10
Accepted
The Department does not have a good enough understanding of what regulatory approaches work at...
Recommendation
The Department does not have a good enough understanding of what regulatory approaches work at local level to help local authorities ensure that landlords comply with their obligations. It has limited data on what tools and approaches are even used by local authorities, as there is no requirement for councils to record their regulatory activity in the private rented sector or report such information to the Department. It has therefore undertaken only limited evaluation of how council’s powers and regulatory approaches are working in practice. Local authorities said they would find evaluations of what regulatory tools are effective and when particularly helpful, as well as guidance on topics such as setting civil penalties or cross-team working in two-tier authorities.24
Government Response Summary
The government will run pilot schemes, strengthen LAs' ability to tackle criminal landlords, explore bolstering national oversight of LAs' enforcement, seek to introduce a national framework for setting fines, and continue to fund the National Trading Standards Estates and Lettings Agency Team.
Government Response
Accepted
Government Response
Accepted
HM Government
Accepted
3: PAC conclusion: The Department is not doing enough to support local authorities to regulate effectively. 3: PAC recommendation: The Department should take a more proactive approach to supporting local regulators and sharing good practice. To do so, it should learn from other consumer protection systems that provide central intelligence and support to local regulators. 3.1 The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. Target implementation date: Summer 2023 3.2 The department recognises the value in sharing good practice across LAs and have supported them to develop their approaches to driving up standards through e.g., roadshows. The department has reinvigorated its engagement programme with LAs and will continue to expand its reach across England to design and implement its reforms. 3.3 The government will support local councils to crack down on poor practices and enforce this new standard and explore different ways of working with landlords to speed up adoption of the Decent Homes Standard. 3.4 The government will: • run pilot schemes trialling improvements to enforcement of existing standards • strengthen LAs’ ability to tackle criminal landlords including seeking to increase financial investigative powers. • bolster national oversight of LAs’ enforcement by requiring them to report on their enforcement activity will also be explored. • seek to introduce a national framework for setting fines to drive a more consistent approach to setting fines building on best practice of local authorities. • continue to fund the National Trading Standards Estates and Lettings Agency Team to deliver guidance and training to LAs’ enforcement teams and their roll-out of the Intelligence Database project enabling effective collaboration and intelligence sharing. 3.5 The Private Rented Property Portal will provide access to information about privately rented properties helping LAs deliver more targeted enforcement. 3.6 The government will work with LAs to share selective licensing schemes best practice. 3.7 The department has engaged with other government departments during the development of the reform package set out in ‘A Fairer Private Rented Sector’ and will continue to use learning from other consumer protection systems while implementing these reforms.
Source
Committee
Public Accounts Committee
Inquiry
Regulation of private renting
Report
Forty-Ninth Report - Regulation of private renting
13 Apr 2022
HC 996
Addressee Bodies
HM Treasury
Timeline
Recommendation age
4.1 yrs
Report published
13 Apr 2022