Earlier this month the High Court ruled that the Right to Rent Scheme is leading to discrimination, is incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights, and that the pilot the Government ran to evaluate the Scheme was insufficient.
The case was brought by a group including the Joint Council for Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) and the Residential Landlords Association (RLA) in December last year. The JCWI raised the case following evidence in their report Passport Please, that found 51% of landlords surveyed felt the Right to Rent Scheme made them less likely to consider letting to foreign nationals.
The Government has stated that the Scheme was trialled in the West Midlands, fully evaluated and published in October 2015. The evaluation was made up from 539 responses to online surveys, 12 focus groups, 36 one-to-one interviews and a mystery shopping exercise that involved 332 encounters. The evaluation by the Home Office found no systemic discrimination on the basis of race.
The written statement confirms that the Government disagrees with the decision of the High Court, and has been granted permission to appeal ‘all aspects of the judgement.’
Agents operating in England should be aware that in the meantime the policy remains in force. There will be no immediate change to the operation of the policy, and those letting property will still be obliged to conduct Right to Rent checks.
On behalf of the Home Office, the written statement from Caroline Nokes MP said:
Liberal democrats respond
In response to the Minister’s written statement, the Liberal Democrats issued a press release from their Home Affairs Spokesperson, Ed Davey MP:
The Right to Rent Consultative Panel will be meeting again in April, where they look at how the Scheme operates, and guidance provided to letting agents and landlords.
Image attribution:
"Rt. Hon Caroline Noakes MP Official MP Portrait" used under CC BY 3.0
Cropped from original "Rt. Hon Sir Edward Davey MP Official MP Portrait" used under CC BY 3.0 / Cropped from original