The Regulator of Social Housing (RSH) published its new Tenant Satisfaction Measures Standard last week (21 September 2022), which means that from 1 April 2023, all social housing providers will need to collect and publish a wide range of performance information. Landlords with more than 1,000 homes will have to submit their data annually to the RSH.
Below we breakdown what this means for providers and take a closer look at the measures around building safety.
The government’s Social Housing White Paper, published in November 2020, set out a commitment that the RSH would introduce a set of measures around issues that matter to residents, as part of a wider overhaul of social housing regulation. The RSH published a consultation on the introduction of these measures which closed on 3 March 2022.
It is hoped that the new measures will:
There are 22 tenant satisfaction measures, covering complaints, neighbourhood, anti-social behaviour, repairs and safety. Ten of these will be measured by landlords directly, and 12 will be measured by landlords carrying out tenant perception surveys. Landlords will need to ensure they stick to the specific survey questions, wording and response options prescribed by the RSH.
There are five performance measures around building safety.
Importantly, the building safety measures require providers to consider communal parts as well as individual dwelling units. For example, for a communal boiler in a block of flats, providers will be required to report the number of individual dwelling units affected to provide the risk context (see Table 1 below).
Dwelling units for which gas safety checks are required |
Dwelling units |
Flats in communal block 1 served by communal gas boiler |
50 |
Flats in communal block 2 served by communal gas boiler |
100 |
Houses with individual gas appliances |
9,000 |
Total dwelling units for which gas safety checks are required |
9,150 |
The RSH regulates the sector through economic regulation and consumer regulation. The new measures are part of the consumer standards, and all social landlords must meet these requirements. Where a landlord does not meet one of these standards, the RSH may take action.
Ensure you understand your legal obligations across each area and what you need to do to meet them.
Data, data, data...Ensure you know how many domestic, communal and other properties you have, and then understand which compliance programmes they should be on.
It’s ultimately the responsibility of Boards and governing bodies to ensure TSMs are reported to the RSH accurately – they should be looking for assurance around this.
Yes.
You might have noticed that electrical safety checks are not included within the building safety measures. The government held a separate consultation around this which closed on 31 August 2022. Feedback is currently being analysed.
Remedial actions are not included within the building safety measures, but of course you must ensure these are also completed.
At Pennington Choices, we work closely with landlords to ensure they not only understand these measures, but they are able to accurately report on them too.
Our diverse and experienced consultancy team is built-up of technical experts that work across fire safety, gas safety, electrical safety, asbestos management and water hygiene, to put in place practical solutions to any shortfalls that landlords may come across throughout the preparation process.
For help with preparing for the new tenant satisfaction measures, please contact us below.