individual flats provided inadequate protection to occupants’ escape route in the event of a fire;
    • there was no fire alarm or fire detection system inside the flats or communal areas;
    • there was no fire risk assessment in place.
  • Further information about the offences for which the company was found guilty can be found here.

 

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