Rent Freeze: A Victory for Tenants’ Rights

This week, the Scottish government announced a rent freeze across the private and socially rented sectors, accompanied by an eviction ban, until March 2023. Whilst there is much in the coming legislation that will need to be scrutinised, two things are immediately clear: the rent freeze will take immediate effect, and that this is a mammoth victory for tenants’ rights across Scotland. This is the outcome of coordinated, relentless, and inspiring tenant action throughout the country, and it exemplifies the power we have when we organise together. Living Rent members have been at the forefront of this fight, having demanded rent controls since our beginnings in 2014.  

The rent freeze and eviction ban formed part of the Scottish government’s “Programme for Government”, which covers a number of policies and legislative moves across different issues in Scottish civil society. But action on housing to this extent was never a given. Less than three months ago, the SNP/Greens coalition voted down an amendment to the Coronavirus Recovery Bill, which had been tabled by Scottish Labour MSP Mercedes Villalba, and backed by Living Rent. That they have u-turned so substantially, is testament to the work of every Living Rent member since, organising in neighbourhood branches and keeping the pressure on the government to actually address the disaster set to unfold with this insane cost of living crisis

Importantly, this win was not made in this summer alone. Living Rent formed as a campaign group in 2014, before forming as a union in 2016. In six years, our membership has grown to thousands of members, with local branches and groups forming in every part of Scotland. Every week, members are out door-knocking, on stalls, taking part in direct action, and forcing radical, concrete demands on housing to the centre of the political agenda.  

As the union has grown, so has the severity of the housing crisis. Over the last 10 years, average rents across Scotland have increased by 32.5%, and this is much worse in cities, where rents have increased by up to 60%. And despite these increases, our homes continue to be of poor quality and poorly insulated: in the private sector 60% of homes are EPC D or below and in the social sector 45% are EPC D or below. The number of homes built by housing associations, one of the largest providers of affordable housing in Scotland, fell by 17%, leaving many sceptical that the Scottish government will meet their target of building 110,000 new affordable homes by 2032. As of March 2021, there were 178,260 applications recorded on local authority or common housing register lists, with the lowest rate of application approval since 2015. Tenants’ in the private and socially rented sectors are being squeezed for more and more rent, whilst the lack of investment in affordable social housing means tenants are left without any viable alternative. 

Over this period, Living Rent has seen our fair share of inadequate or poorly-enforced measures to attempt to curtail this disaster. In 2016, the Government introduced “rent pressure zones”, which theoretically would enable local authorities to keep average rents affordable. Living Rent members pointed out at the time how difficult these would be to put in place, and consequently in the years since, these zones have never been implemented. Even if they had, RPZs wouldn’t tackle quality issues, in-between tenancy rent rises or rents across a whole city. Outwith issues around rent, many Scottish tenants continue to report having faced illegal eviction notices, insecure deposits, and damp and unsafe flats due to lack of repairs. The balance of power between an individual tenant and landlord is stacked heavily in favour of the latter, meaning that landlords may be well aware that they’re ignoring their obligations, or even breaking the law – they just know that they can get away with it. 

But as evidenced by the events of this week, Living Rent members are the ones who are shifting that balance of power. Consequently, we will be the ones looking carefully at the details of the upcoming emergency bill. A key question is whether or not the legislation will apply to those who have been served with rent increases over the past few months, but they haven’t come into effect yet. This is particularly relevant for one member in Partick, who is set to be evicted by Christmas for being unable to pay a £200 rent increase in her Beith street property. Additionally, we are yet to hear whether there are any specific measures around purpose built student accommodation. This is particularly relevant for prospective students in Glasgow, where the University has stated they are no longer able to provide guaranteed university accommodation to any of their offer holders – leaving many to fend for themselves in expensive, private student accommodation. Finally, the rent freeze being in effect until “at least March 2023” is not secure enough for tenants in the socially rented sector in particular. Most statutory rent increases in social housing only take effect in April, and with the Scottish Federation of Housing Associations already claiming to be worried about how the freeze will affect their ability to maintain and repair housing, we should expect a battle on our hands come the spring.

These concerns are a testament to a key takeaway of this week’s announcement – the rent freeze and eviction ban are only temporary measures. After the SNP/Green commitment to rent controls in their cooperation agreement in 2021, it was revealed that these would only be introduced in 2025. The measures of this week need to be strengthened and extended until the implementation of rent controls. We then need a points-based system of rent controls that doesn’t just cap rents, but one that brings them down significantly. The points should be tied to the property itself, not the tenancy, protecting tenants from eviction and inter-tenancy rent increases and ensuring we all have quality and energy efficient homes. 

In short, there is no small feat ahead of us. With landlords already incensed by the Scottish government announcement, there is no doubt that the road to rent controls will be filled with well-organised opposition. But Living Rent is testament to how tenants can be better organised, more powerful, and more inspiring – and we will win against the greed and exploitation of the landlord class, block by block, street by street and neighbourhood by neighbourhood.

Comments (9)

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  1. Hector says:

    Expect a lot of msp s to be invited shooting and other landlord hospitality very quickly as they will be throwing the kitchen sink at this to protect their “rights” to speculate in homes.
    Lets hope this doesnt get bought off the way protections for tenant farmers were.
    Tenant farmers now find themselves far worse off then when scotgov set out to “protect” them twenty years ago.
    They even now pay landlords to leave farms empty, imagine if they did that with family homes?

  2. Axel P Kulit says:

    The legislation should have included mortgage rates and repossessions.

  3. Mr E says:

    A nice idea, but I think this is being introduced after most rent has been set for the year, and I believe it expires before they are reset next year. I think there is far less substance to it than superficially appears.

    It is basically a Labour proposal that both the SNP and the Greens previously voted against. It was even a hard slog to get the Scottish government to belatedly vote for an eviction ban during the plague, even after the Tories had introduced one down south. These are also the people who voted against regulating AirBnBs, but had to change their minds when under more pressure from Councils and everyone else, rather than the corporate lobbyists.

  4. Doghouse Reilly says:

    I think the real problem here is that, beyond a headline, there is no plan what so ever.

    As has been pointed out already social sector rents won’t be increased until after the freeze expires, in any event they have been going up below inflation for the last five years and the main driver of rent rises in the sector is investment to meet SG targets (new build and decarbonisation) that are largely unfunded. Tenants have been paying most of the cost of each new social rented home since the SG cut the grant in 2010 and the rest of the service is wholly unsupported by public money. Social rents are too high but we do need to be clear about why.

    And can we also remember that social landlords are obliged by law to consult tenants on rents. A freeze next year will impact on investment, that isn’t scare mongering, The SG simple hasn’t thought this through but if talking to tenants is good enough for landlords I can’t see why ministers should be exempt.

    And council homes are run by elected councils, why is it the SG believes it knows better than local elected members working with their tenants? What does this say about local democracy and the principle of subsidiarity?

    There is no evidence that a winter eviction ban will reduce evictions. Being clear what the impact of a change like that will be is part of competent and effective government. This is making it up as you go along.

    On the PRS rent freeze, the only evidence we have on rents is based on adverts, the claims about rent rises may, or may not be true but again policy without evidence is at best lazy.

    And what happens next march when the freeze is lifted? What’s the plan? Does the SG have a view on how big the PRS should be? They’ve been promoting “build to rent” and new student accommodation for a decade now, has the view on that changed?

    The whole thing is a mess made worse by the change in the law in 2016 that created 18 different reasons to evict.

    It is time for real change in renting, with a focus on housing as a human right and driving the cowboys, criminals and opportunists out of the sector. But this isn’t it. This is dog whistle politics.

  5. SleepingDog says:

    What about the pressure groups who wanted new Scottish legislation on sex-for-rent abuses, which would not be discouraged by rent freezes or protections against eviction?
    https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/sleazy-sex-rent-landlords-must-23401806

  6. Sean Clerkin says:

    The rent freeze to the end of March 2023 is a public relations pretence by the Scottish Government that they are doing something substantial in the cost of living crisis when they know social rented sector rent rises are set to go up in April 2023. They are taking tenants to be fools when they are not.
    Living Rent don’t help matters by trying to claim credit for this public relations exercise that fools no one.
    In truth only a rent freeze and eviction ban in Scotland that lasts for a minimum of two years can be taken seriously.
    As Dogwhistle Reilly has correctly pointed out the Scottish Government are championing Build to Rent all over Scotland including Glasgow where 6,482 new such units are in the pipeline to be built for the top 20 percent of income earners which will fuel yet further record rent rises in the private rented sector in the next two years at the expense of affordable housing were budgets given to local authorities have been cut. We are witnessing gentrification in city centres on a massive scale in Scotland.
    Rent arrears in Scotland in the social rented sector stand at a staggering record £169.6 million and unless we have an eviction ban that is watertight we will witness homelessness on a mass scale.

    1. Mr E says:

      At least Living Rent are trying, and the eviction moratorium is a good thing if it is properly enacted. But I agree that the SNP/Green ‘rent freeze’ bit does look like a good headline maticulously engineered to have the substance of a Cheesy Wotsit. I am mystified as to why the Scottish government is so beholden to landowner/landlord lobbysts. Maybe the Scottish government are a bunch of profit-before-peopleists who do good deflection PR? You can fool easily enough of the people, all the time?

  7. Sensible Landlord. says:

    Buy your own house/flat then.
    Landlords aren’t here to subsidise your lifestyle choice.
    Rents are only going to go thru the roof with this stupid left wing legislation.
    Problem is that you’re all too stupid to see and understand that, that why you can’t afford to buy.

    1. Doghouse Reilly says:

      But tenants are here to subsidise land lords and pay the price for their failures?

      Nice attitude, the modern entrepreneur in action.

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