Consultation outcome
This consultation has concluded
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The responses which we received to the call for evidence indicated that introducing a housing court would not address the underlying issues which were raised by court users, which included the timeliness of cases, resourcing, access to legal aid (particularly for those in receipt of benefit) and the provision of information and advice.
The government response sets out the package of wide-ranging reforms which we are implementing to resolve the issues which were raised with us. The reforms include:
We are seeking views on the experiences of people using courts and tribunal services in property cases, including whether a specialist Housing Court is needed.
This consultation ran from
9:30am on 13 November 2018 to 11:45pm on 22 January 2019
This call for evidence seeks views and opinions from the judiciary, landlords and tenants to help the government to better understand and improve the experience of people using courts and tribunal services in property cases, including considering the case for a specialist Housing Court.
We are interested in views and opinions on the:
Alongside the call for evidence, we have published a report outlining the findings of a qualitative research study that was undertaken in order to understand tenants’ and landlords’ experience of the county courts and First Tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) and to identify issues that may be deterring them from exercising their rights effectively.
Ref: ISBN 978-1-4098-5361-9PDF, 308 KB, 31 pages
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Published 13 November 2018
Last updated 16 June 2022 + show all updates
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