
Proposed new legislation from the EU could force UK landlords to convert rental properties for disabled tenants that they don’t have. That
could mean fitting
houses with
entrance ramps,
wider doors, grab
rails, stairlifts,
signs in Braille,
redesigning
bathrooms and
kitchens and even
repositioning
electricity sockets
as if they were
tenanted by disabled people,
even if they were not.
“This is particularly
wasteful and excessive when
landlords cannot possibly
know in advance what work may be needed to cater for a
tenant who, in most cases, will
probably never appear
anyway,” says Richard Jones,
lawyer and secretary of the
Residential
Landlords
Association – whose
members own over
100,000 private
rented properties
throughout the UK.
The RLA has
asked the European
Union to think
again.
Their
response, part of a
consultation on a proposed
directive, asks: “how much
would all this cost, who pays
for it, and is it really necessary
in the first place?”
Sensible questions!