Posts with tag: landlord licensing

Landlord Licensing Scheme in Liverpool

Published On: April 1, 2015 at 9:43 am

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From 1st April 2015, all private landlords in the city of Liverpool must apply for a five-year license for each of their rental homes, under the Landlord Licensing Scheme.

The system is being launched in Liverpool under the Government’s selective licensing laws, and signing up is compulsory.

The benefits

All licensed landlords in Liverpool will be subject to a fit and proper persons inspection. Before being given a license, landlords will be asked to declare convictions for dishonesty, violence, drug-related offences, or for breaching any housing/landlord/tenant laws.

Landlord Licensing Scheme in Liverpool

Landlord Licensing Scheme in Liverpool

Properties owned by licensed landlords must meet fire, electric and gas safety standards and be in a good state of repair. Landlords must also deal effectively with any complaints about their tenants.

Exemptions

Properties with a Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMO) license are exempt. There are additional exemptions for other circumstances. The full list of exemptions can be found here.

Applying

The first stage of applying is to register your contact details with Liverpool City Council, and to list the properties that you own.

Once registered, the Council will contact you to let you know how and when to complete the second part of the process, and how and when to pay.

If the application process is not started by 1st April 2015, you may be charged an administration fee or face prosecution. You can start the application here.

If you choose to complete the application offline, you can download and complete the forms from the Liverpool City Council website.

The cost

The fees detailed below apply only to online applications. For landlords who do not want to apply online, the Council will help, but will charge a fee for doing so. You can find contact details here if you do not wish to apply online.

  • First property: £400
  • Each additional property: £350
  • Properties in an approved scheme: £200

Approved schemes

The £200 rate is available to members of the CLASS Accredited Landlord Scheme and other organisations that opt to enter Liverpool City Council’s co-regulation initiative.

However, no organisations are yet to sign up to this initiative and the Council are yet to inform them of how to do so. Once these details are in place, the Council will publish information on their website.

 

 

Welsh Housing Bill a Bureaucratic Mess, says NLA

Published On: November 21, 2013 at 11:07 am

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The Housing (Wales) Bill has recently been introduced as a forthcoming change to legislation. The Act reaffirms the Welsh Government’s commitment to ensuring that all landlords and letting agents become licensed by their relevant local authorities.

Red-tape

Private rented sector are infected by Legionnaires

Private rented sector are infected by Legionnaires

Despite the seemingly positive announcement, the CEO of the National Landlords Association (NLA), Richard Lambert, was disappointed with certain aspects of the plans. Lambert stated: “While it comes as no surprise that the Welsh Government wishes to register all private landlords, it is deeply disappointing that the plans appear mired in burdensome bureaucracy. The requirements outlined in the Housing (Wales) Bill requires landlords to not only register, but to subsequently obtain a licence from what could be numerous local authorities, each of which may stipulate its own conditions and fees.”[1]

Mr Lambert also feels that it is “unnecessary,” and “unhelpful” that private landlords are permitted to “submit details of their investments to a public register in the name of driving improvements and rooting out criminals.”

He argues: “Far from combatting criminality within the private rented sector and offering solutions to the undersupply of residential property, these measures look certain to increase the cost of providing homes by forcing landlords to comply with yet more red-tape.”[1]

Despite saying that “the NLA shares the Welsh Government’s desire to raise standards in the private rented sector,” Lambert is “unconvinced that a national register of landlords is the right approach.”

Instead, he believes that this “will only serve to increase the cost of living for many hard working families as the fee for registering and subsequently obtaining a license will inevitably be passed on to tenants.”[1]

[1] http://www.landlords.org.uk/news-campaigns/news/welsh-housing-bill-bureaucratic-mess-says-nla