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Time for a genuine partnership between residents and housing associations

As the National Housing Federation (NHF) unveils a plan to improve the relationship between associations and tenants, resident Joyce Ward says the focus should be on building a shared vision

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Time for a genuine partnership between residents and housing associations, writes @sovereignha resident Joyce Ward #ukhousing @natfednews

As @natfednews unveils a plan to improve the relationship between associations and tenants, @sovereignha resident Joyce Ward says the focus should be on building a shared vision #ukhousing

“We wanted all tenants and residents to be respected, to be heard, to be involved if they wished” writes @sovereignha resident Joyce Ward on the @natfednews Together with Tenants initiative #ukhousing

There’s been rather a lot of talk about listening recently.

When tenants speak, do housing associations really hear all the way from the boardroom to the frontline?

But as any parent knows, sometimes you can be heard and nothing changes. What we need is a conversation, a genuine partnership, where residents and housing associations work together to make things better for everyone.

As an active social housing resident for over 15 years, I’m committed to ensuring the voices of residents are heard and that the service they receive provides great value for money.

I never shy away from helping others to make a better life for themselves and as a qualified teacher I have this belief that if you nurture and empower people, things will change.

That’s why I was so pleased to see the NHF’s Offer for Tenants evolve in to a Together with Tenants charter.

While rebalancing power is obviously important, this plan focuses on more than that, it’s about building a team: the board, residents and employees agreeing a shared vision for the future.


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I absolutely support the NHF’s ambition for housing associations to be the most trusted and accountable organisations in the country.

I see this same ambition in those I work with at Sovereign. In fact, we were given the space and support to create our own structure of resident-led leadership, data-led scrutiny and local community-led social action about 18 months ago.

Since then, we’ve challenged and dug into thorny issues like lettings and why some tenants have to call more than once to get a repair sorted – how Sovereign handles complaints is next.

And, while data matters, I know that it was the listening to residents’ experiences and getting out of the boardroom that helped Sovereign make the decision to triple its investment in communities.

I’m sure many big, commercial companies would be envious of housing associations, which have so many passionate residents or customers chomping at the bit to help shape services or improve the customer experience.

Listening, involving and co-creating makes so much business sense, as well as just being the right thing to do.

But things change and it feels time to develop the long-standing tradition of housing associations opening their doors and involving residents where they saw fit – and move to a far more collaborative approach.

“It feels time to develop the long-standing tradition of housing associations opening their doors and involving residents where they saw fit”

However, I know not everyone who lives in a Sovereign home will agree that we’re there yet and we can all listen harder, learn and do more.

This was part of our comments when the team from the NHF came to see us as they developed Together with Tenants.

We wanted all tenants and residents to be respected, to be heard, to be involved, if they wished, at a level that works for them and we wanted there to be a stronger, national voice for tenants.

But what matters to each individual is different. Every housing association is different. This plan places ownership squarely on boards, which is quite right, but this is about co-creation.

“We wanted all tenants and residents to be respected, to be heard, to be involved, if they wished, at a level that works for them”

So I’ve asked the NHF to come back to see us in the South West and to speak to around 100 residents and Sovereign employees at our conference in May. Together, with the board and Sovereign’s senior leaders, we’ll start to set the priorities and measures that will underpin our charter.

We’ll explore what respect looks like, what transparency really means, what information matters and what are the standards that we, as residents and tenants, we’ll hold Sovereign to.

I’d urge every resident and tenant to read the NHF’s plan and to have their say. I’d also ask all boards to sign up to this approach, making a public commitment to meaningful change.

To be a success, this new approach needs to be created together and delivered together.

Joyce Ward, resident and board partnership chair, Sovereign

 

At a glance: the NHF’s Together with Tenants plan

At a glance: the NHF’s Together with Tenants plan

Together with Tenants is a draft plan drawn up by the National Housing Federation (NHF) with the “aim of creating a stronger, more balanced relationship with tenants and residents”. As of 13 March, 86 associations had signed up to it.

The NHF says a stronger relationship is needed after questions were raised following the Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017.

The aim of the plan is to introduce new expectations at board level; set clear commitments for tenants and residents; and give tenants and residents a louder voice, a stronger rule in scrutiny and more influence locally and nationally. It also aims to “provide a clear link to regulation”.

The plan proposes four actions:

  1. A new requirement in the NHF’s code of governance for boards to be accountable to their tenants and residents
  2. A new Together with Tenants charter setting out what tenants and residents can expect from their housing association landlord
  3. Tenant and resident oversight and scrutiny of the charter, with a report on how their landlord is doing against the charter commitments
  4. A closer link with regulation

The housing associations signed up to Together with Tenants

As of 13 March, 86 housing associations had already volunteered to be early adopters of the Together with Tenants plan. They are:

  1. Accent Group
  2. Accord
  3. Alpha Living
  4. Anchor Hanover
  5. Arawak Walton
  6. Arhag
  7. Aspire Housing
  8. Beyond Housing
  9. Black Country Housing Group
  10. Bolton at Home
  11. Broadacres
  12. Broadland Housing Association
  13. Byker Community Trust
  14. Calico Homes
  15. Clarion
  16. Coastline
  17. Colne
  18. Community Gateway Association Preston
  19. Connexus
  20. Cotman Housing Association
  21. County Durham Housing Group
  22. Derwent Living
  23. EMH Group
  24. English Rural
  25. Estuary Housing
  26. Gateway Housing
  27. Gentoo
  28. Gloucester City Homes
  29. Great Places Housing Group
  30. Greenfields Community Housing
  31. Hastoe
  32. Home Group
  33. Incommunities
  34. Islington & Shoreditch Housing Association
  35. Johnnie Johnson Housing
  36. Lincolnshire Housing Partnership
  37. LiveWest
  38. Livin
  39. Living+
  40. Luminus Group
  41. L&Q
  42. Manningham Housing
  43. Metropolitan Thames Valley
  44. Mosscare St Vincent's Housing
  45. Network Homes
  46. North Star
  47. Ocean Housing Group
  48. One Housing Group
  49. Ongo
  50. Onward
  51. Optivo
  52. Orbit
  53. Origin Housing
  54. Peter Bedford Housing Association
  55. Phoenix Community Housing
  56. Places for People
  57. Plymouth Community Homes
  58. Radcliffe Housing Association
  59. Radian
  60. Raven Housing Trust
  61. Riverside
  62. Rochdale Boroughwide Housing
  63. Rooftop
  64. Rosebery Housing Association
  65. Settle
  66. SHAL Housing
  67. Shepherd's Bush Housing Group
  68. Soha Housing
  69. South Lakes Housing
  70. South Western Housing Society
  71. South Yorkshire Housing Association
  72. Sovereign
  73. Stonewater
  74. Suffolk Housing
  75. The Community Housing Group
  76. The Pioneer Group
  77. The Wrekin Housing Trust
  78. Together Housing Group
  79. Torus Group
  80. Trent and Dove
  81. Wakefield and District Housing
  82. WATMOS
  83. Women's Pioneer Housing
  84. Wythenshawe Community Housing Group
  85. Yarlington
  86. Yorkshire Housing

CX 2019

CX 2019

Now in its second year, The Customer Experience Conference and Exhibition (CX2019) is the UK’s leading event for CX leadership teams & practitioners in social housing.

We’ve expanded the event this year to provide the most extensive conference programme bringing together case studies and panels from the public and private sector:

The event is based around the three themes: strategic planning, people issues, processes and IT.

It takes place on Monday, 25 February at the Business Design Centre, in Islington, north London.

Click here to book you and your team in

 

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