PRSupdate Spring/Summer 2013

Page 16

Joe Chambers Chief Executive Soho Housing Association

Housing Associations are ready for the challenge of the Private Rented Sector What is the difference between a tenant in the Private Rented Sector (PRS) and a tenant in the “affordable” sector? In the vast majority of cases only money. In many Housing Associations up to 60% of residents have less than the full housing benefit, which indicates that they have worked or do work, and does not mean that they are unwilling to find work now. I am not joining the throng who are demeaning affordable housing tenants by making ill-conceived, uninformed comments about those who find it hard to afford to live in an increasingly expensive housing market.

As we researched the service levels required we began to realise that the private tenants would expect less from their landlord than our affordable tenants. This made me think.

are all reprehensible crimes, the police and the justice system is there to prosecute the perpetrators, however if you are poor you can expect to also have your home taken away.

The affordable housing sector, encouraged by government and the regulator, over the last 20 years has created a paternalistic environment for affordable housing tenants. Affordable Housing Providers have been made to strive to provide a better and better service for, what is essentially, a budget product. More than that, Housing Associations are encouraged to resolve resident issues.

This approach of treating people who live in affordable housing differently leads us to a greater malaise. If you treat people like children they will behave like children. Affordable Housing Providers - even the language “Providers” gives you a clue - have been encouraging tenants to use their landlords to address all their ills.

...treat people like children they will behave like children What I am saying is, if the only difference between “them” and “us” is the size of the bank balance then why do we treat them so differently? These thoughts came to me as Soho Housing was establishing the service levels for our new PRS stock in the West End of London, where private sector rents are about £450 - £750 per week, compared with £120 per week for our affordable tenants. 16

Housing Associations are encouraged to tackle anti-social behaviour, interfere in neighbour disputes, involve residents in how the company is run, paint the faces of tenants’ children at “fun-days” and generally patronise people who live in their properties. Not to mention the injustice that affordable tenants face, through the double jeopardy, when they break the law. For drug use, violence and harassment, which

This has reached the point where I have received complaints from residents because their neighbours will not say good morning to them or a phone call from a tenant telling me that their neighbour is looking at them in a funny way. There is an expectation that I, as the landlord, should address these issues in some way. There is no reason why affordable tenants cannot engage with the statutory services the same as any other member of the public. If they experience noise nuisance they should approach environmental health and if they

experience harassment then they should approach the police. These issues are outside of a landlord’s remit and serve to differentiate affordable housing tenants from the rest of us. This is not healthy for them and can lead to others thinking less of affordable tenants due to the impression that they cannot manage. In terms of customer service, this relationship dynamic leads even the very best of those who work in the affordable housing sector to patronise those who live in their properties. The affordable tenants feel like the supplicant and obtain an unrealistic expectation of what can, and should be, delivered, which could lead to resentment and disappointment. Housing Associations are well placed to provide really top class landlord services. In many cases the office and team is local to the residents they look after and even with larger Associations they usually have sophisticated delivery systems that would knock the spots off of most private sector service industries, e.g. banks.


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