Moray Council to freeze housing rents for a year
Rents for tenants of council houses in Moray will be frozen for the next 12 months.
In previous years rents were increased by between 4% and 5% a year to help fund the council’s new-build programme.
A recent report to Moray Council’s communities committee stated that a number of factors over the past two financial years, including lower borrowing costs and low rent arrears, have enabled the council to deliver its new-build programme without the need to further increase house rents.
Moray Council’s programme of new-build adds 70 homes a year to its estate to tackle the area’s affordable housing shortage.
The average council house rent based on a 52-week year is £59.84 a week. Of the 5,909 tenants that were surveyed, 40% responded.
The results show that:
- 8.4% of tenants not receiving full housing benefit said their rent is difficult to afford;
- 34% of tenants said it is just about affordable;
- 45.2% of tenants stated that they have experienced fuel poverty in the last year.
Chair of the committee, Cllr Louise Laing, said: “While the majority of tenants previously accepted the increase on the basis that it would help fund new build housing, a recent survey showed that affording rent and heat were still issues for a large number of households.
“The Scottish Housing Regulator requires local authorities to take the views of tenants into consideration when setting rent increases.
“The committee considered their views and I am pleased that we agreed to freeze rents at the current levels for 2019/20.”