Committee
Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee 28 February 2023
28 Feb 2023 · S6 · Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Item of business
Subordinate Legislation
Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Early Expiry and Suspension of Provisions) Regulations 2023 (SSI 2023/8)
I appreciate that the full titles of the instruments are a bit of a mouthful. I am pleased to be at the committee to present on the Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2023 (Early Expiry and Suspension of Provisions) Regulations 2023—sorry, there was a typo in my brief; that was the 2022 act—and the draft Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Amendment of Expiry Dates and Rent Cap Modification) Regulations 2023. The convener and committee members will remember that the emergency act that we introduced last year had three key aims: to protect tenants, stabilising their housing costs by freezing rents; to reduce the impact of eviction and homelessness through a moratorium on evictions; and to avoid tenants being evicted from the rented sector by landlords who wanted to raise rents between tenancies during the temporary measures, reducing the number of unlawful evictions. The act came into force on 28 October. Since then, it has provided additional protection for tenants across the rented sector as we continue to live through these challenging and uncertain economic times. Last month, we published our first report on the operation of the emergency legislation, which covers the period from when it came into force in October until the end of December. In that report, in line with the act’s requirements, we set out our intended position for the social rented sector rent cap after March 2023. That is the main focus of one of the instruments that is before you. Scotland has led, and continues to lead, the way across the United Kingdom in the delivery of affordable housing, having delivered more than 115,000 affordable homes since 2007, and we have equally ambitious targets over the next decade. We also lead the way in the UK on our decision to end the right to buy in order to ensure that we retain social rented homes for people who are in the greatest need. Our commitment to affordable housing is second to none, which is why we have placed so much emphasis on enabling continued investment in the delivery of high-quality social housing. During the passage of the Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Bill through the Parliament, concerns were raised by members from across the chamber about the impact that a continued zero per cent rent freeze could have on that investment; indeed, some members of the committee who are here today expressed those concerns. However, due to the unprecedented economic circumstances at the time, we felt that it was imperative that all tenants living in the rented sector be afforded the protection that the emergency measures provide. We agreed to work closely with social sector landlords and, by the time that the bill completed its passage through the Parliament, we had already established a short-life task and finish group to support that work. The group, which comprised a number of key social sector landlord representative groups including the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, the Scottish Federation of Housing Associations and the Glasgow and West of Scotland Forum of Housing Associations, stressed the fine balance between affordability and investment, and stressed the need to set our social sector rents at levels that would ensure the continuation of essential work such as new build programmes and work towards energy efficiency and carbon neutral targets. The group reached an agreement that would result in increases of 6.4 per cent in respect of local authority social housing and 6.1 per cent for housing associations as an average across Scotland. It is important to note that the agreement of an average figure is essential to allow some degree of flexibility. The majority of rents will be increased at levels below the agreed 6.4 and 6.1 per cent figures, but there might be some landlords who will, for specific reasons, need to go beyond those levels. In the light of that agreement, the draft Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Amendment of Expiry Dates and Rent Cap Modification) Regulations 2023 and the Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Early Expiry and Suspension of Provisions) Regulations 2023 expired the rent cap for the social sector from 26 February, enabling social landlords to set rent levels that they judge, in the light of tenant feedback, to strike a balance on supporting repairs and maintenance, working towards meeting carbon neutral targets and continuing to provide the wide range of support that they offer every day to their tenants in times of such pressure. The regulations also make changes to the rent cap for the student accommodation sector. As laid out in the first report, feedback from stakeholders demonstrated that the rent cap was having no impact on the student accommodation sector, in contrast to the mainstream private rented sector. That was because the nature of the majority of contractual student tenancy agreements means that rents are set annually, tenancies typically last for the entire academic year and they rarely, if at all, allow for in-tenancy rent increases. In the light of that feedback, and in recognition that student accommodation tenancies are structured differently from other types of tenancies, we concluded that the rent cap should be suspended from 30 March, which is what the two sets of regulations seek to do. However, I make it clear that, by suspending the student accommodation rent cap instead of expiring it, ministers will continue to monitor the sector, and they have powers to revive the provisions if fresh evidence shows that there would be benefit from doing so to deliver a necessary and proportionate response to the cost of living. I turn now to the affirmative instrument that the committee is considering today. Soon after we published our first report to the Parliament, we laid the draft Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Amendment of Expiry Dates and Rent Cap Modification) Regulations 2023, along with a statement of reasons. In addition to the first report on the 2022 act, which was laid before the Parliament on 12 January, the statement of reasons sets out updated data and economic analysis that shows that the unprecedented economic position has not yet changed fundamentally and that many households in the private rented sector in particular continue to struggle. Yesterday’s announcement by the Office of Gas and Electricity Markets on energy price caps from April this year will bring no consolation, despite the decreases, as the UK Government measures mean that the average domestic energy bill will still increase from £2,500 to £3,000, at the same time as the £400 energy bill support scheme is ended, which will drive up fuel poverty to more than 50 per cent in the private rented sector. For that reason, the draft Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Amendment of Expiry Dates and Rent Cap Modification) Regulations 2023 seek to extend the rent cap measures for the private rented sector for a further six-month period to 30 September, as well as the eviction moratorium provisions across all rented sectors covered by the 2022 act, and the other important provisions in the act. On the continuation of the private sector rent cap measures, although the focus continues, of course, to be on protecting tenants, we recognise the on-going impacts that the cost crisis might be having on some private landlords. That is why the regulations propose that the rent cap be varied to allow for in-tenancy rent increases of up to 3 per cent. The voluntary approach to rent setting that is taken by landlords in the social sector is intended to equate to an approximate average rental increase of less than £5 per week across the country. As rents in the private rented sector are generally significantly higher, allowing for a maximum 3 per cent rent increase equates to a similar average rent increase for tenants in a two-bedroom property, which is the most common property size in the private rented sector. We consider that that gives a measure of parity in monetary terms while continuing to protect tenants from unaffordable rent increases. There is also a safeguard for private landlords, who can opt to apply to rent service Scotland for a rent increase of up to 6 per cent if they have an increase in their defined prescribed property costs within a specified period. On the proposed continuation of the eviction moratorium provisions, tenants in the private and social rented sectors as well as those living in student accommodation will continue to benefit from the additional time to find alternative accommodation that is provided by the six-month pause in the enforcement of eviction action. In addition, they are protected from private landlords seeking to end a tenancy to raise rents above the cap, and there is provision to reduce the number of unlawful evictions by increasing the level of damages payable. As with the rent cap, the eviction moratorium provisions include a number of safeguards for landlords and recognise that there are some circumstances in which enforcement of an eviction order or decree should be able to proceed—for example, it could be done to protect communities in instances of serious antisocial behaviour. The provisions strike the appropriate balance between the protection of tenants and the rights of landlords. In summary, we believe that the evidence that the cost crisis is still very much with us shows that it is crucial to continue beyond 30 March some of the protections that were brought in by the 2022 act. As promised during the bill’s passage through the Parliament, we have kept the measures under review and continue to consider their on-going necessity and proportionality. We have used our powers to make changes to the act where the evidence has shown that measures were required, and that is what the two sets of regulations that are before the committee seek to achieve. Thank you, convener, for giving me the time to introduce the measures. I thank the committee for its scrutiny and look forward to members’ questions.
In the same item of business
The Convener
Green
Our second item is evidence on the draft Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Act 2022 (Amendment of Expiry Dates and Rent Cap Modification) Regulat...
The Minister for Zero Carbon Buildings, Active Travel and Tenants’ Rights (Patrick Harvie)
Green
I appreciate that the full titles of the instruments are a bit of a mouthful. I am pleased to be at the committee to present on the Cost of Living (Tenant Pr...
The Convener
Green
Thank you very much for your detailed opening statement. We have a number of questions; you might well have touched on some of the issues already, but we wil...
Patrick Harvie
Green
As I think that we discussed with a number of members in the debates in the Parliament during the bill’s passage, there are connections between the emergency...
The Convener
Green
Thank you for highlighting the fact that rent adjudication will create a bridge between the current position and your proposals. You touched on the rent cap...
Patrick Harvie
Green
Again, as we debated during the passage of the Cost of Living (Tenant Protection) (Scotland) Bill, we recognise that the two dominant parts of the rented sec...
The Convener
Green
Thank you very much for that response.
Willie Coffey (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP)
SNP
Good morning to you and your team, minister. We heard in committee last week about the below-inflation rent rises that you mentioned, which will provide chal...
Patrick Harvie
Green
The impact has been a subject of concern from the social rented sector, but we have been pleased with our ability to reach agreement with the sector. The ave...
Willie Coffey
SNP
I presume that there has been knocking on your door with requests for consideration of additional resource. Will we keep an eye on the matter and invite some...
Patrick Harvie
Green
Absolutely. The commitment to social housing from the Scottish Government remains very strong. There has always been an understanding that the targets for ne...
Willie Coffey
SNP
Last week, we heard from the North of Scotland Regional Network of Tenants and Residents, which reminded us that the issues are not just about rent but are a...
Patrick Harvie
Green
Yes. I reinforce the point that we have never suggested that the emergency legislation is a solution to every aspect of affordability in the rental market. W...
Miles Briggs (Lothian) (Con)
Con
Good morning to the minister and the officials. The committee has heard from a number of private landlords with regard to investor confidence in the sector b...
Patrick Harvie
Green
A longer-term argument can obviously be had—it has played out in the chamber on a couple of occasions—about whether a regulated approach to private renting i...
Miles Briggs
Con
I do not know whether the Scottish Government has live data on this that the minister could share with the committee. Especially as we approach the September...
Patrick Harvie
Green
As I said in my opening remarks and reinforced to the convener, we believe that we have struck a balance that achieves a degree of parity. Private rented sec...
Miles Briggs
Con
You touched on students, and I want to ask specifically about Edinburgh. As an Edinburgh MSP, I have never known it so bad with regard to the numbers of peop...
Patrick Harvie
Green
We have to continue to engage with the universities around the obligations that they have to look after the students that they choose to attract, whether tho...
Miles Briggs
Con
Have universities contacted the Scottish Government to express their concerns on that issue?
Patrick Harvie
Green
I am not aware of recent contact from the universities on that issue.
Yvonne Gavan (Scottish Government)
Education colleagues are in on-going dialogue with the universities and colleges, but nothing specific has come to us.
Patrick Harvie
Green
Miles Briggs also mentioned homelessness. If we look at the tenures from which homelessness referrals come, there has been an extended period of a number of ...
The Convener
Green
We move on to questions from Mark Griffin, who is online.
Mark Griffin (Central Scotland) (Lab)
Lab
I declare an interest as the owner of a private rented property in the North Lanarkshire Council area. Good morning, minister. You touched on some of my are...
Patrick Harvie
Green
We confirmed fairly recently that we intend to introduce that legislation as soon as we can after the summer recess this year. There are a number of areas w...
Mark Griffin
Lab
Thank you for that answer. The other issue that I want to cover is one that the SFHA raised last week. What is the Government’s view of mid-market rent being...
Patrick Harvie
Green
That is a very good question. We acknowledge that, given the nature of mid-market rent, there are differences not only in rent levels, but in what is include...
The Convener
Green
Annie Wells also joins us online.
Annie Wells (Glasgow) (Con)
Con
Minister, why do you think that extending the evictions pause is necessary and proportionate, given that landlords generally pursue eviction as a last resort...