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Over 62,000 people demand Earl of Lytton’s Scheme to become law

Over 62,000 people are now calling for consumer protection for blocks of flats (without the need to go to court) with the Earl of Lytton’s buildingsafetyscheme.org legislation.

With the Building Safety Act, 2022 freeholder leaseholder protections back stop now at serious risk of freeholder insolvencies with recent legislative proposals, even qualifying leaseholders could find a lack of funding available to cover ruinous remediation costs. Then of course there is the 1.7 million unqualified leaseholders who are still at risk. All because the government hasn’t got enough money.

Please sign the petition here : https://www.change.org/p/protect-innocent-homeowners-hold-property-developers-to-account-for-dangerous-cladding

All leaseholders can be protected from historic building safety remediation costs with this legislation and it doesn’t ask for a tax payer bailout.

Barton House, Bristol – Yet another evacuation due to building defects

A tower block in Bristol is being evacuated after a structural issue was discovered today (Nov 14, 2023).

The only way out of this crisis is the Earl of Lytton’s Building Safety Scheme to make those responsible for building defective blocks of flats (that cause evacuations) permanently liable without the need for homeowners to take them to court.

Consumer protection legislation for blocks of flats is needed as a matter of urgency in the UK. The Earl’s amendment is coming back to the House of Lords in due course.

Full Article on the evacuation in Bristol below: https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/live-bristol-city-council-meeting-8906918

This adds to our large list of evacuations due to dangerous building below – it’s time for a fully comprehensive solution in law to ensure dangerous building due to value engineering ends.

Deepa Mistry speaks at Vision Construct

We were thrilled Deepa Mistry, one of the key team members of the Earl of Lytton’s consumer protection amendment team and CEO of the Building Safety Crisis organisation opened the #VisionConstruct2023 conference earlier last week and gave the keynote address for Day 1 at Wembley Stadium

Deepa candidly and personally explains the serious challenges the Building Safety Crisis presents on the human level to all caught up in the crisis and the need for the Earl of Lytton’s consumer protection amendment for blocks of flats.

You can view her powerful keynote here (skip forward to start at 7mins and 34seconds): https://www.youtube.com/live/HJrNDwCcR5c

Over 50,000 people now calling for Earl’s Scheme

Over 50,000 people have signed a petition in just 25 days calling for the Earl of Lytton’s Building Safety Scheme Amendment to protect every leaseholder in the country.

SIGN HERE https://www.change.org/p/protect-innocent-homeowners-hold-property-developers-to-account-for-dangerous-cladding

The survey has even attracted the attention of a former state premier of Victoria, Australia and former co-chair of their Cladding Task force, who describes the Earl’s scheme as a global precedent for reform.

We appeal to the government to implement the Building Safety Remediation Scheme urgently. To protect the 1.7 million innocent flat owners currently excluded by the Building Safety Act.

The petition has also been featured in Today’s Conveyancer calling on the UK to sign:

British Safety Council Article

The Earl of Lytton explains to the British Safety Council why his amendment is urgently needed:

1. Protect the 1.7 million excluded leaseholders with remediation costs funded by the construction industry.
2. Remove the 3 tiers of ‘protection’ status (needlessly introduced by the Building Safety Act) blighting the UK flat market and causing conveyancers to reject this work due to lack of insurance cover.
3. Ensure the construction industry is the backstop for remediation costs, as many of the landlords are thinly capitalised so making them the backstop could result in many qualifying leaseholders being left in legal limbo due to freeholder insolvency.
4. Ensure that the rotten culture in construction ends with permanent joint and several liability on the developer or lead contractor or their parent companies.

Read the full article below:

Article : https://www.britsafe.org/publications/safety-management-magazine/safety-management-magazine/2023/why-im-backing-a-new-building-safety-remediation-scheme/

Propertymark backs the Earl’s Amendment

Grateful to have the support of Propertymark who renewed their support on 28 July 2023 for the Earl of Lytton’s Building Safety Remediation Scheme. They join the Sunday Times, former state premier of Victoria Australia Ted Baillieu, the Mortgage Intermediary Association, the Association of Mortgage Intermediaries, the British Property Federation, ARMA and the National Landlords Association calling for this vital legislation to become law by Christmas 2023 as part of the Levelling Up Bill. Only by removing the unfair 3 tier flat market and protecting all homeowners from remediation costs can we begin to unblock the Housing market and prevent dangerous building in the future.

Read the full Propertymark press release here:

https://www.propertymark.co.uk/resource/more-leaseholders-protected-but-loopholes-must-be-closed.html

PRESS RELEASE – DEBATE MONDAY 18 SEP

Building Safety Scheme to be Debated in the House of Lords on Monday September 18th 2023

Jeremy Hunt has been warned that the government could face a multi-billion pound bill to rescue up to 1.7 million potential victims of the post Grenfell building safety crisis. If nothing is done, the government faces the risk of large numbers of innocent people losing their homes and lenders facing heavy losses as leases are forfeited.

The crisis arises because the government’s leaseholder protection legislation introduced last year, with the aim of tackling the fall-out from the Grenfell fire in 2017, does not cover three groups of people: those living in low rise flats, those who have enfranchised and those who own more than three flats. 

Unless this is put right up to 1.7 million homeowners find themselves in an uncertain position until all buildings have been assessed for fire safety issues. Not all buildings will have issues but the entire flat market has been hit as no one yet knows which buildings are affected. Those in buildings found to be unsafe are either left with a flat they can’t sell or forced to pay for thousands or even tens of thousands of pounds of costs they can’t afford in order to remediate a range of building safety defects, including any Grenfell type cladding found on low-rise blocks. They may even be living in potentially dangerous flats that need to be urgently made safe. 

The government implemented partial leaseholder protections last year, protecting only a proportion of homeowners from ruinous building safety remediation costs. However, this has created a problematic three tier flat market, of those fully protected, partially protected and not protected at all. This is causing difficulties for conveyancers obtaining professional indemnity insurance as they have to determine a buyer’s potential liability by analysing complex information relating to the status of the seller and building owner. This risks a significant percentage of conveyancers declining fresh instructions on flats, running the risk of stalling a significant part of the UK Housing Market.

The crisis could deepen next year when new banking rules take effect. The Bank of England is due to say how it will implement “Basel 3.1” standards from the beginning of 2025. These will force lenders to revalue a loan if “an event occurs that results in a likely permanent reduction in the property’s value…” With the current legislation creating a three tier flat market, widespread revaluations seem to be unavoidable. Leaseholders who are partially or wholly unprotected will suffer – and banks that have lent them money could find that their mortgages turn into bad debts that cannot be repaid.

The crisis is addressed by an amendment to the government’s bill tabled by the Earl of Lytton, a crossbench peer, scheduled for debate in the House Lords next Wednesday. It seeks to make the developer or lead contractor permanently liable for building defects at the time of construction or recover from a wide building industry levy if the builder no longer exists. This amendment would work alongside the existing government schemes but crucially aims to fund the remediation of all unsafe flats, protecting the 1.7 million currently excluded homeowners and removing the three tier flat market.

The amendment is widely supported by over 51,000 people, the National Residential Landlords Association and most recently by Property Mark who represent 17,500 property agents who wrote: “We believe that the amendments proposed by the Earl of Lytton provide greater protections for leaseholders, removing loopholes and establishing an independent body that would enforce liability, while also expanding the types of buildings where leaseholders would qualify for protections.

It is also backed by former state premier of Victoria, Australia and former co-char of their cladding task force Ted Baillieu: “Lord Lytton’s [Building Safety Remediation Scheme] has the potential to change the Building Industry for the better, forever and across the world. It is the only comprehensive and equitable solution on the table. It is not just a one off remediation it is permanent.

If this amendment is rejected next week, then the chancellor faces the difficult choice of residential valuation write downs and even people losing their homes with all the negative repercussions for the banking system or the government having to step in to bail out up to 1.7 million people and continue with the problematic three tier flat market.

To read more about the Earl of Lytton’s amendment, please visit www.buildingsafetyscheme.org

Notes to editors

According to the National Residential Landlords Association, there are approximately 1.3 million leaseholders of buildings less than 11 metres in height, along with 400,000 leaseholders of high-rise buildings who are non-qualifying due to other eligibility criteria. 

Contact details

Stephen Day 

(E) : [email protected]

(W) : www.buildingsafetyscheme.org