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JUSTICE calls for new model of dispute resolution in bid to create more unified system for housing cases

A working party set up by law reform charity JUSTICE has called for the introduction of a new model of dispute resolution, dubbed the Housing Dispute Service (HDS), as part of reforms intended to create a more unified and accessible system.

However, it admitted that tenant lawyers who took part in its consultation were opposed to the idea of the HDS.

The working party, which was chaired by Andrew Arden QC, said in its report, Solving Housing Disputes, that too many people in England and Wales found it difficult to enforce access to housing or other housing rights.

The report highlighted how over the past decade, homelessness had more than doubled and early legal advice and intervention to address housing problems, homelessness and associated or underlying issues had been greatly attenuated by cuts to civil legal aid.

“This has caused large parts of the housing advice sector to collapse, resulting in ‘advice deserts’, while local authorities are struggling under the demand for homelessness assistance,” JUSTICE said.

“Beyond this context, housing dispute resolution suffers from disaggregation: there are too many places a person might go to resolve a dispute, with adversarial processes that can be difficult to access, navigate and understand for lay people. There is also lack of coherence in regulatory application and oversight and a need for greater emphasis on early resolution and conciliatory measures.”

The working party said the HDS would be an entirely new and distinct model for dispute resolution, fusing elements of problem-solving, investigative, holistic and mediative models utilised elsewhere in the justice system. “The proposal offers a new approach premised not just on dealing with individual disputes, but rather on remedying underlying issues that give rise to housing claims and sustaining tenant-landlord relationships beyond the life of the dispute."

The report said that, should the HDS take off beyond a pilot phase, it would be a national service funded by subscription from housing providers.

The working party admitted that the proposal for a fully formed HDS was “bold, ambitious and will require significant time and investment”, adding that it would have to be tested and rigorously evaluated through a pilot phase. “If the pilot shows positive results, in the longer term the HDS will need to be integrated with and replace elements of the current system.”

It said the majority of the working party considered that the HDS could offer a better outcome for all parties to housing disputes than the current system and was worth exploring – “carefully, in limited scope, against relevant criteria and with advisory input from all relevant professional groups”.

Andrew Arden QC said: “The report looks broadly at housing disputes and makes a range of recommendations aimed at improving the current system and establishing a single point of entry for all disputes. However, there is no doubt that the headline point is the proposal for the piloting of a new Housing Disputes Service.

“I believe passionately that only something like the HDS can actually alleviate the strain of disputes with their landlords for tenants, promise something more hopeful to the homeless and advance housing conditions through a wider consensus.”

The working party report also made recommendations aimed at building upon the Government’s proposed Housing Complaints Resolution Service. These include:

  • access to early legal help, making use of the Government’s Legal Action Plan;
  • more accessible court and tribunal architecture through a single point of entry for all types of housing dispute;
  • changes to how local authorities deal with people facing homelessness, to ensure people can access assistance in times of need; and
  • assisted online services and, where face-to-face alternatives are needed for people who cannot engage online, flexible deployment of physical hearing venues so that people can reach the courts and tribunals that will decide upon whether they can keep their home.

Once proceedings commence, the working party’s proposals are for:

  • alternative dispute resolution to be embedded pre-action and more strongly encouraged throughout the court and tribunal process;
  • case management to engage case workers who can assist in the triaging of disputes to the correct resolution method; and
  • cross-ticketed, specialist housing judges who can sit for both court and tribunal jurisdictions.

Andrea Coomber, Director of JUSTICE, said: “Our report sets out a range of recommendations to improve the circumstances of people facing housing disputes and homelessness. Key to this is more widely available legal advice for people with housing problems, rationalising the landscape to establish a single point of entry for disputes, ensuring people can get assistance when facing homelessness, judicial specialism and flexibility in the conduct of hearings to respond to court closures.

“The proposal for the HDS comes within the context of the Government pitching a ‘new deal’ for tenant-landlord relations. Within that context, we think a new approach to disputes, based on conciliatory methods, transparency and exploration of underlying problems should be explored.”

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