People in Leeds are being encouraged to have their say on the possible introduction of a new regulatory licensing scheme for private sector rented housing.
Leeds City Council began operating a system known as ‘selective licensing’ in Beeston Hill and Harehills in 2020 with the aim of driving up the standard of privately-rented homes and boosting wider efforts to tackle social and health inequalities in the two communities.
Positive results have been achieved but – under the terms of the Housing Act 2004 – selective licensing schemes in England can only run for a period of five years.
The council is therefore now considering plans for a new and expanded scheme that would again include much of Beeston and Harehills but would also take in parts of Holbeck, as well as Armley, Cross Green and East End Park.
All private landlords – with certain limited exceptions – would be required by law to obtain a licence for any residential property they are seeking to let in the designated area.
The licence conditions would include ensuring the safe working of gas or electric appliances, providing smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors and keeping the property in a decent state of repair, both inside and out.
A public consultation on the proposed scheme was launched on Monday (23 September 2024), with the council keen to gather a wide cross-section of views before it decides whether to press ahead with its plans.
And interested parties across the city – including landlords, tenants and other stakeholders – are being urged to take the opportunity to share their thoughts between now and the end of the consultation period on December 13.
Councillor Jess Lennox, Leeds City Council’s executive member for housing, said:
“Privately rented properties are a key source of housing in Leeds and it’s vitally important that they are safe, warm and well managed places to live.
“We want to explore options for protecting and improving the quality of every type of home in our city, with the newly-launched consultation on selective licensing forming part of that work.
“I would encourage as many people as possible to let us know their views over the course of the next few months.”
More than 4,500 inspections and other visits have been conducted at properties in Beeston and Harehills under their existing schemes, which both come to an end next year.
Landlords have had to carry out improvement work on more than 1,500 homes where issues were identified during these checks.
The visits have also given council officers increased opportunities to identify situations where tenants are facing non-housing related problems, with more than 1,700 referrals being made to partner agencies for support with health, financial and other challenges.
The areas provisionally earmarked for the new scheme all sit within the Armley, Beeston & Holbeck, Burmantofts & Richmond Hill, Gipton & Harehills and Hunslet & Riverside council wards.
These wards have higher levels of deprivation than the city as a whole and an above-average concentration of private rented housing.
A decision on whether to bring in the new Selective Licensing in East, South and West Leeds scheme is expected in the first half of 2025.
To learn more about the consultation and how to submit feedback, click here. Further information can also be obtained by e-mailing ESWselective.licensing@leeds.gov.uk or ringing 0113 378 2899.
This post is based on a press release issued by Leeds City Council
Photo: Jeremy Morton
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Beeston Hill, already defined as a slum area, has this licensing. Costs passed on by landlord in rent rises and no changes at all to property itself. Its a money spinner for the council. Biggest improvement may be distributing wheelie bin lids as so much rubbish in these areas is wind born re bins without lids. Also a check everyone actually has a bin. Some just sling their waste in the bin alley for others to deal with. In multi occupancy, the council charges same tax per tenant as if you occupied the whole house. So between disproportionate council tax and rent rises due to this pointless scheme, the council are very much part of the problem not the solution. On a positive note at least their highly offensive red light district shut down. Even if that was forced by the pandemic rather than any concern for the insult to the local community. If the area is slum like in places, the Council may look at itself first before the landlords. The council does not have clean hands. Far from it. It is shifting too much onto landlords. The Council can take responsibility for their own exploitation of the area first. Landlords only followed their example.