Tuesday, 15 October 2024

Unlicensed landlords watch out: Brent street patrols are after you!

 


From Brent Council 


Street surveys crackdown on unlicensed rental homes

 

Enforcement officers have begun patrolling streets in Brent to check whether rental homes are licensed.

 

The first street patrol took place six months following the start of borough-wide licensing. The law states that every landlord who rents out a property in Brent must have a licence to rent, except for Wembley Park.

 


 

Teams were made up of officers covering planning, anti-social behaviour and private housing services. They knocked on the door of every house in Stanley Avenue, Wembley, offering advice on waste management, listening to any concerns about anti-social behaviour and, where the property was a rental home, asking if it was licensed and free of serious hazards.

 

Cllr Muhammed Butt, Leader of Brent Council and Cabinet Member for Housing, said:

 

We are receiving licensing applications, but we know there are many more applications still to be made. 

 

We have intelligence on certain streets with evidence to suggest that tenants might be living in unlicensed properties, or in properties that are in breach of planning regulations, and those are the areas we are targeting through our street patrols.

 

No rogue landlord will slip through the net in Brent: if you are a landlord in Brent and your property is unlicensed, we will find you and you will face prosecution and hefty fines.

 

Last week, a landlord whose tenants were paying £3,500 to live in an overcrowded house of horrors, was handed fines totalling nearly £50,000. Willesden Magistrates Court ordered Sanjay Patel to pay £49,495 for breaches to the Housing Act at a semi-detached house that he managed in Vivian Avenue, Wembley.

 

If you are a landlord with an unlicensed property, avoid prosecution and get licensed today

 

You can report a suspected unlicensed rental property to Brent by emailing phslicensing@brent.gov.uk


 

Editor's note the only ward where a landlord is not required to register is Wembley Park. Brent Council said the area did not meet the threshold re anti-social behaviour etc.

OWL killed off by Mayor's Office


 

I find it hard to understand why the Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime are discontinuing this very useful service.

This message is coming from the company that created OWL, it is not a police or Neighbourhood Watch message.

It is with deep regret and much sadness that I must inform you that OWL will be terminated on 31st October.

The Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC) will no longer be funding OWL and the Met will not take over its funding. Without funding to maintain and operate OWL, we have no choice but to shut it down.

OWL was adopted by 18 London boroughs over the last 10 years so that your local police, their partner agencies, and Neighbourhood Watch coordinators can send urgent messages directly to residents and businesses. Over 1,700 Met police officers were trained to use OWL and many diligently kept the public informed on local issues. Each year, 14,000 alerts and updates for Londoners were published on OWL which generated 6 million emails and 12 million push notifications per year.

Your Personal Data:

OWL is the only communications platform that has kept everyone’s data safe without any data breaches or privacy issues. It has also provided 100% availability, 24x7 every year for the last decade. As per our obligations under GDPR, your personal data held on OWL will be securely erased in a timely manner following shutdown. There is no need to contact us to request erasure.

Proud to have been part of it:

Thank you for being part of OWL. During its time, many residents responded to appeals which helped the police find suspects, stolen cars and vulnerable missing people. As an example of how effective OWL has been in just one borough over a 5-year period, OWL members helped resolve £8.3m of crime and prevent £10m of further crime from happening. These are modest estimates based only on cases we were made aware of.

OWL helped boost public trust & confidence in the Met among the thousands who rely on OWL for information and reassurance. According to MOPAC’s Trust & Confidence survey of Dec 2023, 75% of boroughs using OWL had above-average trust compared with the rest of London. Boroughs ranked #1, #2, and #4 with the highest trust were using OWL. A survey among users in Enfield and Haringey showed that 76% said OWL provides the most up-to-date information from the police compared to social media platforms.

You may continue to receive messages until the end of 31st Oct.

Stay safe, London.

 Gary Fenton 
Creator of OWL, Direct Path Solutions

Wembley Stadium Events road closures and bus diversions/curtailment : Sunday 20th October & Friday 25th October

 


FRIDAY OCTOBER 25th



Shama Tatler ends her Brent Cabinet career speaking about the troubled South Kilburn Regeneration - video

Monday, 14 October 2024

Cllr Shama Tatler moves on from Brent Cabinet to start a new role at the LGA


 Cllr Shama Tatler attended her last Brent Cabinet today to make a presentation on the next stage of the South Kilburn regeneration.

Cllr Tatler earned the nickname 'Towerblock Tatler' for her unapologetic support for highrise developments and densification in Brent housing projects.

From tomorrow she starts a new role at Head of the Labour Office at the Local Government Association.

Cllr Tatler will step down as the Cabinet lead for Regeneration, Planning and Growth  but says she will continue to support Brent Labour from the back benches.

She wrote on LinkIn:

Thank you to all my Cabinet colleagues, past and present and I wish my successor all the best in continuing to deliver progressive Regeneration and Planning for Brent's residents.

Sunday, 13 October 2024

Brent Council tries to stop South Kilburn regeneration from hitting the buffers via a single developer and more private homes

 

The map shows how many sites are still to be developed 20 years after the 2004 Masterplan.

 

The South Kilburn Regeneration began as a concept in the late 1990s, with the New Deal for Communities adopted in 2001.

The first South Kilburn Masterplan was approved on the 12th July 2004 so the project has been going for 20 years and completion may take at least another ten.

The Minutes of the 12th July Executive Meeting show that non-Executive members were concerned that the Masterplan had not gone to the Scrutiny Committee. LINK

Tomorrow's Cabinet starts at 10am and South Kilburn is Item 12 out of 15 items LINK. The meeting will be livestreamed HERE.

Cabinet will be asked to approve a new chapter with the council seeking a single developer rather than a multiplicity of developers for the sites that remain. They include Queens Park & Cullen House, William Dunbar House and William Saville House, Masefield House, Wordsworth House and Dickens House, Craik Court, Crone Court and Zangwill House, Hereford House and Exeter Court, Austin House and Blake Court and John Radcliffe House.  

The Cabinet are told that Early Pre-market Engagement has indicated interest from several companies to take on the very large task with attendant risks in the current climate. Economies of scale are cited as an advantage but there are still risks regarding viability

The regeneration programme is based on the cross-subsidy model where the receipts from market housing funds the delivery of affordable housing, social and public infrastructure.  It is however notable that the programme has up until now benefitted from rapidly rising sales values as regeneration improved the area, but the sales values are now flattening out. 

Meanwhile construction cost inflation has risen steeply and continues to remain high, this alongside the recent regulatory changes, specifically the second staircase, is putting viability under extreme pressures. Also, interest rate rises have affected both development market and purchaser demand. Affordability of the programme is expected to remain challenging and will need to be carefully monitored and robustly managed.

There are still tenants waiting to be rehoused on the estate in line with the Landlord Promise made by the Council that they would be rehoused on the estate. It appears that 164 will have to wait until after 2028:

933 tenants have been permanently rehoused in a new home in South Kilburn. Approximately 200 tenants have been permanently rehoused outside South Kilburn in a new build or an existing home around the borough in areas such as Harlesden, Willesden, Cricklewood, Willesden Green, Kensal Rise, Kensal Green, Brondesbury and Kilburn. 

 At time of writing there are 284 tenants across Austin, Blake, Dickens, Craik, Crone, Zangwill, John Radcliffe, William Dunbar and William Saville remaining to be rehoused. 120 of the 284 will have the opportunity to be rehoused between 2025 and 2028 in the developments under construction at NWCC, C&G and Peel. The rehousing team is working with tenants at Austin, Blake and Dickens as a priority for the next phase of rehousing as these blocks are in the poorest condition.

The report is franker that previously about the difficulties encountered, partly in support of the single developer proposal:

 In a small number of developments however residents have experienced disruptive build quality issues. At Granville New Homes, Franklin, Chase and Hollister House, there have been issues with water leakage, supply of hot water and heating, poor workmanship and use of poor-quality material. Elsewhere, at Merle Court and George and Swift House fire safety issues with cladding has required significant remediation works.  

Multiplicity of landlords and managing agents arising from the site-by-site development model is also reflected in the inconsistent and variable standards of management and maintenance of the public realm across the neighbourhood and sometimes on opposite sides of the street. This inconsistent approach has marred the community's experience of living, working and visiting South Kilburn.  

Parts of South Kilburn have a concentration of sites at various stages of redevelopment - sites which are hoarded up and under construction, sites which are part or fully vacant. There areas have been experiencing increased levels of anti-social behaviour, fly-tipping and squatting. Alongside this is the noise, dust, vibration, and traffic disruption arising from the construction itself.  

Whilst these are the inevitable consequences of large-scale, long-term regeneration programmes, it presents significant disruption to the day-to-day experience of residents and erodes their sense of safety, community and ownership.

  1. The delivery programme as set out in the 2016 Masterplan review has been delayed due to economic and viability challenges and recent regulatory changes requiring extensive design amendments. Beyond the sites which are currently under construction there is no future pipeline of new homes. For residents (tenants and leaseholders) remaining in the existing blocks the uncertainty of not knowing when and where they are going to move is frustrating, particularly for residents living in overcrowded and poor quality homes.

For viability there will be an increase in the private homes quota as well as an increase in densification.

According to the 2016 Masterplan, the remaining sites can provide a further 1,400 homes. An initial review of the Masterplan has indicated that there are opportunities for optimisation, densification to deliver more housing The remainder of programme will include a higher percentage of private housing to re- balance the overall distribution of housing tenure and front loading of affordable homes provision in the earlier phases of the programme. The level of private housing will be critical to the viability of future phases.

 

There is never much discussion, and certainly not debate, at Cabinet - that is all done in private with officers at a private pre-Cabinet meeting, so this complex and risky proposal is likely to go through in a few minutes. It is important that Scrutiny Commitee (unlike in 2005) considers it at the appropriate time.

 

Brent FoE Players to perform at Brent Civic Centre during half-term with 'Jackie and the Greenstalk - an eco-patomime

 

From Brent Friends of the Earth

After the success of our Eco-Panto at two libraries in Brent (see report here), it's been agreed with Brent Council that we will perform the show again at the Civic Centre Atrium on 23rd October at 11:45am (during schools' half-term).

 

We hope to see you there.

British Reggae Allbums Covers Exhibition - Talks and Music - Monday October 14th 6.30-8.30pm at Harlesden Library