Venue: Meeting Room G.01, Ground Floor, City Hall, 115 Charles Street, Leicester, LE1 1FZ
Contact: Georgia Humby, Scrutiny Policy Officer, Email: Georgia.Humby@leicester.gov.uk
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APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE Minutes: Apologies for absence were receive by Cllr Aqbany and Cllr Adatia. |
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DECLARATIONS OF INTEREST Members are asked to declare any interests they may have in the business to be discussed. Minutes: The Chair asked members of the commission to declare any interests for which there were none. |
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MINUTES OF THE PREVIOUS MEETING The minutes of the meeting of the Housing Scrutiny Commission have not been finalised at the time of publication, they will be circulated in due course and Members will be asked to confirm them as a correct record. Minutes: The Chair highlighted that the formal minutes for the meeting on 31 July 2023 were not finalised for review but will be presented to the commission at the next meeting for approval. |
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PETITIONS The Monitoring Officer to report on the receipt of any petitions received in accordance with Council procedures. Minutes: The Monitoring Officer noted that none had been received. |
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QUESTIONS, REPRESENTATIONS OR STATEMENTS OF CASE The Monitoring Officer to report on the receipt of any questions, representations or statements of case received in accordance with Council procedures. Minutes: The Monitoring Officer noted that none had been received. |
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HOMELESSNESS STRATEGY UPDATE PDF 665 KB The Director of Housing submits a report which presents the new draft of the Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy and associated action plan which has been produced following a review and in line with statutory requirements. The Commission is asked to provide feedback on the draft strategy document. Minutes: The Executive Lead Member for Housing and Neighbourhoods introduced the new draft Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy and associated Action Plan. It was noted that the service continues to be held in high regard and the strength and importance of partnership working across the city has secured additional funding for the agile service.
The Head of Service in
Housing presented the report, and it was noted that: · There is a legal duty to formulate and develop a Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy. This is required to be reviewed and a new Strategy formulated every five years. · More people are presenting as homeless and seeking support as a result of the cost-of-living crisis and housing crisis amongst others whereby the service will continue to be flexible and agile. ·
The main aim of the service is to prevent
homelessness, but this is not always possible. The new draft
Strategy will therefore be underpinned by four overarching
priorities including:
Action Homeless, One Roof
Leicester and Inclusion Healthcare – homelessness partners
– contributed to the discussion and commended the
consultation in drafting the new Strategy. The importance of
collaborative working to secure additional funding and support the
increasing challenges people are facing and the complexity of needs
when presenting to services was also noted. In response to questions and
comments from Members, it was noted that:
·
The service prevented two thirds of cases presenting
to them but where prevention was not possible, support was provided
through intervention such as temporary accommodation. Increased
risk of homelessness arose because of court proceeding recommencing
following the pandemic in addition to the cost-of-living crisis and
increasing rental charges.
·
The draft new Strategy is underpinned by an action
plan which incorporates the importance of communication. Increasing
caseload of officers has made communication difficult but managing
expectations through homelessness prevention plans are
important. · The service is proud in the approach of treating anyone that presents as homeless equally and that no community should be spotlighted within the draft new Strategy. · The Council continues to ... view the full minutes text for item 21. |
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DAMP AND MOULD UPDATE PDF 106 KB The Directors of Housing and Neighbourhood & Environmental Services submit a joint report, primarily consisting of a presentation which will be given to the Commission at its meeting regarding progress in relation to work being undertaken involving damp and mould across Housing stock and the private rented sector. The Commission is asked to comment on the achievements and progress made in relation to the work involving damp and mould and to seek any further clarifications needed. Additional documents: Minutes: The Head of Service for Housing and Team Manager for Private Rented Housing presented the item to update on the work being undertaken involving damp and mould across housing stock and the private rented sector. It was noted that:
· The tragic death of Awaab Ishak has heightened awareness and the importance of governance of damp and mould. Legislation underpins responsibilities and further regulations will be enforced in 2024 for social housing with expectations for the Council to deal with reports of damp and mould. · A Damp and Mould Group has been established comprising of teams across different divisions to work collaboratively. An Action Plan has been formulated to deal with damp and mould in social and private housing given the awareness of health impacts. This includes greater resources for responding to additional demand of reports, inspections, and repairs as well as increased communication and advice. · Damp and mould cases have always been a category within the housing repairs section but there has been an increase in reports with the Group using data to identify trends. Around £150k has been spent on remedial work in social housing with improved remedial and preventative solutions utilised. · The percentage of reports locally for social housing is comparative to national figures but further work is needed to improve reporting from the private rented sector. · The private rented sector team have secured funding that will enable initiatives such as an online portal for private tenants to report issues, streamlining inspections with the use of tablets, training officers as EPC assessors, providing advice to tenants and grants for home improvements as well as the Leicester Energy Action service.
In response to questions and
comments from Members, it was noted that: · There will inevitably always be a backlog between reports and repairs, however increased resources have been allocated and the service is maintaining the backlog, currently at around 100 cases. · Properties are inspected within 28days and where remedial work is required, they are categorised. Priority one cases where damp and mould is reported in a bedroom or if there is a child or vulnerable person at the property will be completed within four weeks. Priority two cases are completed within eight weeks. · The Council have invested in its housing stock to ensure properties are of good condition. Whilst the criteria the Regulator will be monitoring is currently unknown, the governance and processes in place ensures appropriate inspection and remedial action when damp and mould is reported. ·
There are fewer reports than expected from the
private rented sector, but the team are developing a portal that
will enable tenants to report damp and mould with evidence. · Landlords are required to provide private tenants with EPC certificates and there is also a national database to search EPC ratings. If landlords are found to be renting properties with an EPC rating of F or G the service would ... view the full minutes text for item 22. |
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REPAIRS AND MAINTENANCE SERVICE PERFORMANCE UPDATE REPORT PDF 464 KB The Director of Housing submits a report which provides the Commission with an update on the performance of the Housing Division’s Repairs and Maintenance Service. The Commission is asked to comment on the report. Minutes: The Head of Service for
Housing presented the report, and it was noted that: · The key performance measures have remained static over several years, but ongoing outstanding repairs is a challenge. A centralised planning team has been created under a single management team to better plan and monitor outstanding repair workloads. · The biggest challenge for the service is associated with vacancies for craft trade operatives, current running at around 20 full time posts. Measures are in place to attract officers such as a technical framework, market pay evaluation and an apprenticeship programme. · There has been good improvement with the emergency repairs including reductions in reports categorised as emergencies and work required outside of normal working hours. This has been enabled by collaborative working with customer services, developing an online repair portal, and adjusting shift patterns for evening work. · The gas service team continue to perform a strong compliance for annual inspections but there are outstanding day-to-day repairs that are of focus. A successful recruitment exercise for officers has supported the service and the extended use of remote technology assist is enabling a better offer for customers. · Improvements are being seen with the voids team despite previously reporting declines to the commission as a result of the voids improvement plan. New approaches including working with utility companies to improve the transfer when a tenant leave a property, using technology to undertake survey, reconfiguring the management team, and trialling a new initiative to enable tenants to move into properties quicker with outstanding non-essential repairs to be completed within six weeks.
In response to questions and
comments from Members, it was noted that: · Vacancies are primarily being created as a result of an ageing workforce and officers moving roles internally. Higher wages for craft trades within the private sector is a challenge to attracting officers and therefore looking to ‘grow your own’ through apprenticeships. · The apprenticeship programme can have around 30 apprentices but duration to qualification will vary dependent on the programme, i.e. a single trade or multi-trade operative. ·
The use of technology has enabled efficiencies to be
made in the service. Tenants are able to report repairs through the
online platform and officers are able to engage with tenants via
smart phones for some repairs utilising remote assist.
Consideration will be given to where this can be further extended
to provide a better service for customers. AGREED: · The Commission notes the report. |
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HEAT METERING UPDATE PDF 466 KB The Director of Housing submits a report which updates members of the Commission on progress with the heat metering and billing project that the Housing Division are delivering. The Commission is asked to comment on the report. Minutes: The Director of Housing
provided an update to the installation of metres and the proposed
billing to tenants supplied by the district heating network. It was
noted that: · A decision was taken at Full Council in February 2023 to install metres in properties supplied by the district heating network to enable tenants and leaseholders to pay for their actual usage rather than the existing standard rate. · Charges to tenants and leaseholders would continue to be subsidised and protected on the standard rate until metre installation where it is anticipated that significant savings will be made to tenants and leaseholders. There will be associated fixed charges in addition to usage charges, but the comparative bottom line is believed to be equivalent or cheaper than the domestic market. · A contractor, Vital Energy, had been appointed and tenants had been consulted. Weekly advice sessions had been run for tenants by Council Officers and a dedicated team at Vital Energy. · 65% of pre-inspections had been completed with 300 metres already installed and a further 300 expected next month. It is anticipated that all metres will be installed ahead of winter unless multiple visits are attempted but officers continue to engage tenants and leaseholders.
In response to questions and
comments from Members, it was noted that: · Tenants can choose to opt out of metre installation, but in doing so they would continue to be charged the standard rate which is likely to be significantly higher. No enforcement action will be taken against tenants or leaseholder to require installation of metres. · The infrastructure supplying the Aikman Avenue flats is complex and therefore unviable to install metres through this project. Funding has been secured to explore potential alternative options and details will be shared once identified. · The average usage identified within the report is based on Government predictions of usages but inevitably some households may use less or more. · Fixed costs charged are associated with running the network, similar to boiler service, maintenance and repairs within the domestic market. Standing charges are inevitably higher than the domestic market as the district network supplies around 2,400 customers compared with utility companies supplying millions of customers to spread the cost but the bottom line is comparative. · Charges to tenants and leaseholders for the installation of metres will be spread over ten years and assurance was given that they will be charged as per the identified cost. It was agreed figures will be reviewed within the report to reflect this.
The Chair asked the tenant and leaseholder forum representative for comments in which he commended the work undertaken by the service.
AGREED: · The Commission notes the report. · Officers are asked to review the figures contained within the report to be charged to tenants and leaseholders.
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Members of the Commission will be asked to consider the work programme and make suggestions for additional items as it considers necessary. Minutes: The Chair noted that the work programme is developing with items suggested for future meetings. Members were requested to email additional items for consideration to the Chair.
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ANY OTHER URGENT BUSINESS Minutes: There being no further business, the meeting closed at 20.08.
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