Issue - meetings

H.M.O. Update

Meeting: 17/06/2025 - Overview & Scrutiny Committee (Item 13)

13 H.M.O. Update pdf icon PDF 174 KB

(A briefing note by Jonathan Challen – Safer Communities Service Manager)

Minutes:

The Committee received a comprehensive update from the Safer Communities Service Manager and the Housing Standards Team Leader regarding the Council’s approach to regulating Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs), including current enforcement practices and anticipated legislative changes under the forthcoming Renters’ Rights Bill.

 

Members were provided with an overview of the Housing Health and Safety Rating System (HHSRS), which underpinned the Council’s enforcement powers. Officers explained the distinction between Category 1 hazards, which required mandatory intervention, and Category 2 hazards, which allowed for discretionary enforcement. The range of available enforcement tools included hazard awareness notices, improvement notices, prohibition orders, and emergency prohibition orders and emergency remedial action.

 

It was noted that HMOs present heightened risks due to shared living arrangements and the potential for overcrowding, fire hazards, and poor property conditions. Officers outlined the criteria for mandatory licensing, which applied to properties occupied by five or more individuals forming two or more households. The Council also monitored non-licensable HMOs to ensure compliance with minimum standards and management regulations.

 

The Committee was informed of the challenges in identifying unlicensed HMOs and the limitations of current legislation. Officers explained the potential benefits of additional and selective licensing schemes, which had been adopted in other local authorities to address concentrations of poor-quality housing and anti-social behaviour. However, it was acknowledged that such schemes required a robust evidence base and significant financial investment to implement.

 

The forthcoming Renters’ Rights Bill was highlighted as a major reform, introducing a national landlord database, enhanced investigatory powers, increased civil penalties, and extended rent repayment orders. The Bill also proposed new offences, including unlawful eviction, and aimed to improve tenant protections across the private rented sector. Officers advised that statutory guidance was expected later in the year, with implementation anticipated in 2026.

 

Members discussed the report and commented as follows:

 

·         It was noted that the number and concentration of HMOs in certain areas of the borough had increased significantly, leading to concerns about overdevelopment, loss of community cohesion, and pressure on local infrastructure such as parking.

·         Members suggested that the Council should explore the introduction of planning controls, such as Article 4 Directions, to manage the proliferation of HMOs and ensure that new developments were appropriately located and balanced within the wider community.

·         The importance of maintaining the external appearance of HMO properties was highlighted. It was observed that poor maintenance and visual dilapidation negatively affected the character of neighbourhoods. While internal conditions were regulated, it was acknowledged that external standards were unable to be enforced when primarily revolving around the appearance/aesthetics of a dwelling.

·         Concerns were expressed about the role of letting agents, particularly where they acted as intermediaries between landlords and tenants. It was felt that agents should be held accountable for property standards where they had management responsibilities, and that enforcement should reflect this.

·         The issue of overcrowding was raised, particularly in cases where extended families or multiple households occupied a single property. Members questioned how such situations were assessed and what enforcement options were  ...  view the full minutes text for item 13