What is a Housing Association Repairs and Maintenance Policy on Health and Safety Standards?
There are particular health and safety requirements which apply to leased homes. By law, your home must be safe and fit to reside in when your tenancy begins and this must continue throughout the tenancy.
From the beginning to the end of your occupancy, your housing association has obligations to repair and keep safety of:.
The gas supply and gas appliances they supply.
Electrical wiring and electrical home appliances they provide.
Condensation, moist and mould are likewise common problems that you might stumble upon. You ought to report problems with this to your landlord instantly.
Every property owner, whether they are a regional authority or a housing association, has responsibilities to fix wet and mould, in addition to to identify the cause of the issue.
After you’ve reported the issue, a maintenance they are accountable for must be performed. If the condensation has happened due to a stopping working to provide sufficient ventilation on their part, it’s their task to deal with the ventilation issue.
Wet and mould can present a major risk to health, causing breathing problems like asthma and bronchitis, particularly in young children. This is why it is important that you report it to your property manager, and that they arrange it out as rapidly as possible.
Everybody is worthy of a safe house. Are features of your house risky, and has your social Housing property manager stopped working to make the needed repairs? To discover more about your housing association obligations to occupants, get in touch.
What Are my Housing Association Repair Obligations and Requirements?
Although as a renter you do have a particular amount of duty to keep where you live clean, safe and tidy, your local authority or housing association also has a lot of repair work and upkeep obligations.
Social Housing property owners are accountable for the majority of repairs in your home, including any damage or disrepair affecting:.
the structure/exterior of the building i.e. the roof, walls, windows and external doors.
central heating, gas fires, fireplaces, flues, ventilation and chimneys.
water system, pipes, sinks, toilets and baths.
external drains pipes and guttering.
gas pipelines, electrical wiring and any devices supplied i.e. if a cleaning machine is provided the proprietor is likely responsible if it breaks.
typical areas like lifts and entrances.
If you live in a house of several profession or an HMO, your property manager has much more obligations for fire and basic security, supply of water and drainage, gas and electricity and waste disposal.
These ought to be detailed in your occupancy agreement, which our Housing disrepair lawyers can assist you understand if you seem like you deserve to claim versus your proprietor or social housing association.
We can send out somebody over to check the damage to your house if you reside in social Housing to help us examine if you can make a claim.
Get in touch.