December 13, 2024

April news headlines

24.04.2012 Peverel and Tchenguiz named in Parliament

Both Peverel and Tchenguiz were named in a wide-ranging debate about leasehold service charges in the House of Lords yesterday. Campaign against retirement leasehold exploitation was also praised for its activities in highlighting exploitaton of residents in retirement developments. Read full report here

23.04.2012 Lords debate on leasehold reform today

Read our full report later this afternoon on the House of Lords debate on leasehold service charges and reform. The debate is being promoted by Baroness Gardner of Parkes following meetings with Leasehold Knowledge Partnership last month.

12.04.12 Moneysavingexpert cheers on leaseholders

Martin Lewis, founder of the brilliant moneysaving expert.com

Martin Lewis, the hugely successful personal finance journalist who set up the moneysavingexpert.com website, has turned his attention to leasehold issues. The result is an excellent guide to buying freeholds and exercising the right to manage, which can be read here.

There is also a section on extending leases. It appears they were uploaded on April 4. The only downside is that Martin refers leaseholders seeking further information about managing agents to ARMA and RICS, where some of the most predatory, big-scale operators lurk like those unpleasant creatures found under stones.

Of course, wise leaseholders will turn to the Leasehold Knowledge Partnership where managing agents have gone through a rigorous vetting process involving a personal interview, checking of references from ordinary leaseholders and have signed up to a 35-point good governance code, ensuring no stealth charges, commissions or squirrelling away of the contingency fund interest for their own benefit.

08.04.12 – Happy Easter to all our readers

Grant Shapps, Housing Minister, does not think the leasehold racket needs cleaning up, in spite of unanimous agreement in the industry – let alone the 1.8 million leaseholders themselves

03.04.12 Minister alone in believing leaseholders do not need further protection

The body representing the most powerful interests in British property fully supports greater regulation of the leasehold sector – leaving Housing Minister Grant Shapps isolated in blocking regulation.

That was the main finding of LKP’s meeting with the British Property Federation’s chief executive Liz Peace and Ian Fletcher, who heads the BPF’s residential division.

The BPF had in fact lobbied in 2010 to stall the introduction of sections 152 and 156 of the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act, which was actually passed in 2002.

These protections to safeguard leaseholders’ money were in fact jettisoned by  Shapps as soon as he took office in May 2010.

The BPF’s objections were that the sections were poorly drafted and the time-scale was unreasonable, but the basic principle – that leaseholders’ money should be better protected than it is now – was not disputed.

There is near unanimity on this – in theory – in the leasehold world, including among the trade bodies such as RICS, ARMA and the ARHM, and the BPF’s clarification will be hugely influential.

The London Assembly last month added its weight to the argument in its hard-hitting report on “opaque” service charges.

The only person who appears to believe there is balance in the system is Grant Shapps himself, who again in a recent letter to Zac Goldsmith MP, reiterated his opposition to improving the position of leaseholders.

Extract from Shapps letter to Zac Goldsmith on March 23 2012 saying why he thinks no regulation of the leasehold jungle is necessary – in order not to add costs to leaseholders!

He believes that greater protection will over-burden landlords and has an ideological aversion to regulation.

But the taxpayer-funded Leasehold Valuation Tribunals, which were supposedly low-cost simple tribunals, would benefit from clearer regulation.

At the moment, they are hugely weighted in favour of landlords, who play the system, repeatedly demand appeals and routinely employ counsel at hearings.

Whereas landlords can spend whatever they wish on legal representation – and, if they win, claim these legal fees out of the service charges – leaseholders can only win back £500 of legal costs.

The LVT battles of Charter Quay, St George’s Wharf and Chelsea Bridge Wharf all involved £20,000 to £30,000 of legal costs on the part of the leaseholders, and far more from the landlords.

The current inadequate LVT system does not represent good value for public money.

Compared with tenants in assured shorthold tenancies – whose deposit money has to be placed in a tenants’ deposit scheme – the position of leaseholders is astonishingly vulnerable.

Between £1 billion and £2 billion is paid by leaseholders in service charges every year – with £500 million in the capital alone, according to the London Assembly – yet there is hardly any protection for these funds at all.

They are simply held and used by the managing agent until such time as he choses to submit his accounts – and they need not arrive until up to 30 months after the money is spent, according to a recent a decision by the Upper Tribunal.

By that time a leaseholder may well have sold up, moved on or died.

For years the professional bodies have done very little to enforce their window-dressing codes of practice. Indeed, some of them have done their best to shelter the worst rogues in the industry.

Even the worst of these organisations now wants better regulation