Progress report on our Houses of Parliament briefing

There is exactly two weeks to go before the LKP/Carlex briefing at the Houses of Parliament things are moving along at a pace.

  •  All MPs and Lords have now received a formal invitation to attend from Sir Peter Bottomley MP.
  • Our speakers are lined up.
  • Key members of staff from the Ministry of Justice and Department of Communities and Local Government have been invited.

In the mean time please keep writing to your MP to encourage them to attend.

Managing agents owned by landlords must come clean … says leading managing agent

A managing agent owned by the freeholder should be made to disclose this relationship clearly to the leaseholders, one of the country’s leading managing agents has announced.

“They should be obliged to disclose if they have, or any party to whom they are financially connected has, any beneficial interest in the freehold title,” says Rob Plumb (left), chief executive of HML Holdings plc.

“Such a relationship clearly gives rise to doubts about their impartiality.”

Plumb’s comments appear in a letter in response to the London Assembly’s continuing investigation into leasehold service charges. In March it issued a report, Highly Charged, which was critical of “opaque” charges and claimed that leasehold complaints had increased by more than 50 per cent in ten years (more here)

The letter has also been forwarded to the Association of Residential Managing Agents and the Leasehold Knowledge Partnership. HML manages 35,000 residential properties.

[Read more...]

CentreForum think tank ponders leasehold

CentreForum invites LKP to contribute to its leasehold report

 

In three weeks time another important report into leasehold is to be published, this time by the liberal think tank CentreForum.

Earlier this month LKP was invited to its Queen Anne’s Gate to offer its contributions to report, which – we are assured – were gratefully received.

CentreForum had been alerted to LKP following its instigation of the House of Lords debate on the desirability of leasehold regulation, which took place last Monday.

Baroness Gardner of Parkes, who invited LKP’s Melissa Briggs and Sebastian O’Kelly to the Lords last month, was behind the move.

CentreForum’ has been researching the issue of leasehold since the autumn. Given that members of LKP have been behind the most outstandingly successful LVT actions in London, winning hundreds of thousands of pounds for leaseholders, CentreForum has wisely decided to ask us over.

Similarly, LKP-accredited managing agent Alan Coates, of HML Anderton has offered to contribute the benefit of his experiences to the report’s researchers.

They have already discussed the issues with Peverel executives at its offices in New Milton, Hampshire, and will undoubtedly benefit from an alternative view.

So far the report appears to be treading similar ground to the London Assembly’s hard-hitting Highly Charged, which was published last month. It is supporting regulation with licensed managing agents and an ombudsman scheme to provide the low-cost redress that LVTs have failed to offer.

The whole issue of LVTs – how they work, the costs, the barristers cleaning up at them etc – is to be examined further by LKP.

CentreForum’s recommendations are still being finalized and LKP is delighted to have had the opportunity to contribute to the report.

London Assembly’s report ‘Highly Charged’

London Assembly damns property management racket

A London Assembly report into leasehold service charges published today is a devastating attack on the stealth charges that are rife in leasehold and it urges the property industry to clean up its act.

Referring to “opaque” service charges regimes at numerous London developments, the report can also be read as veiled criticism of Housing Minister Grant Shapps, who has rejected measures that would give leaseholders further protection.

The report acknowledges the role of the Leasehold Knowledge Partnership by referring to both the £1 million settlement at St George’s Wharf, where Peverel presided, and the devastating Leasehold Valuation Tribunal ruling at Charter Quay, in Kingston. Both cases are extensively covered on this website, which is quoted.

The LA report estimates that more than 500,000 London leaseholders pay service charges and that these amount to more than half a billion pounds in service charges.

The number of leasehold disputes has increased by more than 50 per cent and with thousands more leasehold properties to be built over the next ten years there is “growing pressure for reform”.

‘Highly charged’ recognises that there is little immediate prospect of further legislative reform, although some feel that this may be necessary in future.

The lack of transparency that pervades the system ranges from leaseholders being unclear on what they’re paying for, to a perception that some charges – particularly for insurance – involve excessive commissions.

The report calls on private landlords and managing agents to make contract procurement and bills more transparent.

It urges the Association of Residential Managing Agents and the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors to set an example of good practice.

During the inquiry ARMA was criticized for shielding bad practice, which is why many London managing agents decline to join the organisation.

Improved consultation – which is beneficial to both leaseholders and landlords – is recommended, with the private sector urged to learn lessons from public sector landlords, which tend to have more comprehensive consultation processes.

Steve O’Connell AM, who led the investigation, said: “Problems have dogged the service charges regime for many years.  In some ways it’s an archaic and opaque system and many leaseholders are tearing their hair out with frustration.

“Some people would like to see leasehold done away with altogether, but failing that we must make sure that the system we have is as fair as possible.

“With disputes on the rise and many more leasehold properties in the pipeline it’s critical that all the agencies involved, from central Government down to the leasehold tribunal, look at ways of improving the transparency and equity of service charges.”

The investigation showed that when disputes arise, leaseholders can feel disadvantaged by taking on landlords who may have unlimited resources or large legal teams.  To address this, the Leasehold Valuation Tribunal is asked to review their processes to rule out any unfairness associated with leaseholders conducting their own cases.

Further, the report calls on the Government to look at making mediation a compulsory first step of the dispute resolution process to help leaseholders avoid potentially costly court cases altogether.

It also appears from our review that buyers rarely consider the obligations to pay service charges when purchasing their property and need access to far better information if problems are to be minimised.  Here conveyancing solicitors have a role in providing leaseholders with more information up front, the way public sector landlords like local authorities have to.

Notes

  1. Over a hundred organisations and individuals provided written views including 30 landlords in the social rented sector 16 leaseholder organisations and nearly 50 individual leaseholders.  In all, over 700 pages of evidence and views were submitted to the review, and the report draws on much of these facts, opinions and examples.  As well as holding meetings with DCLG, the LVT and Camden Leaseholders Forum, a meeting was held in public where a range of landlords, both public and private, managing agents and the Government advisory service LEASE were asked for their views on what leaseholders had told us through the first stage of evidence gathering.
  2. Service charge disputes in London increased by more than 54 per cent between 2005 and 2010 and the London LVT caseload increased relative to the rest of England.  The London region’s caseload is about 4,000 per annum, of which about 1,500 are service charge related.  The remaining cases will concern issues such as enfranchisement and lease extension.
  3. The Committee welcomes the Government’s intention to keep the issue under constant review and to assess whether there is evidence that reform of leasehold legislation is required.  The Committee recommends that the House of Commons Backbench Business Committee recommends a debate on the need for leasehold reform if any of the current e-Petitions reach the required number of signatures.  See Section 8 of the report for more details.
  4. There have been some recent LVT decisions on high profile cases that illustrate the nature of these concerns.  For example: In September 2011 the LVT awarded St George Wharf (Vauxhall) leaseholders £1 million to recover “management charges stretching back over a decade, as well as the company’s practice of employing its own subsidiaries to provide CCTV and insurance services.” In November 2011 the LVT awarded Charter Quay (Kingston) leaseholders £185,000 and criticised the landlord for entering into contracts with related party companies and taking excessive insurance commissions.  The LVT determined that the landlord must repay 75 per cent of 2009 management fee (and 50 per cent for 2008) and that insurance commissions for the landlord be reduced from over 30 per cent to10 percent.

 

Highly-charged-report-EMBARGOED

Boris summons LKP

Boris Johnson has invited LKP to discuss the London Assembly’s hard-hitting report into leasehold service charges, called Highly Charged, that was issued earlier this month.

 

Boris … talk to me

The meeting will take place within the next two weeks.

In a statement to LKP the mayor’s office said: “The Mayor recognises that leasehold service charges are an important issue for both leaseholders and local authorities, with many Londoners concerned over seemingly unfair costs, a lack of transparency in how charges are calculated and the lack of good quality information and advice about the issues.

“In particular there are concerns in London that the nature of the housing stock may make it difficult for leaseholders to exercise their right to manage.

“Like you, the Mayor welcomes the Assembly’s report, and hopes that the report will be given due consideration by all interested parties. The Mayor will be encouraging the authorities and agencies to whom the report recommendations are addressed to do their best to implement the recommendations as far as reasonably practicable.”

Apart from the obvious issue of rip-off stealth charges – which have been the subject of record LVT payouts (including £1 million to the residents at St George’s Wharf, Vauxhall) – cash-strapped leaseholders face being hit for huge bills to make their homes eco-efficient.

The mayor is keen to ensure these bills are limited and that leaseholders can pay the bills with interest free payments over a number of years.

LEASE: Find some backbone, or face the chop!

Anthony Essien (left), of LEASE … the Leasehold Advisory Service, at the London Assembly on January 23rd with large-scale managing agents Matthew Saye, of Home Ownership Services and Randall Bevis, of City West Homes. Martin Green (right), of Southwark Borough Council’s home ownership and tenant management initiatives.

January 24 2012: The weakest performance of all at yesterday’s Greater London Assembly meeting on the miseries facing leaseholders was from Anthony Essien, the chief executive of LEASE, the Leasehold Advisory Service.

Asked by London Assembly members how leaseholders can be defended from rapacious managing agents and landlords jacking up service charges, Essien placed his faith in mediation.

This was far preferable to the courts or the Leasehold Valuation Tribunals, which are too complex and expensive for many leaseholders to contemplate.

But LEASE’s own mediation service was hardly a resounding success, before being wound up in January last year.

“Despite a lot of effort and publicity, demand for this service has not justified the cost and attention the organisation has given it,” said the annual report.

In its last year, there were 78 applications for the service, with 25 sessions held and 20 settlements.

LEASE’s board decided, after careful consideration, that “resources should be concentrated on those services, such as our website, email advice, telephone advice and advice surgeries away from the office, that vulnerable customers clearly value”.

One issue the London Assembly is considering is whether LEASE should not be an advocate for leaseholders’ rights rather than be best friends with all, but that would be a marked change of gear for an organisation that puts most of its efforts into sitting on the fence.

Or, to use its own words, “LEASE is committed to working with leaseholders, professional organisations and others to empower leaseholders to have more control over their property, help our customers resolve their problems and to improve the standard of management in the sector respectively”.

How does that translate in practice when dealing with the likes of Vincent Tchenguiz and Peverel? Why is it so difficult to condemn those who hoover up freeholds, appoint themselves as managing agents, CCTV providers, lavatory attendants and the rest, and jack up the service charges?

These have been the subject of LVT rulings again and again.

For some time the government’s “bonfire of the quangos” has been smoldering away. It looks like LEASE is one piece of dead wood that no one would miss being tossed on the pyre.