There are four Golden Lane Estate related facebook accounts and you can follow them here: goldenlaneEC1
21 discussions
170 discussions
608 discussions
126 discussions
1411 discussions
127 discussions
16 discussions
21 discussions
235 discussions
Apparently the City have decided to visit all tenants and leaseholders on the Estate in person to meet them and inspect the interior of the flats.
http://democracy.cityoflondon.gov.uk/documents/s99586/Reports%20for...
The City state that the key objectives of these visits are to:
• improve resident safety and comfort by providing advice or referral to other agencies on:
o home and fire safety, including evacuation advice and an assessment of any risks;
o repairs and maintenance;
o domestic energy advice and housing benefits;o issues such as hoarding and safeguarding;
• improve the quality of tenancy data on the housing management information system to a minimum baseline standard;
• improve future communication and engagement with residents by updating electronic contact details and preferred methods of communication
• help ensure proper and efficient use of housing assets by identifying instances of:
o tenancy fraud, misuse, disrepair or unauthorised alteration of properties;
o under-utilisation (including illegal sub-letting, non-occupation, under- occupation;
o overcrowding.
The first of these aims sound reasonable, but the last section, on tenancy fraud, unauthorised alteration etc sounds quite intrusive and would appear to be an unusual step to take without reasonable grounds. We are not aware of other landlords behaving in this way.
What are people's opinions on this? Is is sensible management or is it overly intrusive? Is it something that GLERA should be taking up?
Tags:
I don't see any problems with this I had a tenancy visit around 2012 by (name omitted) and everything was fine. It's good that the CoL are checking properties to ensure that only the legal tenants are living there!
I agree Christo. The COL have every right to check properties to make sure only the legal tenants are living there and I support that. However, why would they need a camera and tape measure to check on illegal tenants?
Christo said:
I have mixed feelings. Parts of it seem very useful and potentially helpful others seem a tad draconian and intrusive, particularly when you have had a visit a year or two ago. Showing two forms of ID seems a bit over the top when you have lived here for a decade or more
I don't think it is intrusive at all, why shouldn't they check if everything is in order an no one is sub letting? If I owned a property I rented out I would want to check on it every so often. I actually found the last visit quite useful as I was able to ask questions I had on a one 2 one level rather than trying to discuss them in the estate office.
What is an issue is that it is costing £138,000 which presumably all residents will be paying for.
Good point raised Tracy!
If the City want to do this then why should the residents pay? I am not paying for someone to come in here spying on me. Let them chase after illegal sub letters and not genuine residents.
Tim Godsmark said:
What is an issue is that it is costing £138,000 which presumably all residents will be paying for.
© 2024 Created by GLE Website Comms Team. Powered by