Showing posts with label Social Sector Size Criteria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Sector Size Criteria. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Tory Council to Force 21-Year-Olds to Share Rooms

A leading Conservative council is planning to require the children of social tenants to share a room up to the age of 22.  Kensington and Chelsea Council’s cabinet has approved reforms that could see new social tenants lose their homes if the property has become too big for their needs under the council’s strict size criteria.  It will allow one bedroom per adult or couple, but ‘children’, including young people aged up to 22, must share if they are of the same gender. Children aged under 10 must share regardless of gender. The size criteria are tougher than the rules the government intends to use for its controversial ‘bedroom tax’ social housing under-occupation penalty, which allow children separate rooms once they reach 16. Read more on Inside Housing.

Thursday, 14 March 2013

Housing Benefit: Social Rented Housing – Parliamentary Written Answer

Kerry McCarthy: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what guidance he has issued to local authorities and housing associations about the classification of a bedroom under the under-occupation penalty to housing benefit; and what assessment he has made of the safe minimum size of a bedroom to be shared by two siblings.
Steve Webb: Together with the Department for Communities and Local Government we have worked with the Chartered Institute of Housing who have produced an online guide for social sector landlords "Making it Fit—a guide to preparing for the social size criteria". This was launched in June last year and is designed to help landlords to develop a strategic and operational approach to the size criteria, tailored to their local area. 
Separate guidance has not been issued on the size of rooms or their suitability for use as a bedroom. Rent levels generally reflect the number of bedrooms in the property and may take into account their size, but it is for tenants to decide at the point of accepting the tenancy whether the rooms are of a suitable size for their needs. 
The size criteria rules take account of the number of bedrooms as designated by the landlord and compare this with the composition of the household in order to establish whether or not to apply a reduction due to under-occupation.

Friday, 1 March 2013

Social Rented Housing – Parliamentary Written Answer

Stephen Timms: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions whether he proposes that (a) council and (b) housing association-owned accommodation, used to provide temporary accommodation, will be subject to the social sector size criteria.
Steve Webb: People who are accepted as homeless under the Housing Act 1996 and placed in temporary accommodation by either (a) the local authority or (b) a housing association will not be subject to size criteria.