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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament 03 December 2014

03 Dec 2014 · S4 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Private Sector Rent Reform

In our previous debate on housing, I described the difficult and anxious situation facing a resident in East Renfrewshire who came to see me for advice and any assistance that I could offer. The resident was a young man with two children at local schools but whose partner had left and who could no longer afford to live in the family home.

With few priority housing points, there was next to no chance of that man getting a council or housing association property on the Eastwood side of the authority and, although he has worked all his life, a mortgage in the area was well out of his reach. I am pleased to tell members that, along with his children, he has found a private rented flat on the south side of Glasgow, which is close enough for the children to get the bus up to school, and is, more importantly, just about affordable.

How many cases like that have we all heard about over the past few years, some with far less satisfactory outcomes?

Problems with housing supply are helping to drive huge changes to the way that we live in Scotland. We are simply not building enough homes. The number of new private homes has more than halved in recent years, while the population is increasing. In terms of council or housing association property, Audit Scotland has identified a shortfall of almost 14,000 homes in the past decade alone, and there are up to a dozen local authorities in the same situation as East Renfrewshire, where the waiting list for a council house has increased over the past five years. An estimated 150,000 people find themselves in that predicament around Scotland. The fact that the number of Scots who live in private rented accommodation has doubled over the past decade demonstrates precisely how important the sector has become.

My constituent and his family landed on their feet but, for many more families, moving into a private let leaves them feeling insecure or, worse, it becomes a move into poverty. The Joseph Rowntree Foundation has found that private renters spend 23 per cent of their income on housing, which is up from 18 per cent just 10 years ago, and that the number of families in the private rented sector who are on housing benefit has increased from 60,000 in 2008 to 97,000 in 2013.

Last year’s Scottish household survey highlighted the insecurity of tenure in the private rented sector compared with the alternative. The average length of time for someone in the private rented sector to stay at the same address is between two and three years, compared with more than 10 years in the social rented sector and 15 years in an owner-occupied home. As John Mason has pointed out, some of that might reflect choice or people in transition to home ownership but, with so many families now leasing privately, there is a danger of such instability having a detrimental effect on the more vulnerable.

There is no one solution to Scotland’s housing problems—although we clearly need to build more homes—but reform of the private rented sector should be at least part of the way forward. At the moment, many people are fearful of moving into a private let but are forced by circumstance to do so. The constituency case that I gave as an example is far from unique. As I am sure that most colleagues recognise, renting privately is the least favoured option of the majority of tenants. Similarly, many landlords are increasingly wary of renting to bad tenants who they then cannot get rid of. I do not believe that that is a sustainable basis on which the sector can develop.

Shelter’s campaign to make renting right could help tenants and landlords. It could provide stability and security for both and introduce a fairer system for resolving problems when they occur. There are plenty of examples of places in Europe where private renting is seen as a safe, affordable and desirable option; here in Scotland, on the other hand, the gap between the tenancy regime for public and private landlords simply aggravates the sense of inequality that is created by the difference in rent levels between the two. According to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, the average private rent is 86 per cent higher than the average social rent.

The proposal is not an anti-landlord measure. Shelter has shown the way forward, and Labour has put that into the parliamentary process. I urge all members to support the motion.

15:43  

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Tricia Marwick) NPA
The next item of business is a debate on motion S4M-11763, in the name of Mary Fee, on private sector rent reform. 15:12
Mary Fee (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab
In opening for Scottish Labour, I put on record our party’s support for Shelter Scotland’s make renting right campaign. As always, Shelter Scotland is at the...
The Deputy Presiding Officer (John Scott) Con
We have absolutely no spare time this afternoon. I call Margaret Burgess, who has up to seven minutes. 15:22
The Minister for Housing and Welfare (Margaret Burgess) SNP
I am glad to have the opportunity to debate the private rented sector. The sector’s growth might be news to some members, but the Scottish Government identif...
James Kelly (Rutherglen) (Lab) Lab
The minister tells the chamber that the Government has made good progress on issues in the private rented sector. Will she tell us why there was nothing in t...
Margaret Burgess SNP
I say to the member that, when the strategy group met and consulted together, what he raises was not recognised as an issue. It was not part of our Housing (...
James Kelly Lab
Will the minister take an intervention?
Margaret Burgess SNP
If it is brief.
James Kelly Lab
I think that the minister has been listening too much to the letting agents saying that rents have increased at below the rate of inflation. Does she think t...
Margaret Burgess SNP
I say to the member that we did not listen to letting agents to get that information. The information is based on Scottish Government research, which shows c...
Alex Johnstone (North East Scotland) (Con) Con
I welcome Mary Fee’s motion because it gives us an opportunity to address an issue at the centre of the discussion on the private rented sector: the parties’...
James Kelly Lab
On the point about a realistic understanding of the housing situation, does the member recognise that one in four of those living in the private rented secto...
Alex Johnstone Con
We have to be careful of using inappropriate statistics. We have already heard one set of statistics balanced with the Government’s statistics in the two ope...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
We move to the open debate, with speeches of up to four minutes, please. 15:34
John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP) SNP
The private rented sector is clearly changing and growing, so we need to keep legislation up to speed with those changes. My constituency of Glasgow Shettles...
The Deputy Presiding Officer Con
Your time is up, Mr Mason. I appreciate your brevity—thank you very much. 15:39
Ken Macintosh (Eastwood) (Lab) Lab
In our previous debate on housing, I described the difficult and anxious situation facing a resident in East Renfrewshire who came to see me for advice and a...
Clare Adamson (Central Scotland) (SNP) SNP
I want to start by picking up on some of the comments of my colleague John Mason about the quality of tenancies. I chair the cross-party group on accident ...
Mary Fee Lab
Clare Adamson says that the Government has acted responsibly. Would a responsible Government have a record on building housing that is the lowest since the s...
Clare Adamson SNP
I remind Mary Fee of the Labour and Liberal Democrat record on this area. “Housing Statistics for Scotland 2014: Key Trends”, published by the Government, sh...
Jim Hume (South Scotland) (LD) LD
Will the member give way?
Clare Adamson SNP
No, I only have four minutes. Sorry. We have taken action on tenancy deposit schemes and we have launched a consultation on tenancy, which will gather infor...
Siobhan McMahon (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I am pleased to be able to take part in this afternoon’s debate. I will highlight just one of the housing issues that my constituents face. I was contacted ...
George Adam (Paisley) (SNP) SNP
I welcome this debate because housing is an important and basic need and the Scottish Government takes it very seriously. As members have already said, it is...
Neil Findlay (Lothian) (Lab) Lab
Will George Adam take an intervention?
George Adam SNP
Unfortunately, I have only a short time. That money will be invested to deliver a further 6,000 affordable homes, of which 4,000 will be in the social rent...
James Kelly Lab
Will Mr Adam take an intervention?
George Adam SNP
I am running out of time, and the more interventions I get, the more time I seem to lose.
Neil Bibby (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab
Will the member take an intervention?
George Adam SNP
If Labour Party members such as Mr Bibby believed in doing something for the constituents in my area, they would have had more than a short, last-minute deba...