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Domestic abuse survivors ‘failed’ by landlords - claim

A new report claims that many social landlords have inadequate policies to support survivors of domestic abuse.

The report, published this week by Scottish Women’s Aid and the Chartered Institute of Housing, found that social housing landlords north of the border are “overwhelmingly failing to support those experiencing domestic abuse, prevent victim-survivor homelessness or hold perpetrators to account.”

The report claims that many social landlords placed considerable emphasis on victims reporting their experiences – an attitude which puts women and children at risk as the time of reporting or immediately after reporting is described as being “incredibly dangerous.”

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Policies also failed to use the Scottish Government definition of domestic abuse and did not recognise domestic abuse as gender-based violence. Furthermore, landlords were not holding perpetrators of domestic abuse to account, with only six mentioning actions that should be taken against tenants who are perpetrators of abuse.

The report calls for an existing 2019 good practice guidance for social landlords to be placed on a statutory footing to ensure that social landlords prioritise domestic abuse within an equality and human rights-based framework, and wants the creation of a national training resource on domestic abuse and housing to build understanding of the issue. 

The report also says the Scottish Housing Regulator should issue guidance to social landlords which sets out requirements to demonstrate how they have improved housing outcomes for those suffering abuse.

Jo Ozga, housing policy worker at Scottish Women’s Aid, says: “Domestic abuse remains the leading cause of women’s homelessness in Scotland. We are disappointed that, despite making pledges and receiving clear best practice guidance on how to build a suitable domestic abuse policy, social landlords are still failing to act to protect women and children.

“With the cost of living crisis disproportionately impacting women, and further constraining the already very limited choices that those experiencing domestic abuse have, it is more important than ever that social landlords grasp the gendered nature of domestic abuse. 

“Policies alone won’t do it, but with social landlords due to receive new powers later this year as part of the enactment of the Domestic Abuse (Protection) (Scotland) Act, and a new Housing Bill on the horizon, the time is right for the Scottish Government, local authorities and social landlords to put their promises into action to improve the housing outcomes for women and children experiencing domestic abuse.”

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    What has domestic abuse got to do with landlords.? Surely this is a social services responsibility.

    Peter Why Do I Bother

    Absolutely, so increase all taxation beyond recognition, get the EPC to be an acceptable level, pay council tax when no one there, repair all the damage that tenants cause and on top of that become a bloody social worker...

     
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    What nonsense. Policies for this would be madness and leave a Landlord open to litigation. If a new lock or similar is required it would need a court order as any tenant living in the house and on the tenancy has a right to a key!
    You don't need policies for this, get a Court order and I am sure that most Landlords would then oblige in these circumstances.
    But clearly we are not the Court or the Police!

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    So Social Services expect Landlords to do their job for them. We all know Social services are totally unfit for purpose and staffed in the main with People who could not hold down a job in the real World. So after the Government has kicked us from pillar to post, they expect us to take on responsibilities that have nothing to do with us.
    Even when they get the Scum that commits domestic violence to Court they don’t apply stiff enough penalties. Whilst it won’t happen they should give these heroes a good beating,

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    What has any of this to do with (social) landlords? Sure move the woman or the man away to another housing estate. Put some good locks on the door. What else? An alarm maybe? How about giving the woman a kick up the **** and telling her not to get mixed up with such men in the future? No can't do that. It's 2023. Probably need to do a risk assessment before you can speak to them. Sign all sorts of GDPR / data protection / privacy BS forms first.

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    Some women are turned on by violent men, until that man turns his violence onto them, TBH I have little sympathy, not my problem.

     
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    Agree Andrew. They like that sort of thing until it's better for them they don't. Then they are abused. They become society's problem and worst of all a problem for a landlord. I had to go after the parents of some boyfriend of a female nurse tenant. She was nice but with an a-hole.

     
  • John  Adams

    What next, organise child care?

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    Including picking up and dropping off single mothers at the nursery

     
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