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CIH Brighton: uptick in referrals around ‘basic health and safety compliance’, RSH says

There has been an uptick in referrals on “basic health and safety compliance” to the English regulator, Housing Brighton 2024 was told on Thursday.

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Will Perry, director of strategy at the Regulator of Social Housing speaking at Housing Brighton 2024
Will Perry, director of strategy at the RSH, said some organisations do not have a grip on the basics
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CIH Brighton: uptick in referrals around ‘basic health and safety compliance’, RSH says #UKhousing

There has been an uptick in referrals on “basic health and safety compliance” to the English regulator, Housing Brighton 2024 was told on Thursday #UKhousing

Will Perry, director of strategy at the Regulator of Social Housing (RSH), said: “We’ve had an uptick in referrals around basic health and safety compliance, around gas servicing. We thought we had those issues cracked 10 years ago – evidently we haven’t.”

He made the comments during a session on the new consumer standards at the Chartered Institute for Housing (CIH)’s annual conference in Brighton.

The new consumer standards, the catalyst for which was the Grenfell Tower disaster and which cover the condition of homes and how landlords treat tenants, will be assessed through inspections.

This will replace the current in-depth assessment programme and result in a ‘C’ grading being awarded. As with the RSH’s Governance and Financial Viability Standard, ratings will range from C1 to C4.


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Mr Perry said: “Just because we haven’t looked for a long time doesn’t mean there hasn’t been regulatory requirements in place, and one of the things that we’re learning is just how patchy performance against the existing regulatory standards is. 

“What you see when you look at some of the things that have been referred to us, [it] indicates that some organisations just don’t have a grip on some basics.”

Mr Perry said he thinks more things will come out of the woodwork gradually.

“There will be some uncomfortable judgements that we’ll have to put out. There will be some difficult conversations that we’ll have to have. There will be some instances where we’ll have to intervene and make use of some of the new powers we have,” he said, adding that he hopes they will be “minimal”.

He said: “We don’t hesitate to intervene where we need to, but I hope constructively, collaboratively over the next few years we can drive improvement for tenants.

“We can deliver more and better homes, and we can come out of what has been quite a difficult period in a much better place.”

Earlier, Mr Perry said when it comes to consumer standards, the RSH is “very consciously” moving away from talking about “compliance” and towards delivering outcomes. 

Panellist Stephen Blundell, director of operations at Leeds Federated Housing Association, said: “[The] biggest single risk with the consumer standards regime is that we look at it as primarily a kind of compliance framework.” 

Leeds Federated took part in one of the regulator’s inspection pilots. 

“We do need to comply with the consumer standards. However, if we are too focused on that, we will without really thinking about it, turn the regulator into our primary customer, and that is absolutely not what’s intended here,” Mr Blundell said.  

On the inspections, he said: “Overall, and overwhelming, it was a process of deep engagement and inquiry. It was a test as to whether we as an organisation truly understood our strengths and weaknesses, our opportunities to improve, whether we have sensible, rational, demonstrable bases for setting the priorities that we had.”

In response, Mr Perry explained that the English regulator is not going to come and check hundreds of homes to see whether they have damp, ill-fitted windows, or holes in the roof. 

“Us pointing that out does not add a great deal to the sum of human knowledge. It certainly doesn’t improve anything for the customers and tenants who call those places home,” he said. 

He added: “You should know that stuff, you should have a grip on your homes. You should have a grip on your performance. You should know where the problem areas are in your organisation. 

“You should know where you’re doing well as well. What we’re looking for is how you can explain that to us. How you assure yourself internally about your performance. How you challenge yourselves, how your internal controls work, how you know that you’re delivering those outcomes.”

The RSH warned last month that there “will be consequences” for social landlords that fail new regulatory standards.

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