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Health and Safety and other Legal Requirements
The following requirements are the responsibility of the owner (Landlord). Where
you have signed our Full Management Agency Agreement, they are also our
responsibility. Therefore where we are managing we will need to ensure
compliance.
Gas
Annual safety check: Under the Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations
1998 all gas appliances and flues in rented accommodation must be checked for
safety within 12 months of being installed, and thereafter at least every 12
months by a competent engineer (e.g. a Gas Safe registered gas installer).
Maintenance: There is a duty to ensure that all gas appliances, flues and
associated pipework are maintained in a safe condition at all times. Records:
Full records must be kept for at least 2 years of the inspections of each
appliance and flue, of any defects found and of any remedial action taken.
Copies to tenants: A copy of the safety certificate issued by the engineer must
be given to each new tenant before their tenancy commences, or to each existing
tenant within 28 days of the check being carried out.
Electrical
There are several regulations relating to electrical installations, equipment
and appliance safety, and these affect landlords and their agents in that they
are 'supplying in the course of business'. They include the Electrical Equipment
(Safety) Regulations 1994, the Plugs and Sockets Regulations 1994, the 2005
Building Regulation - 'Part P, and British Standard BS1363 relating to plugs and
sockets. Although with tenanted property there is currently no legal requirement
for an electrical safety certificate (except in the case of all HMOs) it is now
widely accepted in the letting industry that the only safe way to ensure safety,
and to avoid the risk of being accused of neglecting your 'duty of care', or
even of manslaughter is to arrange such an inspection and certificate.
Fire
The Furniture and Furnishings (Fire) (Safety) Regulations 1988 (amended 1989 &
1993) provide that specified items supplied in the course of letting property
must meet minimum fire resistance standards. The regulations apply to all
upholstered furniture, beds, headboards and mattresses, sofa-beds, futons and
other convertibles, nursery furniture, garden furniture suitable for use in a
dwelling, scatter cushions, pillows and non-original covers for furniture. They
do not apply to antique furniture or furniture made before 1950, bedcovers
including duvets, loose covers for mattresses, pillowcases, curtains, carpets or
sleeping bags. Items which comply will have a suitable permanent label attached.
Non-compliant items must be removed before a tenancy commences.
Smoke Alarms
All properties built since June 1992 must have been fitted with mains powered
smoke detector alarms from new. Although there is no legislation requiring smoke
alarms to be fitted in other ordinary tenanted properties, it is generally
considered that the common law 'duty of care' means that Landlords and their
Agents could be liable should a fire cause injury or damage in a tenanted
property where smoke alarms are not fitted. We therefore strongly recommend that
the Landlord fit at least one alarm on each floor (in the hall and landing
areas).
Is your property a House in Multiple Occupation (HMO)?
If your property is on 3 or more levels and let to 5 or more tenants comprising
2 or more households (i.e. not all of the same family) it will be subject to
mandatory licensing by your local authority. Whether mandatory licensing as
above applies or not, if there are 3 or more tenants not all related in any
property, it is still likely to be an HMO, and special Management rules apply.
Ask your Letting Agent or local authority for details. Learn more here:
http://www.propertylicence.gov.uk
The Housing Health and Safety Rating System (HHSRS)
The HHSRS provides an analysis of how hazardous a property is through assessment of 29 potential
hazards found in housing. Landlords have to maintain their properties to provide
a safe and healthy environment. The HHSRS is enforced by local authorities. For
further information visit http://www.communities.gov.uk/hhsrs
The Tenancy Deposit Scheme
From 6 April 2007, all deposits taken by landlords and letting agents under
Assured Shorthold Tenancies (ASTs) in England and Wales must be protected by a
tenancy deposit protection scheme. Landlords and letting agents must not take a
deposit unless it is dealt with under a tenancy deposit scheme. To avoid any
disputes going to court, each scheme will be supported by an alternative dispute
resolution service (ADR). Landlords and letting agents will be able to choose
between two types of scheme; a single custodial scheme and two insurance-based
schemes. Learn more here: http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/TenancyDeposit/index.asp.
Note: If you the landlord decide to hold the deposit yourself, we will transfer
it to you within 5 days of receiving it. You must then register it with a
Tenancy Deposit Protection Scheme within a further 9 days if the tenancy is an
Assured Shorthold Tenancy. If you fail to do so the tenant can take legal action
against you landlord in the County Court. The Court will make an order stating
that you must pay the deposit back to the tenant or lodge it with the custodial
scheme which is known as the Deposit Protection Scheme. In addition a further
order will be made requiring you pay compensation to the tenant of an amount
equal to three times the deposit. You will be unable to serve a Section 21
Notice on your tenant until compliance with the above conditions and the Court
will not grant you a possession order. We have no liability for any loss
suffered if you fail to comply.
The Disability Discrimination Act 2005
The DDA 2005 addresses the limitations of current legislation by extending
disabled people's rights in respect of premises that are let or to be let, and
commonhold premises. Landlords and managers of let premises and premises that
are to let will be required to make reasonable adjustments for disabled people.
Under the new duties, provided certain conditions are met (for example, that a
request has been made), landlords and managers of premises which are to let, or
of premises which have already been let, must make reasonable adjustments, and a
failure to do so will be unlawful unless it can be justified under the Act.
Landlords will only have to make reasonable adjustments. And they will not have
to remove or alter physical features of the premises. Learn more here:
http://www.dwp.gov.uk/aboutus/dda_factsheet4-premises.pdf