10 research outputs found
Social Lettings Agencies in the West Midlands
Social Lettings Agencies (SLAs) have been described succinctly by Shelter Scotland (Evans, 2015) as agencies that âhelp people access the PRS who are homeless or on low-incomesâ. SLA is a general term applied to schemes that secure access to decent, affordable private rental accommodation for households in need and on low incomes who would previously have been likely to access social housing. The growth of SLAs has been a consequence of the falling supply of social housing, growth in the private rented sector, expansion of âhousing optionsâ approaches since the Homelessness Act 2002 and discharge of homeless duties in the private rented sector since the Localism Act 2011.
The West Midlands Housing Officers Group has supported this project by the Housing and Communities Research Group at the University of Birmingham to explore the current and potential future role of SLAs in the region. Its relevance to current policy has increased considerably since the time of its commissioning.
Changing market conditions and in particular the growing gap between social housing supply and demand and rising homelessness have led to increasing policy support for SLAs in England. In 2015 the right leaning Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) recommended the Government to âgreatly expand the role of social lettings agencies across the countryâ (Winterburn, 2015 p.3). Key aims of SLAs were considered by CSJ as being âto minimise risk to landlords so they are willing to let to benefit claimants (ibid p.61) â and to provide a measure of support for tenancy sustainability âtypically SLAs will have support workers who regularly check in on the vulnerableâ (ibid p.62).
By 2017 Theresa Mayâs Conservative Government as part of its plan to âfix our broken housing marketâ wanted to âconsider whether SLAs can be an effective tool for securing more housing for people who would otherwise struggle â providing security for landlords and support for tenants to help strengthen and sustain tenanciesâ (DCLG 2017, p.66) . This parallels developments in other countries with an insufficient supply of social housing such as Belgium, Ireland and Hungary where the idea of SLAs has been more prevalent than in England to date (De Decker, 2002, Laylor, 2014, Hegedus et al 2014).
The project brief set out the purpose of the project to explore the scope for SLAs to address the needs of low income households seeking decent, secure and affordable rented homes in the Midlands. This would include an in-depth study of Let to Birmingham SLA, case studies of other SLAs in the region and peer learning events to share experience and ideas about properties, people and process and in what respects PRS could become the ânew social housingâ (in terms of security, affordability and quality issues)
Let to Birmingham: 2016 case study report
Social Lettings Agencies (SLAs) have been described succinctly by Shelter Scotland (Evans, 2015) as agencies that âhelp people access the PRS who are homeless or on low-incomesâ. SLA is a general term applied to schemes that secure access to decent, affordable private rental accommodation for households in need and on low incomes who would previously have been likely to access social housing. The growth of SLAs has been a consequence of the falling supply of social housing, growth in the private rented sector, expansion of âhousing optionsâ approaches since the Homelessness Act 2002 and discharge of homeless duties in the private rented sector since the Localism Act 2011.
The West Midlands Housing Officers Group has supported this project by the Housing and Communities Research Group at the University of Birmingham to explore the current and potential future role of SLAs in the region. Its relevance to current policy has increased considerably since the time of its commissioning.
This report covers the âsecond waveâ of research on Let to Birmingham undertaken in Autumn 2016.
It supplements our earlier report in Autumn 2015 which covered the background to the establishment of Let to Birmingham in January 2014 as a social lettings agency by Birmingham City Council in partnership with Omega Lettings (now a division of Mears) and the first 18 months of its operation (Mullins, Joseph and Nechita 2015)
Strategy, culture and institutional logics: a multi-layered view of community investment at a large housing association
This project is an ESRC CASE study of one of the largest housing associations in England. The aim of the study was to take a multi-layered view of the organisation to explore its changing identity, by tracking its evolving community investment strategy over a 2 year period as an examination of shifting sub-cultures and driving institutional logics. The underlying theme of a multi-layered approach led to a research design sub-dividing the organisation horizontally and vertically into management strata and functional and geographical sampling points. The focus on âstrategy, culture, logics and community investmentâ was derived from a research cycle which integrated both macro level issues and the organizationâs internal agenda reflecting the inherent paradoxes characterising the hybrid third sector of social housing. The thesis builds on earlier work on competing institutional logics in social housing and links this to changing organisations cultures to show how hybridity is enacted over time. The author concludes that a dominant corporate sub-culture, tied into a commercial, customer-driven logic has been displacing more regional, local community cultures derived from the pre-merger organisations. This enactment process is exemplified by the centralisation and consumerisation of CI services depicted in the authorâs logics-culture matrix