The House of Lords Industry and Regulators Committee has written to Michael Gove – urging the government to stop ‘sitting on its hands’ when it comes to regulating estate and lettings agents.
It’s been four years since there was a commitment to establishing a regulator, after the government set up a working group on the subject.
Baroness Taylor, chair of the Industry and Regulators Committee said: “During our inquiry, there was near unanimous evidence from consumers, industry and existing bodies on the need for statutory regulation of property agents and the establishment of a new regulator.
“The government has been sitting on its hands for four years, by not acting on the report of the Working Group it set up. In the meantime, the impact on poor regulation is being felt by tenants and leaseholders, and the sector has been left in limbo.
“I have also expressed to the Secretary of State that we would have appreciated a minister from his department providing oral evidence to the inquiry.”
After hearing evidence from campaigners for leaseholders and tenants, professional bodies representing property agents, The Property Ombudsman, the Leasehold Advisory Service and National Trading Standards, the committee has found that:
- a new regulator would make a significant difference by driving up standards in the sector and proactively enforcing against agents who engage in bad practice;
- current forms of enforcement and redress are reactive and limited in scope;
- the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Bill does not sufficiently address the issues that leaseholders face, and needs to be supported by greater regulation.
As a result, the committee called for:
- Legislation to establish a new regulator, or, at the very least, a full published response from the government to the report of the Working Group that recommended establishing one;
- mandatory qualifications for property agents including dealing ethically with consumers;
- industry codes of practice operated by the new regulator, focused on achieving good outcomes for consumers;
- a Memorandum of Understanding to be agreed between the new regulator,
National Trading Standards and the redress schemes to ensure cooperation and avoid duplication; - the government to legislate for statutory consumer representation in the sector to ensure their views are loud and clear;
- the government to approve a single ombudsman for property agents, rather than two competing schemes as currently;
- the new regulator, after initial government support, to fund its activities through fees, charges or a levy on those it regulates.