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Trade group wants new government to improve slow court process

The Residential Landlords’ Association is demanding that the new government improves the “slow, complex, and underfunded” system which means that it takes an average of 43 weeks for landlords to repossess properties after tenants stop paying rent.

 

The association says that it is unacceptable but not entirely surprising that faced with such a long wait some landlords seek to take the law into their own hands and force tenants out.

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The RLA has made an improved court system one of its key demands of political parties in the build up to the June 8 General Election. 

 

It says tenants, too, find the court system equally slow and hard to navigate. When faced with landlords who are not fulfilling their repairing obligations it is difficult for tenants to establish what their rights are, to obtain expert evidence to prove the disrepair, and to actually get the money that they are owed, or get an order to make a landlord put their property in repair.

 

As a result tenants are driven to under-funded and over-pressed local authorities who, the RLA claims, only respond to around half the complaints about property standards made to them.

 

The RLA says it wants a new, properly funded, housing specialist court modeled on the existing Residential Property Tribunal.

 

This would have its own experts within the tribunal, removing the need for parties to hire external experts. It would also, again like the current tribunal, visit properties itself in order to assess their condition, minimising the need for witness statements and arguments over the state of a property.

 

This specialist court could deal with cases on paper where appropriate and also direct parties to mediation to settle their disputes quickly where possible. It would be able to use its specialist knowledge of property and of the law to decide matters without the need for expensive lawyers and long arguments.

This would reduce costs for landlords and tenants, provide better access to justice, and reduce the cost of the process for the parties and for the government, the association claims.

“We know this model works. Scotland has been using a similar specialist tribunal successfully for some time for housing disrepair matters and has now expanded it to cover possession matters as well. Ireland also has a successful specialist housing disrepair tribunal” says a statement on the association’s website.

“We have invested a great deal into the existing Residential Property Tribunal structure but continually limit its operations to matters involving HMO licensing.

The RLA is calling for that tribunal to be able to do much more and to use its substantial expertise to benefit the PRS across a wider range of issues.”

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