Housing and Regeneration Act 2008
The Housing and Regeneration Act 2008 as amended (HRA 2008) received royal assent on 28 July 2008, it was introduced in parts 3 or stages. Part 1 of the Act was brought into force on 2 September 2008, 26 November 2008, and 26 March 2009. Part 2 was commenced in full in two stages. The provisions abolishing the Housing Corporation and creation of the Office for Tenants and Social Landlords (the Tenant Services Authority) were commenced in December 2008. The remaining provisions, which established the reformed regulatory system, were commenced on or before 1 April 2010. Part 3 was commenced in several stages from September 2008 to April 2011.
Jointly the three parts (schedules 1- 8, schedules 9 and 16 and schedules 10 - 15) restructured many of the bodies related housing, including setting up the basis for a regulator for social housing, carried out by the Office for Tenants and Social Landlords. A summary of the changes summary is outlined below:
- established the Homes and Communities Agency
- abolished the Urban Regeneration Agency and the Commission for the New Towns
- established the Office for Tenants and Social Landlords as the regulator of social housing
- established a system of regulation for social housing
- abolished the Housing Corporation
- made provision for sustainability certificates, landlord and tenant matters, building regulations and mobile homes
- made further provisions for housing and related issues (mainly through Part 3)
The HRA 2008 also set out the statutory framework within which a regulator for social housing must operate. Establishing a framework enabling the regulator to register and regulate providers of social housing, known as ‘registered providers’. Only these registered providers are regulated. Note that the task of regulating social housing was outlined in the 2008 act but the Regulator of Social Housing (RSH) was not itself established and given the task until sometime later.
The tragic Grenfell Tower fire occurred in 2017, and as a result the Government committed to changes to the consumer regulation of social housing to strengthen accountability of landlords for providing safe homes, quality services and treating residents with respect with proposals set-out in Green and White Papers. The Regulator of Social Housing (RSH) itself was established on 1 January, 2018 with its powers being further expanded 20 of July 2023, via the Social Housing (Regulation) Act 2023, which was as a result of the Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Select Committees enquiry, looking into the regulation of social housing.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- ACM cladding.
- Achieving net zero in social housing.
- Building a safer future: an implementation plan.
- Building Safety Alliance.
- CIOB reviews the Building Safety Bill.
- Evacuating vulnerable and dependent people from buildings in an emergency FB 52.
- Fire performance of external thermal insulation for walls of multistorey buildings, third edition (BR 135).
- Fire risk in high-rise and super high-rise buildings DG 533.
- Grenfell Tower articles.
- Grenfell Tower fire.
- Grenfell Tower Inquiry.
- Housing associations.
- Housing tenure.
- Independent review of the building regulations and fire safety.
- Public v private sector housing.
- The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005.
Featured articles and news
Twas the site before Christmas...
A rhyme for the industry and a thankyou to our supporters.
Plumbing and heating systems in schools
New apprentice pay rates coming into effect in the new year
Addressing the impact of recent national minimum wage changes.
EBSSA support for the new industry competence structure
The Engineering and Building Services Skills Authority, in working group 2.
Notes from BSRIA Sustainable Futures briefing
From carbon down to the all important customer: Redefining Retrofit for Net Zero Living.
Principal Designer: A New Opportunity for Architects
ACA launches a Principal Designer Register for architects.
A new government plan for housing and nature recovery
Exploring a new housing and infrastructure nature recovery framework.
Leveraging technology to enhance prospects for students
A case study on the significance of the Autodesk Revit certification.
Fundamental Review of Building Regulations Guidance
Announced during commons debate on the Grenfell Inquiry Phase 2 report.
CIAT responds to the updated National Planning Policy Framework
With key changes in the revised NPPF outlined.
Councils and communities highlighted for delivery of common-sense housing in planning overhaul
As government follows up with mandatory housing targets.
CIOB photographic competition final images revealed
Art of Building produces stunning images for another year.
HSE prosecutes company for putting workers at risk
Roofing company fined and its director sentenced.
Strategic restructure to transform industry competence
EBSSA becomes part of a new industry competence structure.
Major overhaul of planning committees proposed by government
Planning decisions set to be fast-tracked to tackle the housing crisis.
Industry Competence Steering Group restructure
ICSG transitions to the Industry Competence Committee (ICC) under the Building Safety Regulator (BSR).
Principal Contractor Competency Certification Scheme
CIOB PCCCS competence framework for Principal Contractors.
The CIAT Principal Designer register
Issues explained via a series of FAQs.