- who pays if the tenant thrashes the place
But if two or more letting agents are interested, then they enter a competitive tendering process offering to service the property to the private rental sector at a price they deem worth their while.
The letting agent that offers to manage the property for the most competitive rent will be awarded the contract to manage the property to the rental market.
Can you still not see how some people who are experienced in letting properties could make some money here? While simultaneously driving down rents in the private rental sector?
Hi Bronte,
Any issues with the house are obviously just normal wear & tear. In fact, it's probably the fault of private sector kitchen fitters.
Afterall.....
Tenants are good
Landlords are bad
Firefly.
And I've experience too of one of the carpenters working for the LA, spend most of his time doing side jobs when not repairing LA houses. Some wanted their light bulbs changed. That kind of thing. Council was paying for everything.
Good luck with getting repairs done if it eats into the letting agents profits in your race to the bottom.
Brilliant! Races to the bottom are only okay for certain groups of people, (evil) landlords obviously being one of them!
And the Letting Agent couldn't care less how and with what the repairs are done in such a scenario, they just want to ensure the tenant keeps paying the rent with a minimum of hassle and the cheapest plumber in town. I can just imagine the state of the properties after a few years of that. They'd be so bad you'd be lucky to get your €400 for your 500K property which should be getting 3K a month.
The best market to be in then would be the cowboy tradesmen one, with them doing building work using washing up liquid (celtic tiger truth - and look at the 40 fab new schools that aren't built right to see how that works out, bet anything the private contractor there goes company bust before the state catches up with him).
We could call it NAMA, National Association of Management Agents.All easily fixed by a new state agency!!
We could call it NAMA, National Association of Management Agents.
The LA doesn't dictate the rent that is charged. The letting agent dictates that.
All the LA does is choose which interested letting agent to outsource the management of the property too. It does this on set criteria that awards the outsourcing of the property to the letting agent/property manager that offers the most competitive rent price to the tenant.
It really isn't that hard to understand. There is a property available for outsourcing from Dublin city LA ready to rent out into private rental market. The property ordinarily could fetch €2,500-€3,000 pm. The LA doesn't want to manage it and is willing to outsource the management of the property to the private sector. All it wants in return is the equivalent of an average LA rent - €400 a month.
The letting agent can decide whatever rent it wants to apply. If only one letting agent applies to manage the property, they are on pigs back charging €3,000pm, making a killing and this proposal falls flat on its face.
But if two or more letting agents are interested, then they enter a competitive tendering process offering to service the property to the private rental sector at a price they deem worth their while.
The letting agent that offers to manage the property for the most competitive rent will be awarded the contract to manage the property to the rental market.
Can you still not see how some people who are experienced in letting properties could make some money here? While simultaneously driving down rents in the private rental sector?
Aside from actually detailing the minutiae of an entire prospectus to be submitted for tender, I think such a scheme can show how quality private rental accommodation can be provided to the working population in RPZ's who would otherwise be drowning in extortionate rents as amateur 30yr-mortgage-ponzi-scheme HAP payment chasing "landlords".
The purpose is not to drive out landlords, but to drive out bad amateur landlords who cannot even understand basic concepts like this one.
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An anti private landlord post.
The purpose is not to drive out landlords, but to drive out bad amateur landlords
we landlords are so stupid we can't understand your entirely feasable idea.
I particularly love that now the tenant can call out the repair men and pay for the repars themselves.
How about this for a crazy idea, which is how it works in other countries, the tenant pays the repair man themselves when they break the lock or lose their keys or damage the toilet or destroy the cooker.
You'd be laughted at if you asked them to come out for anything else.
Anti-amateur HAP chasing, cant draw up reasonable tenancy agreements 'landlords', yes.
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Thats the whole point! The tenant pays for all repairs, services, refurbishments, etc out of fund set up under contract. The letting agent will have minimal involvement other than to agree that any such draw downs from the fund are necessary and/or reasonable.
If you cant figure out how it is the tenant that will be paying for all these services for the upkeep of the property then you are having difficulty following simple concepts.
But this is the third time I have raised this concept and nobody has returned with any fundamental reason as to why it cant work.
a) a fund
b) enough in the fund to pay the repair from the get go
c) the management of the fund
d) the micro managing of a tenant having to contact the LA go get permission to draw down the fund to pay the tradesman
e) the supervision of this drawdown
f) the monitoring of the bill being paid
g) the question of receipts
H) and of who can deduct
In fact the level of misunderstanding is amazing. I think people read what the expect to see rather than what is actually written.
However the reason it won't work is because there is nothing in it for anybody to get it started
No politician is going to struggle through the level of misunderstanding you have encountered here, to get such a thing started.
There is no profit in it (to launch it) therefore no one will do it. The profit motive (wether the profit is financial or otherwise) is fundamental.
There is no profit in it (to launch it) therefore no one will do it. The profit motive (wether the profit is financial or otherwise) is fundamental.
The housing market has seen so much government interference at this stage it's no wonder landlords are leaving,
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