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How Renters Were Left In The Lurch (Read 111 times)
whiteknight
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How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Dec 11th, 2024 at 5:24am
 
‘Landlords faced few consequences’: How renters were left in the lurch

December 11, 2024
The Age
A string of landlords faced little to no accountability for keeping their investments in such poor condition it harmed the health and financial wellbeing of their tenants, a new report found, prompting calls for a system of roadworthy-like certificates for rentals.

Anika Legal’s Too Hot, Too Cold, Too Costly report on renters in Victoria found they were living in poorly maintained properties that were energy inefficient, and faced significant barriers to having their home brought up to scratch.

Akina Legal wants landlords to provide a certificate which shows how energy efficient their rental is.


The pro-bono tenancy advocacy service’s report based its findings on the cases of 38 tenants who sought its help to get repairs done; just eight of them had the works done, and one of those had to pay for the repairs themselves.   Sad

“The impact that it has on renters is so huge,” Anika Legal chief executive Noel Lim said. “There are renters who are living in extreme temperatures. They’re having to choose between falling into debt and financial hardship and keeping their family or kids out of hospital.

“It’s a choice they’re forced to make and is a choice that no one should have to make.”


Andrea Leong tracked the temperature at home.
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A range of studies has shown that Australian homes are not well-built for energy efficiency or climate resilience, and renters are more likely to live in poor-quality homes.   Sad

The report found renters who used Anika’s services had structural issues in their home which hurt their energy efficiency, such as holes and gaps in roofs and floorboards, draughty doors and single-paned glass windows.

Renters also tried to get landlords to repair issues with air conditioners, heaters and gas and water-plumbing systems. The tenants said they faced high utility bills and little willingness to fix issues which could alleviate the costs of running the home.



“When renters do assert their rights to have a home in good repair that meet minimum standards, landlords and their agents have regularly ignored their requests or flatly said no even when it amounts to a breach of their duties towards the renters. Landlords faced few consequences when they failed to meet their duties.”   Sad

In 18 of the 38 cases, tenants didn’t bother asking, and moved instead.


“They’re scared that if they do exert their rights they’re thinking they can get a rent increase they can’t afford in retaliation, and then they’ll be without their home in the worst rental crisis we’ve ever seen,” he said. “The cases that we took, what we’re really confident in is that renters are choosing to move rather than assert their rights.

“When you have almost half of renters making that decision, I think that’s a really clear indication that the system isn’t working.”

Real Estate Institute of Victoria president Jacob Caine disagreed that agents were part of the problem.


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“There’s not a property manager in Victoria that doesn’t want to be compliant, but the resistance comes from the financial calculus of the people who make the decisions …and the owners of properties make the decisions.”

Sweltering Cities executive director Emma Bacon said the report’s finding echoed what her advocacy organisation had discovered anecdotally.

“I think unfortunately it’s something we’ve heard from renters across the state … people are worried that if they push for fixes or cooling it will affect their ability to stay in the house,” she said. “Having to move can have a huge expensive effect and lead to social disconnection.”

Lim praised recent state government moves to increase penalties levied on agents and landlords who advertise properties that don’t meet minimum standards, but said more was needed to tip the balance of power away from investors.


Energy-efficient homes can save their owners money.
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“We need to see it followed through and more of it,” he said. “And we need public reporting of these complaints, and it will promote transparency and will build renter confidence that landlords and agencies will be held accountable.

“We need to ban rent increases where the property doesn’t meet the minimum standards … We need roadworthies for rentals. All landlords should have to certify their home meets energy efficiency standards before they advertise it … so renters know exactly what they’re in for.”

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Grappler Truth Teller Feller
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Re: How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Reply #1 - Dec 11th, 2024 at 6:55am
 
Poor buggars - looks like they'll have to get out of the business of being landlords then... it's a tough life.
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Re: How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Reply #2 - Dec 11th, 2024 at 7:09am
 
whiteknight wrote on Dec 11th, 2024 at 5:24am:
Real Estate Institute of Victoria president Jacob Caine disagreed that agents were part of the problem.


Welcome to the joys of greed-based capitalism.

Of course agents should NOT be allowed to rent out properties which are not fit for habitation.

Sickening self-interest -  "we aren't the problem, we only offer the unhealthy housing to renters who are desperate  for a home.....not our problem".   

Another greedy corporate manager met a swift execution  in the US last week:  "we are here to maximize our profits, not to insure against medical expenses incurred by people needing health  care".

Dog eat dog freemarket capitalism. 

"The markets are good servants, but bad masters, and  a worse religion". Amory Lovins.







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Gnads
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Re: How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Reply #3 - Dec 11th, 2024 at 7:31am
 
Sick of the stories about the "poor renters".

I've seen what people(tenants) do to both Govt owned and privately owned rental accommodation.

People from all walks of life.

They live like pigs, turn yards into overgrown junk yards, wreck the insides and have pets shyting and pissing throughout the house/flat.

I hope the rental market gets less & less as landlords sell up because they can't make their investments pay because the costs of repair and maintenance outweigh the returns.

There are far more bad tenants than there are Landlords.
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thegreatdivide
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Re: How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Reply #4 - Dec 11th, 2024 at 7:40am
 
Gnads wrote on Dec 11th, 2024 at 7:31am:
Sick of the stories about the "poor renters".

I've seen what people(tenants) do to both Govt owned and privately owned rental accommodation.

People from all walks of life.

They live like pigs, turn yards into overgrown junk yards, wreck the insides and have pets shyting and pissing throughout the house/flat.

I hope the rental market gets less & less as landlords sell up because they can't make their investments pay because the costs of repair and maintenance outweigh the returns.

There are far more bad tenants than there are Landlords.


Well...if you are forced to pay exhorbitant rent for some run-down dump, you might not respect the property.

Indeed landlords should get out if they can't offer a decent home for rent.

Which gets us back to well-maintained  public housing, for people who can't afford to buy private housing.....

"The markets are good servants, but poor masters, and a worse religion" Amory Lovins.
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Gnads
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Re: How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Reply #5 - Dec 11th, 2024 at 9:02am
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Dec 11th, 2024 at 7:40am:
Gnads wrote on Dec 11th, 2024 at 7:31am:
Sick of the stories about the "poor renters".

I've seen what people(tenants) do to both Govt owned and privately owned rental accommodation.

People from all walks of life.

They live like pigs, turn yards into overgrown junk yards, wreck the insides and have pets shyting and pissing throughout the house/flat.

I hope the rental market gets less & less as landlords sell up because they can't make their investments pay because the costs of repair and maintenance outweigh the returns.

There are far more bad tenants than there are Landlords.


Well...if you are forced to pay exhorbitant rent for some run-down dump, you might not respect the property.

Indeed landlords should get out if they can't offer a decent home for rent.

Which gets us back to well-maintained  public housing, for people who can't afford to buy private housing.....

"The markets are good servants, but poor masters, and a worse religion" Amory Lovins.


Excuses, excuses that's all you've got.

So people who take on a run down dump are entitled to turn it into a bigger run down dump because the rent is too high?

Surely they would have seen it was a run down dump before they signed the lease?

Well maintained public housing ??? Didn't I mention Govt housing?

People in public housing or private rentals treat well maintained properties like shyte.

Like the public housing in remote communities - public housing in urban towns & cities where people trash them & expect someone else to come fix it pronto tonto.

There's one - a nice style of little brick house 2 blocks down the road from me - gawd knows how many are living there - but the yard is full of toys, chairs, rubbish, wrecked cars & 3 other shyte boxes parked out on the street.

Even get the yard gets mowed for them for nothing after the grass gets knee deep.

Do you follow?
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Re: How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Reply #6 - Dec 11th, 2024 at 11:21am
 
Quote:
Akina Legal wants landlords to provide a certificate which shows how energy efficient their rental is.


I actually like this idea. Let the renters be properly informed, but still give them the choice.

But how much would the certificate cost, and will it be realistic? I suspect this certificate will tell you what happens if you close all the doors and windows and use air con to keep the inside at 25 degrees C. But if you own a house on a slab for example, with plenty of trees and shade, you should be able to keep it reasonably comfortable through summer without air con, so long as it cools off enough at night.
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Re: How Renters Were Left In The Lurch
Reply #7 - Dec 11th, 2024 at 11:26am
 
Gnads wrote on Dec 11th, 2024 at 7:31am:
Sick of the stories about the "poor renters".

I've seen what people(tenants) do to both Govt owned and privately owned rental accommodation.

People from all walks of life.

They live like pigs, turn yards into overgrown junk yards, wreck the insides and have pets shyting and pissing throughout the house/flat.



Most tenants look after their properties. As a landlord, if a tenant reports a fault, it needs to be rectified. That some tenants abuse properties is not an excuse for neglecting the landlords responsibility
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