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Bid for tenants' reviews of landlords to be used for enforcement

A review platform which describes itself as a TripAdvisor for tenants is using a left-leaning blog to seek business from councils.

Marks Out of Tenancy allows private tenants to leave reviews of their landlords and properties. 

Writing in the Red Brick blog - which focusses on what it calls progressive housing policy and is linked to the Labour Housing Group - Ben Yarrow, the man behind Marks Out of Tenancy, describes renters in the UK as “paying steep sums for terrible conditions and insecurity, while the government drags its feet over promised reforms.”

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He says that without properly funded enforcement and with reforms moving slowly through Parliament, state-sponsored regulation of the private rental sector appears ineffective right now. But he says his platform could help with enforcement if its reviews were used by local councils and other official bodies.

Yarrow tells Red Brick readers: “Imagine a scenario where a local authority had imposed restrictions on properties that can be used as Airbnb rentals – and the Airbnb platform reported back to a local authority when a property was being let without a licence. 

“Or imagine a scenario where Checkatrade or Trustatrader reported non-compliant plumbers who were operating without Gas Safe certification. 

“These scenarios are unlikely to occur – these companies would be hurting their own business by reporting their own customers, however Marks Out Of Tenancy differs significantly in that we have no vested financial interest in the rental transaction.”

And he goes on to say: “While a well-publicised bad landlord may struggle to find a new tenant, all the bad reviews in the world will not force them to make the necessary repairs if they are not minded to. This is where it becomes essential to work closely with existing regulatory and enforcement bodies at the Local Authority level.”

He claims that if a council worked with his platform he would provide “legally compliant, timely and accurate data from tenant reviews” which would allow licensing and enforcement teams to find out which properties were being rented out, the identity of the landlord, whether the property required a license, and whether it complied with the Minimum Level of Energy Efficiency standards.

“Through the Marks Out Of Tenancy portal, housing officers are also able to open communications with the tenant who left the review” says Yarrow.

Although he suggests councils could use his website to leave messages for the landlord, his blog makes no mention of whether his platform makes any attempt to get the landlord’s view of events before such a review is public; nor does it explain how landlords’ views could be sought if they chose not to use his private service.

Yarrow concludes: “We want Marks Out Of Tenancy to help bring about a shift in the fundamental relationship between tenants and landlords. 

“But it requires stakeholders like Local Authorities and existing regulatory bodies to allow us in – this platform can be a valuable resource when combined with agencies with enforcement powers against bad landlords.

“Marks Out Of Tenancy invites housing professionals at Local Authority level to begin looking outside of the purely enforcement and regulatory systems currently at play, recognise that trade associations or professional landlord bodies do not aid with actively rooting out the poorest quality providers, but rather, that tenants on the frontline can provide an invaluable insight into the service provided by landlords and the products they’re obligated to maintain.”

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    Just like Tripadvisor. Great. Full of lies and fakes. The bad Landlords will post themselves as angels and the tenant you wouldn’t agree to half rent and them keeping cattle will have a free for all with your reputation.

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    In a proper functioning democracy we would also be able to have our say. We are restricted.
    However letting every agent landlord in your immediate radius know how a bad tenant behaves is the best deterrent

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    Are we really restricted though? I've been thinking for a while now that all Landlord's should include a clause in the agreement whereby the tenant gives the right for the landlord to upload to a database, payment history and deposit deductions, ie nothing subjective. I don't see why that wouldn't be allowable. I think that could be very powerful.

     
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    Anything like that would help Chris. Probably be campaigned against by Shelter for giving a good tenant an advantage over a bad tenant. I make it clear before the tenancy starts that we make all checks and bad tenancy behaviour will have consequences if they wish to rent again

     
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    Is he also going to start 'Marks Out of Tenant'?

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    Exactly, that was my thought. Like Airbnb the guest can rate the holiday let, the holiday let owner can rate the guest.

    If this gets off the ground, as a Software developer myself I will start a review your tenant app so we can all benefit from the information sharing. Our assets our decisions, sick of this constant attack on us from all sides.

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    Looks like its been going a while already

     
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    😂😂 this nonsense is just getting funnier by the article.

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    Peter exactly an Airbnb locally which had a lot to be desired.
    Some dubious characters staying there each giving one & others great reviews. Had a side extension done connected toilet to storm water. Advertised airbnb with parking but only one parking space occupied by her own Car.
    Ask me brother am I a Rogue.
    The Article is just more parasites joining the anti-landlords piggy back groups for easy living off us.

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    Depends how honest the reviews are

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    Honest 😂!
    Although I say it myself I am a good Landlord and I am sure my Tenants would agree. However I recently had a Scum bag move out, the House was filthy and damaged, but the DPS sided with the Tenant. How fair and honest is that?.

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    Another parasite

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    Robert Shread, DPS is only there to protect bad Tenants as is the Removal of Section 21 simple.

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    They are surely having a laugh. My local landlords association used to have a black list of bad tenants but they stopped due to "data protection" apparently there was a risk tenants could sue. Surely this must apply to landlords as well. In any case there is such a massive shortage of rental properties that tenants are surely taking properties in the full knowledge that the landlords may not be great and faults may not get fixed very quickly (as per social housing)

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    As well as Data Protection, to have a decent database would need landlords and agents to populate the information which, with a lot of properties and tenant changes, might put off landlords/agents? And, as a database doesn't benefit the person adding the review, only the person wanting to read it, there's maybe even less incentive to review outgoing tenants.

    How popular was the landlord association's blacklist and was it reliable?

     
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    Just had a look at this site and under the acceptable use policy it states:
    "It is important that any review or comment you make about any agency, landord's or tenant's behaviour is accurate, proportionate and justified. Submitting a false or misleading review risks exposing you to legal action for defamation and may be a criminal offence under the Data Protection Act 1998."
    Would be interesting to know whether any legal cases have yet followed.

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    If the only house available is from a LL with a bad review how much notice will a renter take? ATM it is a LLs market & you can probably rent out anything, even the meanest hovel, in most of the UK.

  • PossessionFriendUK PossessionFriend

    Very recent research of Tenants by Chamberlain Walker ' A Housing Market That Works for All ' reveal that 79 % of tenants are satisfied to varying degrees with their PRS rent !

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    9 MONTHS to ONE YEAR for a Possession Process
    (appears all tenants are given 5 months more, to appeal, if they ask)
    COURT SAYS IT AIMS TO OPEN AN EMAIL
    OR LETTER WITHIN 80 DAYS
    (delay increasing)
    GET OUT : BEFORE THEY REALLY START TO HURT LANDLORDS
    DON'T MOAN LATER... 'THE WRITING WASN'T ON THE WALL'

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