A not-for-profit adjudication service says it can resolve social landlord and tenant disputes without involving the Ombudsman or the courts. Centre for Justice, based in central London, says alternative avenues to resolve disputes will become increasingly relevant in the face of the 'democratic filter' - which will cut tenants' direct access to the Ombudsman - and as tenants become more aware of regulatory issues. The Centre adjudicates all types of housing dispute and claims it can resolve them at a fraction of the cost and in a fraction of the time of court action, using ‘modern arbitration’. It says this delivers "better and more reliable outcomes" than can be achieved through the courts. It says the service appeals to both social housing provider and tenant. Read more on 24dash.
Too many buildings remain unsafe after Grenfell disaster, housing minister
warns
-
Wajid Khan tells House of Lords remediation work is yet to start on half of
properties with unsafe cladding
Far too many high and medium-rise buildings a...
1 day ago
No comments:
Post a Comment