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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Emma Munbodh & Steven Smith

Rogue landlords in England will be 'named and shamed' under new rules

Rogue landlords who provide poor standards of social housing will be "named and shamed" under plans improve standards. The Government is also planning to establish a "resident panel" to allow social tenants to be heard "directly by Government".

As part of that, 250 people from across England will be invited to share their experiences, the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) said. The changes will be brought forward through legislation, reports The Mirror, and will see failing landlords named on the Government's website and social media channels.

This will include those who have breached consumer standards set by the Regulator of Social Housing or where the Housing Ombudsman has made a finding of "severe maladministration" against them. The resident panel will give tenants a chance to have their say on how to improve the quality of social housing, the DLUHC said.

"The panel will allow residents to scrutinise and influence measures to strengthen the Decent Homes Standard, training and qualification for staff, a new Access to Information Scheme and other planned reforms," it added.

Eddie Hughes, the minister for social housing, said: "Everyone in this country deserves to live in a safe and decent home. It is unacceptable that anyone should have mould covering their walls, risk slipping on a wet floor or have water dripping from the ceiling.

"We have published draft legislation today to toughen up regulation of social housing landlords. This includes naming and shaming those landlords who fail to meet acceptable living standards and giving tenants a direct channel to raise their concerns with Government. This package will help to deliver on our commitment in the Levelling Up White Paper to halve the number of non-decent rented homes by 2030."

The panel will be supported by a national survey, with about 5,000 residents asked to share their views on their landlords' services during March and April 2022. This will be used to monitor the impact of reforms.

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