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Everyone should have a home

Everyone should have a home. Where are we and what could the future hold? Rosemary Brotchie. The landlord caricature Ideally, the worst type of slum landlord is a fat wicked man, preferably a bishop, who is drawing an immense income from extortionate rent…. .

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Everyone should have a home

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  1. Everyone should have a home Where are we and what could the future hold?Rosemary Brotchie

  2. The landlord caricature Ideally, the worst type of slum landlord is a fat wicked man, preferably a bishop, who is drawing an immense income from extortionate rent…. .

  3. ….Actually, it is a poor old woman who has invested her life’s savings in three slum houses, inhabits one of them, and tries to live on the rent of the other two – never, in consequence, having any money for repairs. .

  4. About Shelter • Private renting and Homelessness. • Where are we now? • Where do we go from here? .

  5. Shelter Most of our work is in direct services: housing aid, legal representation, support to families and web-based help. We also have a policy and campaigning team and a growing training function Our services deal with prevention of homelessness, with sustaining tenancies and tackling anti-social behaviour. .

  6. What is private renting for? • An alternative to owner occupation • A vital part of economic and geographical mobility • A last resort for those with no other option? • Homes for homeless people? .

  7. Homelessness and Private Renting • Prevention of homelessness • Temporary accommodation • Interim accommodation • Permanent accommodation? .

  8. How do we ensure higher standards? Market incentives or Regulatory intervention? .

  9. Policy direction so far… • Repair and the Private Rented Housing Panel • Evictions • Consumer information • Accreditation and landlord registration • Housing benefit .

  10. What is still to do: • Enact deposit protection • Tenancy regime change .

  11. Summing up • The PRS has a vital role in both preventing and responding to homelessness. • Recent developments in PRS – both market and public-policy – can be seen as ways of enhancing that role. • Strengthening the hand of consumers – tenants – is integral to building on the reversal of fortunes in PRS. .

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