The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has temporarily paused third-party deductions from Universal Credit until 10 May.
DWP is currently in the process of explaining the changes to claimants via their online journal and to third parties, including housing providers who collect arrears by this method.
The third-party payments that have been suspended include:
A DWP spokesperson confirmed to Propertymark that direct payments for rent will continue and are not affected by this temporary pause.
https://www.arla.co.uk/news/may-2020/dwp-suspends-third-party-uc-payments/
Thursday 7th May 2020 7:00 PM
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Visit the Goodlord website for further information; https://blog.goodlord.co/qa-david-cox-answers-questions-on-legislation-and-the-impact-of-coronavirus-on-the-lettings-industry
All information on this post is from the Webinar hosted by Goodlord, 29 April 2020. Advice may change as the Government make daily updates.
The government has made it very clear that estate agents and letting agents are not essential workers. A house move is not an essential move except in exceptional circumstances. Where people need to move, that is acceptable. Where people want to move, they’ve just got to put it on hold. That’s where the “hit pause” message comes from.
There are times where people need to move. The government has outlined in the guidance quite a few specific examples and it is effectively, where there was a risk to life or limb. I would use that as your benchmark. If there was a risk to the life or limb of the inhabitant of that property, then they need to move. If they don’t or if there isn’t, they don’t need to move right now. To give you a few examples – the roof caved in or the boiler has stopped working and you’re not going to be able to get the boiler fixed. Effectively, if the property’s unfit for human habitation. Another one is domestic violence – if there is a situation of domestic violence , then of course that is a need to move.
The final one is the essential workers. Essential workers are permitted to move for many reasons. One, is to be closer to work. The other is, particularly for NHS staff that are going into hospitals and exposing themselves to the virus every day, they may have family at home who need to shield. Therefore, key workers self-isolating from their family to protect them from the virus is also a perfectly acceptable reason to move.
That wouldn’t be classed as an essential move. I would suggest putting it on hold for the time being. Plus, even if they were going to a new job across the country, they wouldn’t necessarily be going into an office at the moment. Therefore, they would be home working in any event.
I think you’ve then got to look at the properties. If it involves somebody moving out that’s not an essential worker, then again, that’s when you should pause. If there are empty properties, and we are aware there are many empty properties around the country, it may be possible – whilst complying with the social distancing guidelines from the government – for somebody to rent an empty property.
Right to Rent checks have been relaxed during the lockdown. I would highlight very much, during the lockdown. Whilst we are in a period of lockdown, you can do them virtually. By seeing the person on a video whilst having a copy of their scanned documents. You still need all the documents, but they can be scanned and emailed to you rather than seeing them in person.
As long as you’ve got the scanned documents, you’ve then done a video call to see that the person that is on the video is the same person as in the document, you put a note on their file, you’re good for the duration of the lockdown. The relaxation is very specific that it only applies during the lockdown. Once you come out of lockdown, you then have to go and do the physical check. If you don’t do the physical check in a reasonable period of time, even if you’ve done it all right at this moment in time, you will still be liable to the penalty.
I would suggest keeping a log of all the ones that you’ve done virtually. Then when we come out of lockdown, get that log out and go and do the physical checks.
No – check out is not an essential activity. Therefore, stay at home. On this one, the government’s advice is clear.
Where I can see the possibility of doing a check out is where somebody has abandoned the property. They have moved out and you’ve now got an empty property that you want to try and re-let and you go and do the video to do virtual viewings. If you’re going in to do the video viewing, I don’t see why you couldn’t do the check out at the same time. But making a special effort to go and do a check out is, I would say, very much a breach of government guidelines at the moment.
The advice from the Tenancy Deposit Scheme seems to be – and I’m in complete agreement with it – if you as a tenant have moved out against government guidelines and has broken the law, because it is a breach of the Coronavirus Act to be doing that, you cannot then turn around to your landlord or your agent and say, “Well, I’ve broken the law. Therefore, I now want you to go and break the law and do my check out.”
It’s not technically essential, but if it’s one person going to a property that’s been empty for at least 72 hours and checking that the property is secure as well, I think that should be okay. I can’t guarantee it. It is technically a breach of the Act because it’s not essential. If you’re going to put an essential worker in the property, maybe you could argue that it is essential. It’s one of those legal grey areas. I know how much pent up frustration there is in the market to move. You’ve got properties sitting empty, you want to get them at least so that they can be viewed virtually online. I could probably see an argument where that would be at least arguably acceptable even if not strictly in accordance with the government guidelines.
What we are hearing that the market is doing, and I think it seems quite sensible is redoing that affordability criteria – you will have gone through the vetting and the referencing, you’ll have a lot of the information… Just redo it. You saw what their affordability was when they first moved in. You’ll now see based on what they’re now earning under COVID-19. at which point you can then make evidence-based decisions rather than saying, “Okay. Furlough scheme drops to 80%, therefore we’re only going to charge 80%.” Do a slightly more scientific calculation as you would have done when they first moved into the property.
There really is nothing you can do. The ban on evictions is a ban on evictions. No matter what was being said at the time that it’s only technical. It’s not. It was the legislative mechanism that the government used to ban evictions and it’s worked.
There’s a difference between the “can’t pays” and the “won’t pays.” The “can’t pays” certainly, something that we’ve been working on is our keep the rent flowing campaign. If there are people who are falling through the safety net, let us know. We have been taking those to the government.
You then have the “won’t pays.” The “won’t pay,” I think, do bear in mind, they’re probably still paying their mobile phone contract, their broadband, their Skype. They just don’t want to pay the rent. It’s not that they can’t pay, it’s that they don’t want to pay. What I would suggest is to remind them that you will pursue them through the courts, they will be building up a massive rent arrears debt. A county court judgement will make it more difficult for them to get credit cards, mobile phone contracts, any other sort of credit agreements, loans, car finance, and ultimately mortgage finance down the line.
We are very much in tune with government policy on this one and the government is very clear – the first line of their guidance to landlords and tenants is, “Pay the rent.” It’s not beneficial for a tenant to be building up loads of rent arrears.
If you’ve got a guarantor agreement, that is what they’re there for, if the tenant falls into arrears. What to do with somebody that is already in arrears, I’m afraid I don’t know. The only thing I could suggest is the Money Advice Service to get some sort of debt counselling for the tenant.
What the Coronavirus Act says is that all notices are extended at this moment to three months, whether the original notice would have been for 14 days, two months, whatever. When the notice is expired, you begin the possession proceedings as normal through the courts. Now, a couple of points on this one. Number one is that the ministers could extend that three month notice. So, to answer the question… Possibly.
Simultaneously, all proceedings are suspended. From the 27th of March, there was a 90 day moratorium, which takes us to the 24th of June. I would suggest that when your notice expires, if you still do want to get the tenant out, you begin the court proceedings like you normally would for any other court process. You will lodge the case but what will happen is that it will immediately be suspended at that moment in time pending the Master of the Rolls withdrawing the practice direction that has suspended all court cases. What I would suggest is at the moment, “Do it as normal. It just means it’s going to hit an absolute brick wall the moment you proceed at the court.”
As I understand it, if you leave it, the standard four month notice period expires, so you only have four months from the expiry of the notice to bring the proceedings. Otherwise, you have to start the whole process again.
If you’re using cloud-based systems, it might look and feel like it’s running on your computer, actually, you’re using an internet site through your browser, then the data hasn’t actually landed on your computer. The data’s as secure as the cloud-based system is. You can use any machine, frankly, as long as it hasn’t been hacked or compromised, as long as it isn’t being viewed by cameras. Things like that that could be used to steal data.
The honest answer is, nothing apart from training. If they do any work, they’re not on full furlough. They can do training. If you’re doing your qualification at the moment in advance of RoPA, that’s perfectly acceptable. Online courses, they’re still perfectly acceptable. You can do training, you can’t do any actual work. Doing any work at all for the company will breach the furlough.
I think it would be perfectly acceptable to say with furloughing that you’re still being paid 80% of your wages, therefore, we expect you to do your training. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with expecting your staff to do their qualifications whilst they’re on furlough.
The government has made it very clear, legal responsibilities are legal responsibilities. You should continue doing them where you can. That includes the electrical safety regulations from 1 July. The electrical safety regulations say that, “From tenancy start date or tenancy renewal date, all new tenancies from the first of July need an Electrical Installation Condition Report.” It’s a little bit more detailed than that, but you do need to do it. The government guidance is clear. Whether it’s electrical, gas, fire safety, testing smoke alarms on the first day of tenancy, MEES and EPCs, you still need to do those under lockdown.
Yes. It’s about tenancy start dates. So, it doesn’t matter when you’ve signed the tenancy, if the tenancy renewal date is the first of July, you need to comply with the EICR.
Where an agent or landlord has done everything that they can, they have an excuse against penalty. I saw some research from Generation Rent a couple of weeks ago that suggested over 60% of tenants are refusing entry to contractors, landlords, agents at the moment. I think it’s also totally understandable. Would you want a stranger in your home at this moment in time? For most people, I would say the answer’s probably going to be, “No,” unless you’ve invited them in. Therefore, what the government has put in the guidance very clearly is, you need to do your legal obligations but if the tenant says, ‘No,’ then that is your excuse. Make sure you’ve got it documented as a file note on your system. When you come out the other end and we are in a post lockdown world, you’ve got a log of all the properties that need to be checked and get those done as a matter of priority.
What I would also say is, where you are sending people in, make sure that you are minimising virus transmission. Check with both parties that they’re not experiencing symptoms. Then, when they get there, try and make sure that the tenants are in a different room from the contractor to minimise interaction and possible viral transmission and maintain the government’s social distancing guidelines.
It’s still valid. It’s just suspended under Practice Direction 27 from the Master of the Rolls. If it was served and expired, and court proceedings had already started when we hit lockdown under suspension on the 27th of March, it’s just suspended. If you’d served it but it hadn’t expired, it’s still within the two months. So, you don’t need to put that extra month on; but once it’s expired, under the Deregulation Act, you only have four months to start proceedings. What I would suggest if you do still want to go forward with the eviction, begin the proceedings now. Even though once you’ve lodged the case at court, the court will just go, “We’re suspending until at least the 24th of June.” If you don’t lodge the case, you’re going to run out of time under the Deregulation Act and have to start the whole process again.
At this moment in time, the government is really not thinking about anything other than coronavirus and the implications of coronavirus. The abolition of Section 21 and the Renters’ Reform Bill is a key piece of legislation that is a top priority for the government. However, the only priority for the government at the moment is tackling the coronavirus pandemic. The Regulation of Property Agents is pretty much put on hold at the moment. I’m sure it probably is still ticking along quietly in the background but it’s not at the forefront of the minds of the senior civil servants that will be pushing things forward.
In that situation, then you have to serve Section 21 at the moment, but you’re not going to be able to get the tenant out. Therefore, you have a situation of having to pursue the tenants through the courts if they refuse to leave; but you’re not actually going to be able to do that for several months. Once again, either the tenant will have to stay in the property and continue paying rent, or they’ll start building up rent arrears and we go back to our earlier questions about how to tackle tenants that won’t pay their rent.
One of the reasons that this is taking longer than the government probably wanted was because this is a cross departmental initiative. Housing law is governed by MHCLG, Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, this is about changing court processes and court procedures. The government has been very clear that they are not planning on abolishing Section 21 until they have improved Section 8. That requires the Ministry of Justice to be heavily involved and Her Majesty’s Courts & Tribunal Service. It is not something that MHCLG has the authority to just do on its own. It needs to work with other government departments.
I think the pandemic has had an impact for the time scales – we are probably about a year behind schedule at this point in time. We are still expecting that the recommendations will be taken forward pretty much as is. What I’m expecting is it will be a Level 3 for employees, it will probably be a Level 4 for employers. We’ve seen quite an uptake in people taking the qualifications to get ahead of RoPA. We know that it’s going to have to be an Ofqual regulated qualification. There aren’t that many Ofqual regulated qualifications in the market, but now is a great time to actually do the study.
I think the impact of coronavirus on the way agents have been running their businesses under lockdown and some of the learnings that they are making is going to change the market quite significantly. On top of that, the government is sooner or later going to go back to its normal course of business – the regulation of property agents, abolition of Section 21.
Once we come out of those, I think they’re going to be looking at regulation of landlords. The plan has always been to start with the property agents, then go on to the landlords. That deals with one side of the private rented sector, which is the management standards. The second side of that is the property standards. I do think we are going to go into a much tougher regime on property standards.
Start planning for when it’s going to be lifted. Look at your workloads at the moment. Are you expecting a lot of tenancies to move shortly after lockdown? If you are, you’re going to need the staff to be able to do it. It’s a logistical exercise more than anything. How are you going to manage the gas checks, the electrical checks, the testing of smoke alarms? How are you going to get all those done in a very short space of time? How are you going to get the inventories, the check ins, the checkouts, inventories and everything sorted? What about if you’ve got to do work and cleaning?
I would suggest that you take this time to plan a very detailed first seven days back. Once, as the business owner, you have planned what you’ve got to do you then know all the tasks that need to be done. Then you’ve got to work out the human resources required to undertake those tasks. Remember that when you furlough somebody, they’ve got to be furloughed for a minimum of three weeks.
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