Health & Safety + Other Legal Requirements
The following requirements are the responsibility of the owner (Landlord). Where you have signed our Full Management Agency Agreement, they are also our responsibility. Therefore where we are managing we will need to ensure compliance.Gas
Annual Safety Check
Under the Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998 all gas appliances and flues in rented accommodation must be checked for safety within 12 months of being installed, and thereafter at least every 12 months by a competent engineer (e.g. a GAS SAFE installer).Maintenance: There is a duty to ensure that all gas appliances, flues and associated pipe work are maintained in a safe condition at all times. Records: Full records must be kept for at least 2 years of the inspections of each appliance and flue, of any defects found and of any remedial action take.
Copies to tenants: A copy of the safety certificate issued by the engineer must be given to each new tenant before their tenancy commences, or to each existing tenant within 28 days of the check being carried out.
Electrical
There are several regulations relating to electrical installations, equipment and appliance safety, and these affect Landlords and their Agents in that they are ‘supplying in the course of business’. They include the Electrical Equipment (Safety) Regulation 1994, the Plugs and Sockets Regulations 1994, the 2005 Building Regulation – Part P, and British Standard BS1363 relating to plugs and sockets. Although with tenanted property there is currently no legal requirement for an electrical safety certificate. It is now widely accepted in the letting industry that the only safe way to ensure safety and to avoid the risk of being accused of neglecting your ‘duty of care’, or even of manslaughter is to arrange such an inspection and certificate.Fire
The Furniture and Furnishings (Fire) (Safety) Regulations 1988 (amended 1989 & 1993) provide that specified items supplied in the course of letting property must meet minimum fire resistance standards. The regulations apply to all upholstered furniture, beds, headboards and mattresses, sofa-beds, futons and other convertibles, nursery furniture, garden furniture suitable for use in a dwelling, scatter cushions, pillows and non-original covers for furniture. Items which comply will have a suitable permanent label attached. Non-compliant items must be removed before a tenancy commences.Smoke Alarms
All properties built since June 1992 must have been fitted with mains powered smoke detector alarms from new. Although there is no legislation requiring smoke alarms to be fitted in other ordinary tenanted properties, it is generally considered that the common law ‘duty of care’ means that Landlords and their Agents could be liable should a fire cause injury or damage in a tenanted property where smoke alarms are not fitted. We therefore recommend that the landlord fit at least one alarm on each floor (in the hall and landing areas).The Tenancy Deposit Scheme
From April 2007, all Deposits taken by Landlords and Letting Agents under Assured Shorthold Tenancies (AST’s) in England and Wales must be protected by a Tenancy Deposit Protection Scheme. Landlords must not take a deposit unless it is dealt with under a Tenancy Deposit Scheme. To avoid any disputes going to court, each scheme will be supported by an alternative dispute resolution service (ADR)Environmental Performance Certificate
From October 2008 there is a LEGAL requirement for all rented properties to have an Environmental Performance Certificate (EPC). The certificate is valid for 10 years and is a means of rating the efficiency of your property. There is no Legal requirement to improve the efficiency of your property although the certificate will offer recommendations to increase the rating of the property.
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