Wednesday 28 November 2012

Is S.20 consultation achieving best value for leaseholders?

Statutory consultation must be seen as a good thing and S.20 has undoubtedly changed the way that landlords behave - but when the cure becomes more painful than the illness then it is worth having another look at the reasoning behind it. I believe that S.20 is restricting the opportunity for lessees to benefit from the best value available, particularly for utilities, maintenance and engineering contracts.

In the 1970s and '80s a number of landlords used the lack of consultation procedures to give associated building companies extensive and high cost major works projects across long neglected Victorian and Edwardian estates. The quality of the work was often questionable, the value was hard to justify and the contracts were often awarded, without consultation, to associated companies. Since this was before the days of LVTs and S.20, leaseholders were often powerless to resist.

The 1985 Act and the amendments in 1987 sought to shift the balance of power between landlords and leaseholders. It is easy now to forget the changes that these Acts achieved if you were not involved in property management at the time. It was a quantum shift in behaviours that was required to meet the standards laid down in these Acts. (I recall negotiating  an increase in management fees for a block in Battersea in 1987 to £220 per unit specifically to take account of the increased management requirements. Interestingly I doubt this fee has risen much, if at all, since - such is the competitive nature of the industry now.)

I am looking therefore, specifically at the unintended consequences of S.20 legislation which was initially introduced in the landlord and Tenant Act 1985, as amended 1987 and fully revised in the Commonhold and Leasehold reform Act 2002.

Looking at the most obvious problems first:
  1. £250 per head for consultation is not much if you are a very small block. You will have to consult on all moderate to major items. Most agents charge for formal consultation adding to management costs which might already be disproportionate for small blocks. 
  2. If just one flat in your block exceeds this contribution you must consult - for example if you have a large penthouse (say 3000 sq ft) and the service charge is divided on a floor area basis then you are likely to do proportionatley more consultations. 
  3. You must consult on long term contracts in excess of £100 per unit (see number 2 above - still applies). This means there will be no snapping up of a 3 year contract for fuel at a beneficial rate. These deals are usually only available for 24 hours. S.20 has all but stifled this long term value and needs to be rethought.
  4. Managing agents are rarely contracted for more than a year because there would have to be full consultation otherwise. This means that best value is not necessarily being achieved - given the risk that you will loose the contract after one year how can you genuinely offer best value? Most agents would be lucky to break even in year one. Longer term contracts offer security to both parties and better value. Contracts still have normal termination rights in the event of a proven breach.
  5. You cannot avoid S.20 - even if all lessees agree to circumvent it. The LVT does not take kindly to S.20 avoidance and will always support fully any future claim that consultation was not undertaken correctly. 
  6. Residents' Management Companies are not excluded either - even though in the event that they fail to consult and are unable to recover the full sum it is a moot point - in theory only their members can pay the difference anyway.
  7. It takes too long. 3 months is the general minimum.
  8. It can only be avoided in an emergency (by dispensation under S.20za) and even then you are at the mercy of the LVT if they decide that your interpretation of urgent or an unintended minor breach of the rules is different from theirs. See the Daejan Investments v Benson decision for the full details.
  9. That leaves Landlords with a difficult choice in really urgent situations. To get dispensation in advance of undertaking the work which can take 3 to 4 weeks or to gamble that it will be given retrospectively. 
Given all this I have set out below my thoughts on how to improve and modernise consultation. I do not have all the answers and would welcome your thoughts but here goes:
  1. Firstly the qualifying sums need to be raised - they have only been changed once since 1985. I would propose £500 and £250 (for long term qualifying agreements) respectively. This would still give a reasonable level of protection whilst reducing the annually increasing administration of notices - most agents, if not all, charge for serving the notices.
  2. Allow procurement of long term agreements where these are demonstrably good value. As long as the value can be evidenced thereafter, procurement should be free to take advantage of market opportunities, this is of particular importance to Local Authorities and agents with real buying power. Consultation can be by initial letter describing what the client is endeavouring to achieve with detail being added after.
  3. Allow RMCs to opt out of consultation in the event that they have full support of their members. It is, their members who would pay any penalty arising from a breach anyway. This might be achieved by, say, a simple 'cover all' consultation periodically.
  4. Dispensation should be given automatically and immediately if it can be demonstrated that any lessee will be disadvantaged were it not. For example if anyone was to be without heating or hot water or suffer a leak or threat to their safety or security.
  5. 30 days is more than a sufficient time to consult. 21 days would reduce the timescales and benefit everyone. Technology has significantly speeded up communications since the 1980s.
  6. The consultation limits should be divided equally across all units to avoid the issues set out in part 2 of the problems above, a long shot I know.
Consultation is an important tenet of residential block management and has changed the way that landlords and managers behave. But through time it has become less valuable as a tool in its current form and now hinders best value for leaseholders, increases costs and diverts management time. Inflation and improved communication channels mean that in it is no longer fit for purpose and should be carefully reviewed. We live in hope...



13 comments:

  1. Training Managing agents in good communication skills would probably speed things up.

    Leaseholders deal with these matters in their spare time! Workloads and deadlines have increased. Contractors or professionals who might need to be consulted would need the full time so Communication times have not speeded up.

    You forget many older people are downsizing moving into blocks and they do not use email etc. and need even more time to digest the sometimes incomprehensible figures presented.

    The only people advantaged by reducing Section Times would be managing agents who wanted to bulldoze their way through and were probably bad at communicating and unable to keep things simple.

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  2. How about Open Data -what do you think of that? Good agents would gain traction and create greater confidence - would raise everyone's game including difficult leaseholders and freeholders.
    The transparency alone would speed things along for everyone. See my Tweets on www.Twitter.com/RainsinChelsea .

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  3. Thank you for your comments. I am endeavouring to spark a debate with my posts so I am pleased to hear from you. The post on S.20 has been read more than any other that I have posted - which alone might suggest that it is an area that needs revisiting.
    Technology is inexorably moving many industries towards an open data/book approach and this is a good thing - provided the data is correctly analysed. As for communication skills? Well my view is that communication skills are generally good, it is 'responsiveness' that can be a problem and this is driven by the new ways of communicating. Managers could expect 5-10 letters per day before email. That number has gone up by a factor of ten in most cases.
    As a person who is getting older and hoping to downsize to a flat fairly soon, you will forgive me if I believe that technology is actually improving everyone's ability to communicate.
    You make no comment about the consultation levels. I am interested to hear views. DC


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  4. At ARMA conference I noted the increase in frustration around S20 and the demands it makes on us all.

    I've yet to hear a call for change though that doesnt recognise the protection the principle of S20 gives leaseholders. Its existence also provides those in the industry a safeguard against calls of the sort of historical dodgy dealing you describe.

    I think then that I lean towards validation of organisations doing the work as a potential alternative and safeguard. Professional memberships and accountabilities that allow circumnavigaton, shorter process or even differing thresholds to those prescribed to those without the accreditation. It would also add value to the work and expense we put into (eg) Arma Q, Irpm, etc.

    Failing that fanciful thought, the increase in thresholds you suggest appear sound.

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  5. I think the principal of consultation on major works is too enshrined but your point is a valid one. Unfortunately, in the meantime we have the issues currently raised by Phillips v Francis (No. 2) [2012] EWHC 3650(Ch)stirring up a storm amongst managing agents. If anything this takes us backwards, creating more cost and complexity (and, in my view creating more grey areas for the unscrupulous). Watch this space...

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  6. s20 consultation could be made more transparent by compelling the landlord to include some idea of the scale of cost in the initial Notices of Intention. Perhaps something that could be exceeded by say 10%. I've seen some of these notices and they do not really indicate that service charges will arise, it should say "you will be liable to pay £x in service charges if these works are carried out"

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  7. I agree - although this can be difficult unless the full specification is ready and can be costed. The initial notification really serves as just that - to prepare owners for likely costs but cannot know at that stage, other than vaguely, what they will be. I would prefer to see all the information at stage 1 but with all the rights to challenge and offer alternatives still in place. That way you have some indication of costs, from where works are to be funded and who the agent/client is choosing to do the work. One of the agents I deal with has recently (and entirely unreasonably) selected that 3 companies 250 miles away to provide quotes! Had I known that at the initial notice I would have recommended some local companies.

    The system is absurdly lengthy and clunky - often missing the weather window for external works as a result of delays. In this day and age, with electronic means of communication, there are much better ways we could be doing this. But first we need a sensible outcome from Phillips v Francis and then a sensible review of the ridiculously low threshold and finally a new consultation process that really is inclusive and straightforward.

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  8. It also seems ridiculous that leaseholders still have to go to the office of the agent to see the specification and tender responses. Most of these are held electronically these days. I can only assume that the original legislation (S22 L&T Act 1985) is now regarded as helpful to agents and not to residents who have to make arrangements to travel to offices sometimes many miles away! This needs updating.

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  9. I'm glad to see this is a live topic. I'm Bill by the way, I'm a non resident leaseholder of a flat, landlord is a housing association. The consultation was frankly a farce and I've taken the matter to the tribunal. I was going to make the point about travelling to some distant location to view stuff, a very valid point. In our case the landlord has gone to great lengths to conceal as much as possible even making it impossible for my QS to examine things. I completely agree about the initial stage consultation, there really isn't enough information given which was the point I was making. In our case the landlord didn't bother explaining why the works were necessary in their notice of intention, a statutory requirement I think. The landlord was involved in a large program of internal improvements for decent homes initiative, our works were very limited but part of the same contract. The interesting bit is that although the overall successful tender price was lower for the whole contract, the prices from that builder for our contribution were a fair bit higher. There's a slight lack of transparency.

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  10. Welcome Bill. I have been saying for a long time that social landlords and local authorities are failing to act properly when it comes to major works. The government have finally recognised this with the introduction of some new regulations applying to this sector which are worth a look: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/342737/140811_Mandatory_signed.pdf

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    1. It doesn't help that the legislation is so poorly drafted. Offer notices with reference periods had to be introduced as councils were offloading defective properties onto unsuspecting buyers. There is poor control of the valuation, theoretically the tenant can ask the district valuer for a valuation but who does? I suspect the supposedly "independent" valuer is rather less independent than he should be.The problem with the five year reference period is there's nothing to stop the landlord waiting for the five years to expire. There is the problem of new owners like me not being party to the original sale.
      Bill

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  11. I've thought s20 through a bit more and these are the improvements that should be made. I speak as a leaseholder subject to a botched consultation. The first stage consultation , notice of intention should clearly carry the warning that the consultation is statutory together with a government or RICS drafted information booklet setting out the procedures that are to be followed, should outline the the proposed works to a defined level of detail, vague statements like "external works" should be barred. A price accurate to +/- 10% itemised to a similar level be included together with a list of contractors that the landlord will offer the tender to. A surveyors report on building condition and need for works should be supplied. The tender stage would be much the same as now but with a statutory level of detail. The process would now change with a notification of proposed selection of contractor with an option for leaseholders to object within 14 days say, rather than the we've chosen a contractor, tough approach that is the current approach. All this would be underpinned with an internet enablement which would make things more accessible. Although there is a significant bureaucratic overhead there isn't a great deal more delay and if leaseholders actually understood what was going on then there would be less chance of tribunal cases.

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  12. You raise many points, some of which would, inevitably, involve leaseholders in additional costs. However I do agree that technology is the key. There really is no reason now why all documentation and comment relating to S.20 works should not be made available to all via a web portal. I want to see the specification when works are to be undertaken and I think this is a reasonable position to take.

    The key to succeeding with cyclical works is really to have a properly priced capital expenditure plan over a long period (20 years is good) and to ensure that sufficient reserves are collected to remove any additional unanticipated pain. This usually means that, provided the work is justified, in accordance with the lease and represents reasonable value for money, the concerns and queries reduce substantially and so to does the admin.

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