Venue: Council Chamber
Contact: Susie Blood
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Minutes: The Mayor and Executive member for Adult Social Care and
Public Health and the Director of Adult social care and
integrated services submitted a report that approval for the proposed Statement of Principles for
the penalty charge structure for offences committed by landlords under the
Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (England) Regulations 2015. This report falls within the Terms of Reference of
this Committee as the policies proposed will impact on all wards within the
Borough and represents a change in the approach to Housing enforcement policy,
which requires a Member decision. The
report outlined that the Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm (England) Regulations 2015 introduced
an obligation for all landlords to provide a smoke alarm, at the start of the
tenancy, on each storey of their tenanted accommodation, where there is a room
used as living accommodation. There was
also a requirement for a carbon monoxide alarm to be fitted in any room used as
living accommodation which contains a solid fuel burning combustion appliance.
Landlords must ensure the alarms are in proper working order at the start of
any new tenancy. When Local Authority officers carry out inspections
of privately rented residential accommodation they check that a smoke and
carbon monoxide alarm is provided, in accordance with the Regulations. Where a
landlord fails to comply with the Regulations the local authority must serve a
remedial notice on the landlord. This notice gives the landlord a period of 28
days in which to comply. The landlord
can make representation to the council during this time. After 28 days if the landlord has not complied with
the remedial notice, and not made representations, the local authority must
arrange for the remedial works to be carried out, with the consent of the
occupier. The Regulations provide Local Authorities with a
power to charge up to £5000 for offences when a landlord has failed to comply
with a remedial notice. The level of
penalty charge shall be determined having regard to the cost of the works in
default, officer time, recovery costs, an administration fee and a fine. It is considered that repeated offences
should attract a progressively higher penalty. The Regulations require local housing authorities
to publish a Statement of Principles which it proposes to follow in determining
the amount of penalty charge. (Appendix 1)
The report further outlined that the proposed
penalty charge was in line with those adopted by neighbouring local authorities. It was proposed that the penalty charge shall
be set at £1000 for the first offence, to be reduced to £750 if paid within a
14 day period. Should the landlord not comply with further remedial notices
then the fine shall be set according to the table below
The landlord can request, in writing within 28 days of issue, that the local authority reviews the penalty charge. The local authority must consider this and decide whether to confirm or vary the ... view the full minutes text for item 21/1 |
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The decision will come into force after five working days following the day the decision was published unless the decision becomes subject to the call in procedures |