Anti-social tenants will be banned from council housing under new laws

Michael Gove will unveil plans to make it easier for ‘persistently disruptive’ people to be evicted from social accommodation

Michael Gove
Michael Gove is set to toughen legislation that targets difficult neighbours in social homes Credit: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images

Anti-social tenants will be evicted and banned from applying for council housing for five years under proposals to be unveiled this week.

Social landlords will be allowed to get rid of tenants after three warnings for anti-social behaviour, such as playing loud music.

The tenants will then be banned from reapplying for two years, under plans to be unveiled by Michael Gove, the Housing Secretary, this week.

People with unspent convictions and anti-social behaviour orders could also be blocked.

A government source said: “It’s not right to have people who make their neighbours’ lives a misery staying in social homes while deserving families are stuck on waiting lists.”

The proposal was first floated in an “anti-social behaviour action plan” published last October.

It said: “Landlords and law-abiding tenants will benefit from stronger laws and systems to ensure those who are persistently disruptive are evicted.

“We will seek to halve the delay between a private landlord serving notice for antisocial behaviour and eviction and broaden the disruptive and harmful activities that can lead to eviction. We will also provide a clear expectation that previous antisocial behaviour offenders are deprioritised for social housing.”

 

Mr Gove will launch a consultation on the scheme this week.

Ministers say it will focus on giving social housing to those who need it and those who contribute most to the country. This includes putting British families at the top of a waiting list for social housing to try to prioritise “British homes for British workers”.

Government figures show that 90 per cent of the lead tenants in social housing are British. However, in the London borough of Brent, 40 per cent of new social homes were let to foreign nationals in 2021-22.

It is not yet clear how the law will be written and how it will be enforced.

The plans echo changes made by Gordon Brown in the dying days of his government which allowed housing providers choosing between two households of equivalent need to take into account how long they have lived in the area.

Priority for UK-born

The consultation will also look at how to give people born in the UK priority for council homes.

Mr Brown’s changes allowed housing providers choosing between two households of equivalent need to take into account how long they have lived in the area.

But the Conservative proposals – which were first trailed last summer – are understood to go much further.

Under current rules, local housing authorities are meant to decide social housing allocation based on need, giving priority to those who are homeless or living in overcrowded or squalid conditions.

As part of the bid to make it easier for British-born people to jump the housing queue, tenants will have to show they have had links to the UK for a decade and the local area for two years.

The consultation will also consider blocking people who earn above a certain salary from renting social housing.

Refugees are allowed to claim social housing, but anyone who is not entitled to benefits is not, meaning most foreigners in the UK are already excluded.

One option in front of the Government is to discriminate on the basis of nationality, but such a move is likely to fall foul of equalities law.

A more plausible change would be to bar refugees from gaining access to social housing, but this would be controversial given that those who have successfully been given refugee status are supposed to be allowed full access to social benefits.

Those who have come to the UK under the Ukrainian or Afghan resettlement schemes are likely to be protected, however.

Ministers could also seek to strengthen the rules introduced by Mr Brown so that people have to show they have stronger or longer connections to an area before being given priority for housing.

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