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GOOD PRACTICE GUIDE:
SUPPORTED BY
SUSTAINABLE
LEASEHOLD AND
LONG-TERM ASSET
MANAGEMENT
DECEMBER 2016
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zXQrHP?ԆנXQrHP?Ձ /̻9ׁHhttp://www.housingforum.org.ukׁׁЈנXQrHP?ԁ /X9ׁH (mailto:Shelagh.grant@housingforum.org.ukׁׁЈ׉E2
THE HOUSING FORUM
GOOD PRACTICE GUIDE:
SUSTAINABLE LEASEHOLD
AND LONG-TERM
ASSET MANAGEMENT
Working Group Chair
Dick Mortimer
Group Director of Development & Sales
Family Mosaic
December 2016
Acknowledgements
The Housing Forum would like to thank all who
contributed to this guide (listed at the back) and
also our sponsors Martin Arnold and calfordseaden
The Housing Forum
The Housing Forum is the only cross-sector, industry-wide
organisation that represents the entire housing supply chain
as the voice of the industry.
We have over 150 member organisations from both public
and private sectors, collaborating to inform, network and
influence with the shared objective of building more and
better homes for the nation.
The cross-sector representation of our membership equips
us especially to investigate issues that require collaboration
in order to achieve successful outcomes.
The views in this guide are the views of The Housing Forum
and have been contributed from Working Group discussions.
If you are interested in joining The Housing Forum please
contact: Chief Executive Shelagh Grant:
Shelagh.grant@housingforum.org.uk
020 7648 4070
www.housingforum.org.uk
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P4
P6
P16
P34
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
FROM DICK MORTIMER,
WORKING GROUP CHAIR
PART ONE: MAINTAINING
LONG-TERM OWNERSHIP
PART TWO: THE
CHALLENGE
OF LEASEHOLD
MANAGEMENT
CREDITS
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WORKING
4
GROUP CHAIR’S
INTRODUCTION
DICK MORTIMER, GROUP DIRECTOR OF
DEVELOPMENT AND SALES AT FAMILY
MOSAIC ON THE SCOPE OF THE GUIDE
AND WHY IT IS SO RELEVANT TODAY
With leasehold stock levels rising,
housing associations and other social
landlords face a new and critical
challenge. Do they continue to own and
manage all their existing stock for the
foreseeable future, or instead do they
take the radical step of analysing what
could be released and disposed of?
It is to help answer this and related
questions that The Housing Forum
produced this guide.
The guide has been prepared by the
Making the Most of Existing Housing
Working Group, which met throughout
the year, and draws on numerous
conversations, members’ insights and
experiences and a membership survey
into leasehold practices and issues.
We focused our attention on two
main areas: ensuring best value from
existing homes; and assessing how
leasehold management can be good
business.
It is axiomatic that we need
to ensure best use of our assets.
Housing associations need to look
carefully at how and why they
retain stock. They need to ask
themselves whether retaining stock
on a permanent basis is the right
approach for today and tomorrow.
We noted that the gradual
introduction of Right to Buy within
the housing association sector, the
continued demand for Right to Buy
in the local authority sector and
the disposal of the most valuable
local authority stock will mean a
growing proportion of both housing
association and council stock will be
leasehold. This leasehold stock will
have to be managed sustainably, such
that it generates a surplus for future
investment.
Housing associations over the
last 10 years and even more so in
the next 10 years will be adding
substantial amounts of leasehold
stock to their portfolios, both shared
ownership and outright sale. This has
been done as income/profit is needed
to replace the grant reductions from
central government. Better and more
efficient leasehold management by
social landlords will lead to more
funds being available to house people
in housing need.
The group discussed the difficult
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regeneration,
Barking, East
London, supplied
by architect
bptw partnership
5
We looked closely at how certain
DICK MORTIMER
balance of achieving customer
satisfaction while ensuring that
leaseholders pay the right amount
for their services. We looked at ways
and means of extracting extra capital
resources from our existing stock.
And we also came up with suggestions
for protecting the asset base so that
capital income can be generated
from future sales, both in terms of
value from leasehold properties and
longer-term enfranchisement of the
properties.
The rights and wrongs of stock
disposal exercised much of our time.
The issue is not about selling highvalue
council or housing association
property; it’s about recognising that
what was good for social housing 50
years ago or indeed 30 years ago may
not be what is needed for residents
in the future.
If we as a sector
manage one million
leasehold flats, then
a calculation which
assumes a £40 per
week service charge
and a failure to
collect 2% of those
charges could mean
we lose over £41m a
year. Money which
would have been
invested in new
housing.
organisations make decisions on
disposals and I hope this will promote
fruitful discussion in the sector.
‘More for less’ is a burning topic for
us all these days, and there is much
focus on how we increase housing
supply. But we must not overlook
the potential for housing unit growth
within our existing assets.
There’s money to be found if we
get this right. We did not try to put
a figure on savings or additional
income that good management
could generate. But if we as a sector
manage one million leasehold flats,
then a calculation which assumes
a £40 per week service charge and
a failure to collect 2% of those
charges would mean we lose over
£41m a year. Money which could
have been invested in new housing.
Similarly for existing stock, if we
try to maintain properties that cost
us £10,000 more than they bring in
over a 10 year period, then it only
takes 100 properties to lose £1m
from the sector.
These are difficult issues to
solve but I believe our guide offers
illumination and valuable pointers for
tackling them effectively and fairly.
I would like to thank all of the
participants from the working group
for their help and input.
I hope you find the guide useful.
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PART ONE:
MAINTAINING
LONG-TERM
OWNERSHIP
CORE HOUSING STOCK NEEDS TO BE LOOKED AFTER AS
BOTH AN ASSET TO BRING VALUE TO THE LANDLORD AND
AS GOOD HOMES FOR TENANTS. IN PART ONE, KERRY
HEATH, DEVELOPMENT AND REGENERATION DIRECTOR AT
HEXAGON HOUSING ASSOCIATION RUNS THROUGH THE
CONSIDERATIONS TO ENSURE MAXIMUM VALUE FOR BOTH.
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zXQrHP?ԏ׉EIntroduction to
8
Asset management
For most housing associations and other social
landlords, a high proportion of their homes could
reasonably be described as core stock. The homes
are of good quality design and construction, and
there is strong demand for them now that is likely
to continue into the foreseeable future. These are
the successful homes and neighbourhoods desired
by tenants and landlords alike and as assets they
dominate the financial flows in the business plan.
These properties need to be looked after as both
assets of capital value and, of course, as tenants’
homes. They should be increasing in value to the
housing association through being run as efficiently
and effectively as possible while accommodating
tenants’ needs. Because of their scale and the scope
for value gains through efficiency, these are often the
homes with the greatest potential for ‘getting more
out of what you’ve got’ - for the benefit of residents,
neighbourhoods and future customers.
This approach requires a significantly broader data
set than when assessing conditions. It involves an
understanding of current and future demand, current
operating performance, responsive repair costs,
general costs and income at a granular level, socioeconomic
conditions, resident aspirations and levels
of expectation.
In the course of this chapter we will be exploring the
best way to get the most out of core stock and will
be aiming:
l To provide guidance on drawing up an active asset
management strategy.
l To offer advice on the factors to consider when
deciding to keep or dispose of stock.
l To provide case studies highlighting different
approaches to management and disposal.
׉	 7cassandra://R8EMTRfvho01hes7ANsSun7_x26VQaZ2SrS12juaiPY7#` XQrHP?Ԑ׉E	A Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
9
Adopting a systematic and
proportionate approach
Landlords should have an active and
dynamic approach to asset management
that identifies and responds to stock
that could be adding more value, or
whose future may be unclear. As part of
their basic strategic approach, landlords
should be alert to such issues and should
have a systematic and proportionate way
of responding and reacting.
There can be many causes for concern
and degrees of seriousness. There may
be fundamental factors such as high
investment costs, high running costs or
low demand due to unsatisfactory design
or very poor location. In extreme cases,
these factors may combine to produce
a very low or even negative net present
value (NPV)1
and a social housing value
assessment that suggests the stock is and
will remain a liability rather than an asset.
But most cause-for-concern stock is
not in such an extreme position, and
the best response is likely to be much
less easy to identify than in the worst
performing cases. It may be that an
analysis has shown that apparently good
stock is producing surprisingly poor
value. Or some local issues may have
caused a sudden increase in voids and a
worrying reputational dip, for example a
rise in anti-social behaviour.
Good strategic asset management
Parkside phase 3,
Lewisham, south London.
New homes for Family
Mosaic by architect
bptw partnership
involves being aware of these issues,
considering what to do and making
brave decisions. Housing associations
have to consider what investment is
required to maintain the portfolio in
good condition and offer the amenities
to meet residents’ ever-increasing
expectations. Some buildings can only
achieve modern standards with high
levels of investment, and the investment
required may not offer good value.
In addition, there is pressure on
housing associations to assess whether
they could obtain better value by selling
a high-value property and using the
funds to support a new development,
which will offer contemporary levels of
quality, amenity and energy efficiency.
1
Net present value is the
measure used to assess
the value of assets in the
future. It compares the
amount invested today
against the present value
of the future cash receipts
from the investment. In other
words, the amount invested
is compared to the future
cash amounts after they are
discounted by a specified rate
of return.
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zXQrHP?Ԓ׉EA Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
10
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
In order to reach the best conclusions,
housing associations need to decide the
following:
l What is the strategic direction of our
organisation?
l Do we have the structure to be able to
manage activities that are more of a
commercial nature?
l Do we have the skills to manage the
range of tenure types?
l Where do we want to own property?
Are the current areas of operation
right for our future strategy?
l What standard of property condition
do we wish to offer? Are we aiming
for Decent Homes Standard, for
example, or do we aspire to offer more
than that? How can we respond to
future pressures to improve property
condition?
l Is the property mix correct for the
foreseeable future?
l What balance do we wish to achieve
between offering social rents,
affordable rents, sub market rents
and full market rents? Are there
affordability issues with any of the
current stock, perhaps as a result of
the current programme of welfare
reform?
l How satisfied are residents with
the property they are currently
living in? And do we have the
information available to interrogate
this meaningfully? Specifically, does
resident satisfaction information
allow us to determine that residents
are more satisfied with certain types,
ages or locations of property?
l What are the cost estimates of work
required to bring stock up to the
Decent Homes Standard in future?
Or the costs to go beyond this, if
that is the aspiration of the housing
association?
l If the property is sold, do we want
to and can we replace it? Do we have
a pipeline of development and/or
acquisition? Will it be in the same
geographical location or out of area?
l If redevelopment is a consideration,
will planning issues halt our plans and
send us back to the drawing board?
l Are there title restrictions, covenants,
loan or transfer issues (which should
be captured in the asset and liability
registers which housing associations
should hold) that need to be
considered?
Since the Decent Homes Standard
was introduced there have been no new
mandatory performance standards that
housing associations must meet to
improve the condition and amenities of
their existing stock, so in one sense they
are under less pressure to do so than
when the Decent Homes Standard was
introduced. In addition, the financial
pressures on housing associations from
rent cuts and welfare reforms make
justifying investments in existing stock
more difficult.
However, at the same time, there is a
continuing need to ensure that housing
association stock continues to meet
contemporary expectations, and to
remember that residents’ expectations
are likely to change over time. One
more factor to bear in mind is that
there is a new generation of residents
more equipped to use social and digital
media and who perhaps expect to have a
different relationship with their landlord.
There is no getting
away from the fact
that to identify the
best performing
assets, you need to
hold data on each
and every one of the
assets. Calculating
the property viability
assessment of each
of its properties is
really the only way a
housing association
can accurately
assess the return
on assets expected
to be assessed
as part of the
regulator’s valuefor-money
(VFM)
standard.
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A Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
11
If the costs held by a property database
are considered an accurate forecast of
repair costs, then this can serve as crucial
part of an automated tool in making
decisions about a property’s future. It
is important that these databases are
regularly updated on components that
have been replaced out-of-cycle, such as
might occur in a void property.
At the centre of a housing
Malvern House, Kenley,
London Borough of Croydon,
developed by Hexagon
Housing Association
It is important that
databases are
regularly updated
on components
that have been
replaced out-ofcycle,
such as
might occur in a
void property.
How decisions on lifetime
components and quality
maintenance can be factored in
and linked to long-term asset value
Housing associations usually have a
database that forecasts when components
need replacing and how much it may cost.
Their property viability assessments rely
on the accuracy of the calculations behind
the lifespan of components as well as the
condition of data and extent to which it is
based on actual surveys or ‘cloned’.
However, any reliable asset
management database will include
component replacements based on
surveyors’ forecasts of when an item will
need to be replaced. When a property
becomes void, it offers an opportunity
to undertake works in advance of the
forecast timing. For example, windows
which are due for replacement in three
or four years’ time could be specified for
immediate replacement as the work is
much easier to do in a vacant property
and is therefore more cost effective.
association’s plans will be realistic lifecycle
replacement timings and costs
for all the main building elements. In
many cases that will be the bulk or
the entire investment plan. However,
it is important to make allowance for
other, perhaps less predictable future
investments. Collecting and maintaining
accurate, complete and consistent
information about the whole housing
stock is crucial to effective asset
management. This does not necessarily
involve commissioning a 100% stockcondition
survey, but a robust dataset
on 100% of the assets is required to
perform sufficiently granular analysis.
There is no getting away from the
fact that to identify the best performing
assets, you need to hold data on each and
every one of the assets. Calculating the
property viability assessment of each
of its properties is really the only way
a housing association can accurately
assess the return on assets expected to
be assessed as part of the regulator’s
value-for-money (VFM) standard.
The following need to be considered:
l Standards – which are to be
applied? What are the aspirations
of the organisation? What type of
properties do you want to be letting
and to whom?
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zXQrHP?ԕ׉EA Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
12
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
A hierarchy for the maintenance of property assets
Statutory servicing and maintenance
Responsive repairs and maintenance
Void property servicing
Cyclical maintenance and redecoration
Major component planned renewals (Lifecycle renewals)
Major repairs
Improvements and remodelling, estate environment works
Re-development
Disposal assessment
Green and amber illustrate the day to
day repair and cyclical repair decisions
• “Business as usual” essential activities;
• Demand-led/reactive;
• Always completed subject to financial
control limits;
• Major component renewals referred to
major works team.
Amber
• “Business as usual” activities;
• Completed adherent to a planned
programme;
• Always completed subject to
procurement and financial control
limits.
Red
Illustrates activities where options
appraisal / NPV approach is needed
• All activities subject to options
appraisal comprising survey, feasibility
study, and financial appraisal;
• Only completed where value for money
realisable;
• Options appraisal refers to Strategic
Asset Appraisal Model.
l Do you want to maintain the
property for the short, medium
or long term? This will impact
on the standard or investment/
type of repair/replacement that
is undertaken.
l Do you want to continue to
give tenants the freedoms
and flexibility to make their
own alterations, which may
be sub-standard and poorly
installed without the appropriate
certificates and cost you money
to rectify when they leave?
Should you instead be saying,
as private landlords do: “This
is our asset. You can rent it but
we won’t give permission for
alterations unless you put them
back to how you found them at the
end of the tenancy”?
l Often, stock condition
surveys do not include the
non-core elements. For
example, the improvements to
communal areas or the outside
environment that would be
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Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
13
Getting best value
ASSET
Quantitative
NPVs
APPRAISAL
VALUE
Qualitative
Strategic
Values
necessary if you intend to offer
different forms of tenure and
need curb appeal to help attract
prospective residents.
Financial measures
The estimated 30-year NPV of
the net rental stream is a crucial
metric. Put simply, this is a financial
measure of income and expenditure
related to the specific asset over
time. Assets with a positive NPV
indicate that they can add financial
value to the business plan. This is a
very good proxy for the long-term
financial value being brought to the
social landlord and can be calculated
from mainstream information
on rents, voids, management and
maintenance costs and planned
investment.
Measuring the performance
of assets
We are clear that in the social
housing sector, assets should not be
appraised purely in financial terms.
A limitation of NPV-only models is
their disregard of the strategic value,
past investment, legacy and social
value.
An effective approach may be one
that highlights the long-term value
that different groups and types of
stock are bringing to the business
plan. A good way for a social landlord
to do this is to look at value in a way
that brings together both financial and
non-financial factors. This can provide
a rounded assessment of the value
homes are generating.
Quality measures
Qualitative measures of housing
and neighbourhood performance
are also good indicators of housing
success. The best ones to use will
depend on the individual landlord
and its context, but good examples
include turnover, demand, resident
satisfaction, energy performance,
incidences of anti-social behaviour
and neighbourhood deprivation.
Assets that display positive results
on the chosen measures are likely to
indicate value to the organisation.
Often the broad assessment
criteria chosen to evaluate asset
performances are similar but the
detailed measures and scoring
methodology vary according to
the specific drivers, objectives and
values of the individual businesses.
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zXQrHP?Ԙ׉EOCase studies
–
14
Highlighting how housing associations are
determining how to make the most of their
existing housing stock
Hexagon HA – when to repair and when to re-let
Hexagon is a traditional, developing
housing asociation working across
five South London boroughs,
developing approximately 80 homes
per year. It owns just over 4,000
homes across South-east London,
approximately 25% of which are
Victorian and Edwardian street
properties (converted flats). These
properties are usually hard to heat
because of their construction and
expensive to insulate. Typically they
are located in popular areas.
The big conundrum was whether
Hexagon should retain or replace
them? There were pros and cons to
consider:
• Replacement – difficult to
achieve, and could shift Hexagon’s
geographical focus, but high
returns from sale.
• Retention – high maintenance
costs, higher energy bills for
residents, but popular and
sustainable.
What Hexagon did to assist
with decision-making
Hexagon assessed void properties
with a view to re-letting or disposing.
The organisation found that in nearly
all cases, it made more financial
sense to sell these older properties
and provide a new home, even
when only relatively low levels of
expenditure were required to bring
the void up to a lettable standard (in
some cases as little as £5,000 was
required). Hexagon also took account
of the future costs.
The main driver for the decision to
dispose was the size of the receipt
that would be generated from selling
these high-value properties.
Hexagon wanted to protect the
family silver. It wished to develop a
method of taking into account the
broad social-value attributes of its
housing stock when deciding on
disposals, so that these decisions
are not simply made on long-term
financial grounds. Hexagon also
wanted the method to be capable
of being applied with data it already
held or could easily obtain with only
minimal changes in its practices
– basically, the solution had to be
practical.
Hexagon devised a methodology
for assessing the social value of
these properties alongside the
financial value of disposing of the
property and building a new home.
With input from staff in housing
management, maintenance and stock
improvement departments, it came
up with a suite of relevant measures
that were weighted and the scores
fed into a lookup table, which formed
the basis for deciding whether it was
better value to retain or dispose.
The next challenge was deciding on
the relevant indicators of social value
that should be considered.
The impact of this was that
disposal outcomes subsequently
slowed down as only properties
needing a significant investment
were sold off.
Hexagon’s view is that as an
organisation which holds assets,
it should be clear about how each
asset performs financially and utilise
this data to make decisions about
retention, depending on the drivers
for considering any properties for
disposal at any given time. These
drivers will be an influencing factor on
the extent to which the social value
criteria feeds into the final decisionmaking.
There
is no single measure
of social value; a unique set of
indicators needs to be developed
that reflects the objectives of each
organisation and its stakeholders.
Within Hexagon’s disposals
procedure, social value is considered
according to the following factors:
• Concentration of stock -is the
unit in a block or street with other
Hexagon units?
• Is the unit family-sized?
• Is the rest of property all tenanted/
part already-sold to a leaseholder?
• Is the property in an unprotected
flood risk area?
• Quality assessment, are there 21st
century facilities in the home?
• Location such as the proximity to
shops and transport (the Public
Transport Accessibility Level
[PTAL] indicator may be of interest
here).
Other factors which can be
considered, (although they are not at
Hexagon) include:
• Health outcomes – this is difficult
to assess in a meaningful way for a
dispersed stock portfolio across a
broadly homogenous geographical
area.
• Level of worklessness.
• Level of anti-social behaviour.
• Locational indicators, including:
average gross income per week;
percentage of the population
claiming housing benefit;
percentage of households
in poverty; percentage of
economically active in (full or
part time) work; percentage of
pupils achieving five GCSEs at
Grades A – C; percentage of those
economically active with limiting
long-term illnesses; and the total
number of reported crimes.
• Management time.
• Access to public services.
• Access to green spaces – this
may be a useful determinant of
locational quality.
• Long-term demand issues.
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policies in place for
disposal considerations
Amicus Horizon owns and
manages just under 28,000
homes across London, Kent
and Sussex, offering a range
of different housing choices
including affordable homes,
shared ownership and extra
care.
Amicus Horizon’s stock
analysis tool assesses
which properties are viable
or unviable in the long term.
It looks at a range of data
including: rental income;
historic maintenance
expenditure; future planned
maintenance expenditure;
turnover of tenancies; and
energy efficiency.
The tool ranks properties
according to performance
scores against these criteria,
and shows which properties
are performing well and which
are presenting issues.
Amicus Horizon says: “We’ll
carry out a detailed options
appraisal on poorly performing
properties before we take
any decisions. We’ll consider
whether we are able to improve
the property or if sale is the
best option. We’ll examine all
information to ensure we make
the right decision for each
property. We’ll usually want
to sell properties that aren’t
viable in the long term.
“When we decide to
sell, we’ll ensure we gain
sufficient value from the sales
programme to be able to build
more new properties than we
sell.”
How SDS Stock Profiler
has improved Sovereign’s
approach to asset
management
Sovereign owns and manages around
38,000 homes across the South and
South-west, and aims to add 1,000
new properties each year for the next
three years. One of the largest housing
associations in England, it offers
a wide range of tenures including
affordable rent, shared ownership,
private rent and outright sale.
To support its strategic asset
management strategy, Sovereign has
worked with Shelton Development
Services in the evolution of NPV modelling
by jointly developing the SDS Stock
Profiler.
Strategic asset management is
about efficiency and adding business
and social value, and this value can be
defined as a combination of financial,
social and political factors. Clearly,
each of these value components
has different weighting according
to the asset under review, but the
base information in all cases is the
financial model. This needs to be
flexible and able to align the inputs
with the organisation’s business plan,
and apply a consistent approach
throughout the asset’s life.
To deliver the financial modelling,
many organisations develop complex
spreadsheets but this presents
problems because of their size and
stability. For example, manipulating
data is time-consuming and there is
often less flexibility and more potential
for error.
Sovereign and SDS wanted something
that would deal with large volumes of data
quickly, flexibly and safely. It also had to
align easily to business plan data and
deliver end-to-end modelling within the
asset life.
The SDS Stock Profiler system helps
the strategic asset management team
to fulfil its principle purpose, namely
understanding the value that each
asset contributes to the business.
It allows investment decisions to be
made, by enabling an understanding of
the financial impact of these decisions
and thus assessing the overall value.
The model is used in a number of
different ways. Macro-level asset
management has resulted in a stock
rationalisation exercise across a
number of tenures. And on a micro
level, investment, remodelling or
disposal options for individual
properties can be evaluated and
correct-value decisions made.
Five top tips
for assessing
whether to keep
or dispose of
stock
1
3
5
Have clear
processes
policies and
procedures
in place for
decision
making
relating to
retaining
or selling
properties.
It is essential to
know how stock
is performing.
Do not
underestimate
the importance
of collecting
accurate data.
2
4
Take account of
the future needs
of residents.
Take account of
business needs.
Do you need
to dispose of
assets because
the business
plan demands it
to invest in new
stock? Or to
support future
development?
Ensure you
take into
consideration
the social value
of the assets.
As housing
associations
we are social
businesses and
this should not
be lost.
15
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THE CHALLENGE
OF LEASEHOLD
MANAGEMENT
AN ESSENTIAL AND GROWING ASPECT OF MAXIMISING
ASSETS IS THE EFFICIENT MANAGEMENT OF LEASEHOLD
PROPERTIES. JIM MARTIN, EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN AT
MARTIN ARNOLD, OFFERS GUIDANCE FOR GOOD PRACTICE
AND SUGGESTS HOW TO AVOID THE PITFALLS.
17
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zXQrHP?Ԟ׉E18
Why leasehold management
is a growing issue
Like councils before them, housing associations
have over the past 10 years added
substantial numbers of leasehold stock
to their portfolios, both through shared
ownership and outright sale, as they have
sought to bring in income to replace the
grant reductions from central government.
Housing associations will be doing this
even more in the next 10 years as they seek
to meet the needs of those who cannot buy
homes or pay market rents.
The arrival of Right to Buy within
the housing association sector, the
continued demand for Right to Buy
in the local authority sector and
the disposal of more local authority
stock means a growing proportion of
social housing providers’ stock will be
leasehold. This leasehold stock will have
to be managed efficiently, such that
it generates a surplus for investment
in housing. This requires a long-term
management strategy for the stock, with
careful attention being paid to sinking
funds, stock rationalisation, planned
maintenance and keeping an asset
register under constant review.
Because of the changes in legislation
and Government policy, flexible
tenure stock is the future of many
housing association and other social
landlords and they will have to seek
development funding from other
sources. One of these sources could be
surplus generated from the successful
management of the leasehold
properties in their stock. Better and
more efficient leasehold management
by social landlords should lead to more
funds being available to house people in
housing need. It will also lead to better
and more efficient management of
rented stock as lessons are learned and
quality thresholds rise.
Social landlords need to ensure
best use of their assets. Housing
associations, in particular, need to
look carefully at how and why they
should retain elements of their stock.
Successful leasehold management
will be a key factor in the future
sustainability of any multi-tenure social
housing provider. In a flexible-tenure
future, if the management of leasehold
properties does not generate a surplus,
this will mean the rented stock will be
effectively subsidising the leaseholders.
Our Working Group at The Housing
Forum came together with the aim
of highlighting the challenges of
leasehold management and to offer
our collective experience and advice to
social landlords to help them develop
a strategy to manage leasehold
properties efficiently.
Thus, the aims of this chapter are:
l To help social landlords think
more laterally about leasehold
management and its potential for
their housing stock.
l To understand that successful
leasehold management is not easy.
It has a constantly evolving set
of parameters: legal, contractual,
standards, energy and cost. Social
landlords need practical advice on
how best to develop a strategy for
successful leasehold management.
l To highlight some ideas, some
problems and some evidence of good
practice to help social landlords
develop a successful leasehold
management strategy.
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Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
19
Ensuring successful recovery of
expenditure for major works
Social landlords often fail to recover
legitimate costs from leaseholders, for a
variety of reasons. This may be because
they fail to follow the correct procedures
for major works under Section 20 of the
Landlord and Tenant Act, or because
they are undercharging for management
administration fees and service charges,
which means that the time they spend
recovering expenditure from leaseholders
is being subsidised by tenants. It is worth
remembering that the relationship between
the landlord and the leaseholder is a
commercial one and should be considered
as such. Here are a few areas where social
landlords can find themselves out of pocket.
Poor accounting for
works and services
As an example, major repair works are
complex and take time to deliver. Many
landlords feel that because of the length
of time involved and the complexity,
items which should be charged to the
leaseholders often get absorbed by the
landlord. To stop this happening, landlords
need a clear understanding from the
outset of what is chargeable and what
is not chargeable. This will require an
understanding of the repair covenants
in the lease. Once the understanding is
developed, a very detailed system of data
recording and management needs to be
put in place. This includes strict adherence
to the correct service of notices, formal
communication channels and a clear and
well-defined recovery mechanism.
Gosport Towers,
Hampshire, Hyde Housing,
supplied by Martin Arnold
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zXQrHP?ԡ׉E@A Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
20
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
Failure to follow properly Section
20 consultation
Many landlords report that they have
failed to recover the full costs of works
because of a failure to follow Section
20 consultation properly. Specialist
legal advice should be sought to
ensure the Section 20 notices and the
supporting information are correct. Many
leaseholders take their own legal advice
on receipt of Section 20 notices. The law
requires that leaseholders paying variable
service charges must be consulted before
a landlord carries out qualifying works or
enters into a long-term agreement for the
provision of services.
Detailed regulations have been
produced under Section 20 of the
Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 (as
amended by Section 151 of the
Commonhold and Leasehold Reform
Act 2002) which set out the precise
procedures landlords must follow; these
are the Service Charges (Consultation
Requirements) (England) Regulations
2003. Similar regulations have been
enacted in Wales.
The regulations separate the
consultation procedures into four
schedules, each covering different
contracts. The requirements in the
regulations are defined under three
headings:
l Qualifying works.
l Qualifying long-term agreements.
l Qualifying works under long-term
agreements.
Concerns over affordability
Many social landlords have concerns
regarding affordability. The leaseholder
is required by the terms of the lease to
pay the service charges and ground rent.
Remember, the relationship between
the landlord and the leaseholder is a
commercial one and should be considered
as such.
Any non-payment will result in
a breach of the lease. The landlord
or residents’ management company
will be required to collect the service
charges and should therefore initially
try proactively to seek to get them
paid - for example, finding easy ways
for payments to be made, such as direct
debit or making a concession as long
as a precedent is not set. Many leases
allow late payment fees to be charged
by the landlord where leaseholders do
not pay on time. Often the payment
of service charges can be delayed for a
variety of reasons; for example, when
someone has died, a property has been
sold, a leaseholder is made redundant or
an investment landlord cannot attract a
tenant. It is therefore important that the
landlord, managing agent or residents’
management company investigates
proactively.
Where flats and apartments are subject
to mortgages, the leaseholder will not
only be breaching the terms of the
lease but also the mortgage company’s
requirements. Mortgage companies
should be made aware of the debt, as they
will be keen to protect their investment
to avoid any possible forfeiture of the
lease and the loss of their security.
They may even offer to add the debt to
their client’s mortgage with or without
Many landlords
report that they
have failed to
recover the full
costs of works
because of a failure
to follow Section
20 consultation
properly. Specialist
legal advice should
be sought to
ensure the Section
20 notices and
the supporting
information are
correct.
׉	 7cassandra://Xe5HJ_zY7e27QcBeM9bi2zhVR9NyUxDacAuwZOPSy_I1*` XQrHP?Ԣ׉EA Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
21
Many social
landlords have
concerns regarding
affordability. The
leaseholder is
required by the
terms of the lease
to pay the service
charges and ground
rent. Remember,
the relationship
between the
landlord and the
leaseholder is a
commercial one
and should be
considered as such.
a leaseholder’s consent. Legal action is
usually sought by seeking a county court
judgment (CCJ) which may award the
monies owed plus fixed costs (for claims
under £5,000) and late payment interest
to be paid by the defaulting leaseholder.
Once a CCJ is granted by the court, a
landlord’s solicitor will have a variety of
options to enforce the court’s order.
In most cases if there is a mortgage
on the property it is likely that the
mortgage provider will be given a further
opportunity by the landlord’s solicitor
to protect the mortgagee’s interest and
pay on behalf of the leaseholder the full
amount owing including the solicitor’s
costs, interest, administration charges
and, of course, all the arrears of service
charges and ground rent. If payment still
remains outstanding following the court’s
determination a number of enforcement
measures are available.
Lack of adequate reserve funds
The majority of housing associations
have set up appropriate sinking funds
to cover future maintenance works.
However, and particularly with smaller
housing associations and other social
landlords who find themselves with a
major repair programme to carry out,
there is sometimes a lack of adequate
reserve funds to pay for the works.
It is likely that a loan may have to be
negotiated or grants obtained. Housing
associations who find themselves in this
position must focus on full recovery of
the cost of the works from leaseholders.
Failure to maintain a
property adequately
Landlords may fail to recover the
full costs of a repair if a leaseholder
successfully claims the landlord
has failed to maintain the property
adequately. This is a common ground for
appeal by leaseholders. The best defence
is for the landlord to have a current
asset management plan or strategy, with
a predicted programme of repairs and
replacements.
The asset management plan is likely
to include day-to-day repairs, planned
maintenance and long-term component
renewal. Having taken the appropriate
professional advice and put an asset
management plan in place, the landlord
must adhere to it. The question of
whether a landlord has failed to maintain
a property is generally decided by the
first-tier property tribunal, based on
expert opinion.
Inadequate collection processes
and overgenerous payment terms
Housing associations and other social
landlords do not always have the best
track record when collecting debts, and
sometimes offer overgenerous payment
terms. This may be understandable as
social landlords, in general, come from
a background where helping people
in housing need is a priority and it
is sometimes difficult for individual
officers to implement collection
processes from people who may well be
cash poor (although asset rich). There
is no simple solution to this problem
except to educate officers that they
must be commercial, fair, reasonable and
consistent throughout.
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zXQrHP?Ԥ׉EaA Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
22
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
Undercharging for management
services and admin fees
Housing associations may find it
difficult to assess the time they spend
dealing with leaseholder issues and the
administration fees associated with
those costs. Accurately recording time
spent on each project is the only way
that this issue can be addressed. If
leaseholders are not charged for the full
cost of management time and services,
together with administration costs, it can
mean tenants’ rents effectively subsidise
leaseholders’ services.
Resolving the overlapping roles
for management charging
It can also be difficult for housing
associations when external agents and
housing management staff are being
used. But if the landlord’s officers do not
leave the external agents to deal with
matters, then they are effectively using
their time but are not recovering costs
for that.
Again, in order to be fair to everyone,
officers need to be trained to understand
that they must be consistently
commercial, fair and reasonable
throughout. Writing off costs is
something a commercial landlord would
not do. To successfully manage leasehold
property, social landlords need to adopt a
commercial mind-set.
That said, housing associations are not
always providing value for money for
leaseholders because:
l Services are often delivered through
inflexible partnering contracts
designed for social housing.
l On some Section 106 schemes there
is the risk of double charging of
shared owners by managing agents
and landlords.
l Asset management focuses on social
housing standards, health and safety,
Decent Homes, environmental
efficiency and stock condition. It does
not tend to consider the needs or
views of leaseholders.
Balancing the provision
and management of
services and costs
Some housing associations can have
a very poor track record in managing
leaseholder services, such as service
charges, service of formal notices,
consultation, billing and debt collection.
This may be understandable: they
want to help people, and provide low
cost housing, so getting tough with
leaseholder problems can conflict with
their natural instincts.
l Accounting and partnering
practice on contracts works mean
it is not easy to be transparent and
demonstrate good value.
This can affect satisfaction levels and
even create the false impression that
leaseholders are subsidising tenants.
Some working group members were
concerned about charging management
fees on the cost of the works, which can
often be in addition to any professional
fees or preliminaries. This is a major
bone of contention with leaseholders.
Many working group members felt that
there were savings to be made in the
Some working
group members
were concerned
about charging
management fees
on the cost of
the works, which
can often be in
addition to any
professional fees or
preliminaries.
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Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
23
This task would be well suited to a
working group of The Housing Forum
who could co-ordinate ideas.
Packington Estate
regeneration, Islington,
North London, Hyde
Housing. Image supplied
by Rydon the contractor/
developer. Designed by
architect, Pollard
Thomas Edwards.
process and a reduction in management
fee should be offered. Others felt that
if the landlord is entitled to recover
these costs, they should indeed seek
to recover. All working group members
agreed, however, that challenges and
disputes will diminish if the landlord
is transparent with costings and can
demonstrate to leaseholders the value
they receive for the services.
Social landlords adopt widely differing
approaches to Section 20 consultation.
One that our group came across insists
on having individual block costs for a
cyclical redecoration programme, which,
while being a belt-and-braces approach,
is expensive and administratively
intensive. It struck us that it could lead
to greater efficiencies across the sector
if a group of social landlords jointly
developed a robust way of dealing with
Section 20 and other leasehold issues.
Optimising leasehold reversions
One of the major sources of income
that housing associations and social
landlords will increasingly be able to
tap into in the coming years is the
money they will be able to collect from
extending the length of leases. The
importance of considering this aspect
of a landlord’s work should not be
underestimated. With an unexpired
lease of less than 80 years, it is very
difficult for a purchaser to obtain a
mortgage. This means that a leaseholder
who is at 80 years unexpired or
approaching that milestone will need to
agree a lease extension.
The value of this extension is called
the leasehold reversion and it will
become a major aspect of the social
landlord’s business negotiating these
reversions.
The basic calculation every landlord
should carry out and keep under
constant review is the value of leasehold
reversion plus any income versus cost
of maintaining, administering and
insuring the property. This calculation
will inform the landlord’s overall asset
management strategy and help decide
whether to repair or dispose.
This is a complex calculation but it
offers the landlord an opportunity to
share in the value of the property. As a
landlord’s leasehold stock matures, such
lease extensions should offer a strong
stream of long-term income.
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zXQrHP?ԧ׉E \A Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
24
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
׉	 7cassandra://3bBCiZX-PbExkHhu8BE6_4Zz0N9dK3UfGt0JxSsOO8k>M` XQrHP?Ԩ׉EiA Housing Forum Good Practice Guide
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
25
Like local
authorities, housing
associations will
have to offer the
Right to Buy to
their tenants, and
this will increase
the number of
leaseholders
significantly.
The premium to be paid for the new
lease, according to Schedule 13, Part
II of the Leasehold Reform, Housing
and Urban Development Act 1993 (as
amended), is the total of:
l The reduction in the value of the
landlord’s interest in the flat; that
is, the difference between the value
of the interest now with the present
lease and the value of the interest
after the grant of the new lease with
the extra years.
l Compensation for loss arising from
the grant of the new lease.
The reduction in the value of the
landlord’s interest is:
l The loss of the income from the
ground rent for the remainder of the
original term; plus
l The loss due to the additional
years waiting for the reversion (the
surrender of the flat at the expiry of
the term).
The marriage value is the value of the
leasehold reversion when two or more
value components are blended together.
This value is taken as the potential for
increase in the value of the flat arising
from the grant of the new lease; the act
requires that this ‘profit’ should be shared
between the parties. The proportion of
the split of marriage value between the
landlord and the leaseholder is legally set
at 50:50.
In the calculation of the marriage
Maydew House,
Southwark. Image
supplied by calfordseaden
value, the leaseholder’s and landlord’s
valuers will rely on local knowledge and
experience to assess the increase in value
in the flat arising from the new lease.
The compensation is to provide
remedy to the landlord for any other
reduction in the value of his interest
in other property (other flats in the
building or the building itself) and any
loss or damage arising from the grant
of the new lease. It is difficult to find
examples of where a landlord could claim
compensation since he will, in most
cases, retain the freehold. Probably the
only possibilities could be a claim for
loss of opportunity for redevelopment
potential or for a reconversion of a house
containing flats back to a single dwelling.
The act does not require a formal
valuation to be carried out but it
would be prudent to obtain one. The
valuation will provide the basis for
the leaseholder’s offer to the landlord
contained in the tenant’s notice.
The legislation requires that the value
of the interest to be acquired should be
determined in accordance with general
market values – assuming a willing
vendor and a willing purchaser. The
principles of the act are not to provide
a forced bargain for the leaseholder but
to compensate the landlord adequately
for the reduction in the value of his
property – a fair price based as closely
as practicable on open market values.
The essential difficulty is the assessment
of an open market value in the artificial
situation created by the imposition of the
leaseholder’s rights.
The importance of managing
ground rent as a source of
income
It is important that housing associations
should be also be thinking about the
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26
Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
long-term income stream and how
to optimise that by the setting of the
ground rent.
A ground rent is created when a
freehold piece of land or a building is sold
on a long lease. A building can be either
sold as a single house or divided into flats.
Ground rents were originally the result
of leases sold by the owners of landed
estates to speculative builders in the
early 1900s, but are now also a feature of
Victorian house conversions, apartment
blocks and modern estates. Ground rents
can also be reversionary investments.
Most landlords would know them if they
have invested in flat-schemes in cities.
The individual leases provide an annual
payment, known as ground rent, which
in turn provides a source of income to
the freeholder. It is this accumulative
long-term income stream that attracts
investors. The investment value of the
ground rent income stream can be 1-2%
of the gross development value of the
apartment scheme and the payment is
usually made annually.
Ground rents are a product of the
freehold/leasehold structure in English
law. The ground rent is an annual
payment to the landlord in consideration
of the grant of a long lease, with the
landlord ultimately benefitting from the
reversion at expiry.
Long leases are drafted by
housebuilders on disposal of flats, or
in some cases houses. Over the past
30 years housebuilders have become
increasingly aware of the investment
value that can be created by drafting
their leases in a manner that secures a
ring-fenced income stream for future
freehold owners. This is particularly the
case over the last 10 to 15 years as
leases have been optimised in terms
of the rent review clauses, notice
fees and other provisions in order to
maximise freehold sales receipts for
the developer.
The market has always existed
but was considered specialist. There
is a greater awareness of the value
of ground rents as a long-term
investment, particularly among
investors like housing associations
or councils which manage large
diversified portfolios. The key
to setting ground rent is in the
successful drafting of the lease, regular
communication with leaseholders and
effective collection.
Failure to fully
recover the costs of
leaseholder works will
mean the rented stock
is cross-subsidising
the leasehold stock
and this cannot be
allowed to happen.
Two reports showing
the importance of
ground rents
Managing leasehold services
following outcomes of the
Right to Buy which allows
for a commercial return
Like local authorities, housing
associations will have to offer the
Right to Buy to their tenants, and
this will increase the number of
leaseholders significantly. A very
different mind-set is required when
managing housing stock with a view
to allowing a commercial return.
Whether that return is called surplus,
margin or profit, the point is that
long-term stock management and
maintenance of leaseholder housing
must be paid for by the leaseholders.
Failure to fully recover the costs of
leaseholder works will mean the
rented stock is cross-subsidising the
leasehold stock and this cannot be
The Evolving Residential
Ground rent market,
spring 2013 (CBRE)
http://www.cbre.eu/
portal/res rep.show
report?report id=2854
Ground rents uncovered (Savills)
http://www.groundrents
incomefund.com/wp-content/
uploads/2012/10/SavillsResearch-Ground-RentsUncovered-WinterSpring-2010.pdf
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Sustainable Leasehold and Long-term Asset Management
27
Transformation of the
Loughborough Park
Estate, Brixton, South
London. Image supplied
by bptw partnership
allowed to happen.
Local councils have for many years
had to grapple with the challenges
of leaseholder housing: the London
Borough of Lambeth, for example, has
approximately 30,000 homes, of which
almost 10,000 are leasehold.
Housing associations will have to focus
on a number of specific issues in dealing
with the impact of the Right to Buy:
l The accuracy of accounting data and
reporting.
l Correct apportionment of costs.
l Managing sales and resales; values,
fees, administration costs, lease
terms, lease extensions, ground rents.
l Differentiating services and products
– some private landlords are seeking
to add services to their list of
management tasks such as concierge
services including package collection,
dry cleaning and security, sales and
resale agent services.
l Section 20 notices and the
management of cash flow. The cost
of the works often places a great
financial strain on the freeholder’s
cash flow. Careful service of notices
and discounts for early payments can
ease the problem.
l A different mind-set is needed for
different tenures – one size does not
fit all. Good property management
is key, along with high levels of
communication and effective collection.
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–
28
Highlighting the challenges for leaseholder
recovery and how they could be avoided
The need for materials
guarantees and proper
maintenance
A working group member was
involved with a package of external
works proposed to an apartment
block carried out under a qualifying
long-term agreement (contractor
partnering framework). The
feasibility report outlined flat roof
covering would be replaced owing
to its condition. A Section 20 notice
of intention was issued to various
leaseholders on the block on this
basis. The procedures of the client in
this scenario are that an initial bill for
the works is issued at the same time
as the notice of intention, charging
leaseholders for the works based on
the initial estimated scope of works
with the final bill being issued at
agreement of the final account.
One leaseholder challenged this
proposal upon receipt of his initial
bill as he recalled paying towards
new roof coverings which included
a 10-year materials guarantee, less
than 10 years earlier. The freeholder
was unable to produce the guarantee
paperwork, and in any event, had
carried out no maintenance to the
roof so the guarantee would have
been invalidated. As a result, the
cost of the roof works could not be
reclaimed.
The key message for social
landlords is that they must be
rigorous in their keeping and filing of
maintenance paperwork as the costs
of re-charging qualifying works can
only be claimed where the building
has been adequately maintained.
Additionally, recharge would have
been possible had the leaseholder
not raised the challenge.
Charging leaseholders for
work they do not feel is
required
A working group member’s
window-replacement project in an
apartment block hit problems when
leaseholders objected to being
charged. Although the windows
maintained by the freeholder were
mostly in a poor condition, some
leaseholders had maintained theirs
well and they were in significantly
better condition. The leaseholders
claim it’s unfair to have to pay
towards the costs of new windows.
Again, this case underlines the
problems that can arise if buildings
are not maintained. We anticipate
this one will go to a first-tier tribunal.
Charging leaseholders
for others’
entry-phones
A door entry-phone system was
installed in an apartment block and
the leaseholders were charged an
equal portion of the costs. However,
a number of ground floor flats had
their own front entrance door leading
directly to public space, not to a
communal area, so were not served
by the new entry phone system. A
leaseholder in the block challenged
successfully that no one should
pay towards a door entry-phone
where no system is installed to their
apartment. Apportioning costs can
be a minefield. Housing associations
always need to be aware that
leaseholders are looking to be
treated fairly and reasonably and
looking for good value for money.
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in Lewisham, southLondon,
Asra Housing
Association. Image
supplied by Martin Arnold
29
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Leaseholders unfairly
subsidising total
project costs
Advance charging for
refurbishments
An external works project across
a number of separate blocks on
an estate had the access scaffold
costs included on the prelims
element of the contractor’s
proposals, which was then
calculated pro-rata across
all blocks based on number
of dwellings. A leaseholder
challenge was raised, since the
scope of works varied across the
blocks and the extent of scaffold
varied significantly between
the blocks. It was held that
given the variance in scope, the
scaffold costs should have been
considered on a block by block
basis. Costs therefore had to
be revised. This case highlights
that it is hard to generalise when
apportioning costs.
A working group member has
a client who chose to raise
leaseholder charges in advance
of refurbishing its large property
portfolio. It did so because
waiting until completion of the
works to recoup the costs would
impact heavily on its cash flow.
In accordance with Section 20
of the Landlord and Tenant Act,
the new charges are based on an
initial estimated scope of works
and associated costs. A final bill
is submitted upon completion
of the works and agreement of
the final account, at which point
adjustment of the account is
made.
For this all to proceed
smoothly, the following issues
need careful handling:
• The initial scope of work
needs to be reasonably
accurate, otherwise
significant changes in
charges between initial and
final bills can be open to
challenge.
• Changing the scope of works
during work phases can have
a significant change in costs
and may require additional
Section 20 notices being
served, which can lead to
delays to the works.
• Leaseholders can be out of
pocket for significant periods
if costs reduce between initial
and final bills.
Thrive Homes’ environmental
improvements, Otley Way,
South Oxhey, Watford
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Failure to clarify who is
responsible for repairs in units
procured through Section 106
A housing association purchased
66 homes through a Section 106
agreement from a speculative
developer in 2008. The homes
were part of a 220-unit scheme.
The developer and contractors
are all in administration. The
freeholder has set up a
separate legal entity and
appointed a managing agent.
There have been significant
problems with leaks from the
cold water supply to the blocks
leading to the insurer refusing to
insure against escape of water.
Additionally, there is leaking
from roof terraces into four of the
properties.
Shared owners are not
prepared to accept the insurance
situation or the uninhabitable
homes. The freeholder has not
got funds to deal with the issue.
The housing association has
significant equity stake in the
properties, but no management
control or legal responsibility
to pay. Shared owners have
individual leases with the housing
association and have been
pressing for action through them.
There is no straightforward
solution here. This case study
demonstrates the consequences
of not procuring freehold, or of
not using the lease to clarify
legal responsibility for repairs,
maintenance and insurance.
The situation would have been
improved if there was a clearer
legal separation between the
role of the housing association in
enabling the shared ownership
purchase and the duty of the
freeholder to manage the
building. However, there is often
still an incentive for a housing
association to be involved to
protect its financial investment in
the unsold equity.
In this case, the housing
association has provided
financial and technical support
to investigate and to some extent
have underwritten the insurance,
so the homes are saleable.
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1 2 3 5
4
Hone your
communications
strategy –
communication with
leaseholders needs to be
clear, unambiguous and,
very importantly, timely.
Develop an
understanding of
leasehold – it is complex
and relies on landlords to
collect precise data and
accurate Information,
receive good advice
and develop a full
understanding of what is
involved.
Understand definition
of terms – many of the
terms used in leases and
leasehold negotiations
are obscure but have
precise meanings.
Ten top tips for
successful leasehold
management
Draw up a strategy for
sustainable leasehold
management – this must
form part of the overall
asset management
strategy.
Engagement is key
– every effort must
be made to build
communication into a
two-way engagement
with leaseholders. The
first time they hear about
works should not be
when they get the bill.
Hold meetings to talk
about proposed works,
rather than simply send
letters.
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contracts clearly –
building contracts need
to recognise and spell
out the leaseholder’s
rights and obligations.
7 8 9 10
6
Consider carefully how
works are procured
– procurement of
leaseholder works and
the use of qualifying
long-term agreements
are a developing area
of law and need to be
considered carefully.
Opting for a long-term
framework, for example,
could provide benefits
in areas like social value
but may be challenged
by leaseholders for not
yielding the cheapest
price.
Keep the works
to programme–
leaseholders tend to
be very vigilant while
the works are being
delivered, so careful
management of the
delivery of works is
essential. Landlords can
of course use this to their
advantage
Draw up a plan for billing
for the work – interim
billing and final billing
are options for billing
and key stages towards
full recovery. Great care
must be taken to get the
information in the bills
correct.
Put a recovery strategy
in place – this needs
to be agreed and
communicated to
leaseholders from
the outset. Included
should be early payment
discounts, interest
charges etc.
33
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Credits and Contributors
The Housing Forum is indebted to the many
people who contributed to the content, writing and
production of this publication.
Those who contributed and
supported us:
working group chair:
Dick Mortimer
Group Director of Development
& Sales
Family Mosaic
contributors and commentators:
Jim Martin
Executive Chairman
Martin Arnold
Kerry Heath
Development & Regeneration
Director
Hexagon
editor and production:
Denise Chevin
design:
Mark Bergin
Seventy Eight Design
markbergin.carbonmade.com
illustration:
Marcus Marritt
marcusmarritt.com
With thanks to:
All case study contributors and
to our sponsors Martin Arnold
and calfordseaden
This report has been developed
by members of the Making
the Most of Existing Housing
Working Group
Graham Acus
Director
Hunters
Kevan Allaway
Senior Associate
Faithorn Farrell Timms LLP
Peter Arnold
Head of Market Development
Rydon
Steve Barford
Executive Director - Property
Sovereign
Jo Barrett
Operations Director
Thrive Homes
Dave Bateman
Head of Planned Investment
Affinity Sutton
Tony Battle
Joint Managing Director
Kind and Company
Mark Bottomley
Consultant
bptw
Paul Finch
Managing Director
Sanctuary Maintenance
Contractors
Pete Gardom
Project Champion
City-Insights
Kerry Heath
Development & Regeneration Director
Hexagon Housing Association
Alex Burton
Partner
calfordseaden
Adrian Cheetham
Head of Maintenance
Operations North
Sanctuary Maintenance
Contractors
Michael Cleaver
Director of Home Ownership
Amicus Horizon
Steve Coleman
Director
Takeparts
Colin Farrell
Senior Partner
Faithorn Farrell Timms LLP
Mat Fenner
Director, Surveying
Silver
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Working
Groups
Justin Kelly
Partner
bptw
Jim Martin
Executive Chairman
Martin Arnold
Gavin Missons
Housing Policy Manager
Sevenoaks District Council
Geoffrey Murray
New Business and Development
Opportunities Consultant
Silver
Daren Nathan
Development Director
Durkan
Leigh-Anne Pattison
New Business Project Director
The Hyde Group
Andrew Sharp
Business Development Director
Osborne
Katie Smith
Assistant Director,
Building Surveying
Silver
Lettice Swan
Business Development
Executive
MDA Consulting
Alex Thomas
Key Account Manager
Worcester Bosch
working group support:
Shelagh Grant
Chief Executive
The Housing Forum
shelagh.grant@
housingforum.org.uk
Charlotta Andresson
Project Executive
The Housing Forum
charlotta.andresson@
housingforum.org.uk
Printed by Hartgraph Ltd.
Member organisations
can join any Working
Group and to register
your interest in
participating, please
contact:
Shelagh Grant
shelagh.grant@
housingforum.org.uk
Charlotta Andresson
charlotta.andresson@
housingforum.org.uk
The Housing Forum
Working Groups
produce influential
reports for our
members, which
are recognised at
the highest level
in government and
throughout the
industry.
The topical
agendas continue
to draw in external
specialists from
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government and trade
associations.
35
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London
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info@housingforum.org.uk
www.housingforum.org.uk
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