What is a Housing Association Repairs and Maintenance Policy on Health and Safety Standards?
There are specific health and safety requirements which apply to leased homes. By law, your house must be safe and fit to reside in when your occupancy begins and this need to continue throughout the occupancy.
From the beginning to the end of your tenancy, your housing association has commitments to fix and preserve security of:.
The gas supply and gas devices they supply.
Electrical circuitry and electrical home appliances they provide.
Condensation, moist and mould are also typical issues that you might stumble upon. You ought to report problems with this to your landlord immediately.
Every property owner, whether they are a local authority or a housing association, has commitments to fix moist and mould, in addition to to recognize the cause of the issue.
After you’ve reported the problem, an inspection and repairs they are accountable for need to be carried out. For example, if the condensation has happened due to a failing to offer adequate ventilation on their part, it’s their task to fix the ventilation concern.
Wet and mould can pose a major risk to health, triggering breathing issues like asthma and bronchitis, particularly in kids. This is why it is vital that you report it to your property owner, and that they sort it out as rapidly as possible.
Everybody deserves a safe home. Are features of your house unsafe, and has your social Housing property owner stopped working to make the required repair work? To learn more about your housing association duties to renters, get in touch.
What Are my Housing Association Repair Obligations and Requirements?
Although as an occupant you do have a specific quantity of duty to keep where you live tidy, safe and tidy, your local authority or housing association likewise has a great deal of repair work and maintenance commitments.
Social Housing landlords are responsible for a lot of repair work in your home, including any damage or disrepair affecting:.
the structure/exterior of the building i.e. the roofing system, walls, windows and external doors.
central heating, gas fires, fireplaces, flues, ventilation and chimneys.
water system, pipes, sinks, toilets and baths.
external drains and guttering.
gas pipelines, electrical wiring and any devices supplied i.e. if a cleaning machine is provided the property owner is likely accountable if it breaks.
typical locations like lifts and entrances.
If you live in a home of multiple profession or an HMO, your property manager has much more duties for fire and basic safety, supply of water and drainage, gas and electrical power and garbage disposal.
These need to be detailed in your tenancy agreement, which our Housing disrepair solicitors can help you comprehend if you feel like you deserve to claim versus your landlord or social housing association.
We can send out someone over to examine the damage to your home if you live in social Housing to assist us examine if you can make a claim.
Contact us.
Following Your Housing Association’s Complaints Process
Your Housing association will have its own formal complaints treatment. You should have been provided details of this treatment when you signed your occupancy contract. If you do not have it, call your Housing association and ask for a copy in composing.
You should follow this procedure properly, only when this procedure fails to get your Housing disrepair fixed, will there be a path to making a settlement claim.
We can help you to make accident claims for an injury or disease triggered by Housing disrepair. Call us on the number down near the bottom of this guide to begin your claim today.