You are correct, professional, large-scale landlords with staff and an expert legal team can deal with this. Problem tenants will be a cost of the business and factored in to how much rent is charged on the portfolio overall in the same way as an employer factors in the risk of underperforming staff. In fact the cost of RTB compensation to difficult tenants will be factored in as well as I'm sure employers factor in WRC awards. It'll be far more professional overall. Monthly inspections, formal letters to tenants telling them to rectify faults etc. (A tenant of mine who relocated from Dublin and rented from one of the funds told me about this system).Yes. But, in the same way, employment protection laws make it difficult to get rid of underpeforming employees. Publicans will tell you that equal treatment legislation makes it difficult to exclude problematic customers, etc, etc.
I think the idea here is that if you have professional, large-scale landlording, dealing with a proportion of less-than-desirable tenants within the framework of the regulatory regime for landlording, including protections for tenants, has to be managed as a cost of the business.
I had an inspection. The property failed. I was issued with an 'Improvement Notice' ie. things which I must do to be incompliance with the Guidelines. One of the items was weed the garden, so I can only take it that as the the property failed the inspection and the improvement notice was issued to me, weeding the garden is my responsibility.Slight deviation here: I see mention above of "Provision of furniture is mandatory" - and elsewhere that weeding was the responsibility of the landlord.
Hasn't the RTB heard about rewilding and no mow May?One of the items was weed the garden,
One of my fears is that as the years go on, there will be more and more detailed enforcement of these guidelines and the guidelines will become ever more detailed. Plus ever more expensive work will be needed to comply - see for example the ratio of open window size to room size, a lot of older houses won't comply unless larger windows are installed. Another reason why I am giving up as a landlord.The way those guidlines get into minor issues like "architraves" etc being in good condition - and presumably hold the landlord responsible through an improvement notice for what could very well have been tenant damage, is just ridiculous...
When did furniture become mandatory?As Greenbook points out, the provision of furniture is now mandatory, and there are detailed regulatory specifications. The regulatory specifications happened because of the notoriously poor quality of furniture and appliances that landlords used to provide.
It doesn't say directly that furnishing is mandatory.Edit 2: Can’t find where it says furniture is mandatory
On checking, I think you're right. I don't think there is an express requirement in the legislation that the landlord must furnish rented residential property; it's simply a well-established market expectation that he will do so. (And it may have become the expectation because, in the past, there was an incentive to do so, in the form of an exemption from rent restriction legislation.)When did furniture become mandatory?
If you are a 'large' landlord with, say, 5 properties, that is not the case. You just haven't the scale for this and, as I keep stressing, a permanent tenant will be a disaster.
Not a hope of that happening politically; caving into the landlord lobby etc. etc.Which is why I suggested that the number should be raised - although I would prefer it eliminated altogether
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