Speeches by Pennycook.
Every Hansard contribution by Matthew Pennycook this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.
Showing 1,541–1,560 of 1,749 contributions · most-recent first
| Date | Debate & contribution | Words |
|---|---|---|
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “We now move to part 3 of the Bill, concerning the decent homes standard. As members of the Committee will be aware, the private rented sector has the worst conditions of any housing tenure. More than one in five privately rented homes fail to meet the current decent homes standard, which sets a minimum standard for soc…” housinglocal-government | 606 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “I will respond briefly, partly because a number of the issues raised are outside my ministerial responsibility. I commit to replying in writing to the points raised in relation to the responsibilities of the Home Office and the Department for Education, to give the Committee more clarity. Some of those details will com…” housinglocal-government | 142 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “Unless the hon. Gentleman is pressing his amendment simply to make a political point, I ask him gently: what outcomes are we seeking? He wants to bring MOD accommodation up to the decent homes standard. I have made it very clear to him that the MOD has been benchmarking minimum housing standards to the decent homes sta…” housinglocal-government | 337 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “I give way to the hon. Member for Taunton and Wellington.” housinglocal-government | 11 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “We have been in office for a little over 120 days, so the hon. Gentleman will forgive us for not publishing information about every action that we are taking. I will make him this offer: I will take his point away to MOD Ministers who we are in conversation with, and if I cannot give him further assurances through writ…” housinglocal-government | 142 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “These provisions deal with financial penalties. Schedule 5 sets out the process for a local housing authority to impose a financial penalty on a person and applies to clauses 39, 56, 64 and 89. Foremost, schedule 5 stipulates that, before imposing a financial penalty, a local housing authority must issue a notice of in…” housinglocal-government | 261 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “I will begin by addressing clauses 100 and 101, and I will then turn to amendment 41, which was tabled by the hon. Member for Bristol Central. Clauses 100 and 101 make provision about the application of rent repayment orders to superior landlords and to company directors. To be most effective, tenants and local authori…” housinglocal-government | 749 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “I hope that the hon. Lady will appreciate that I cannot, as a Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government Minister, give her that commitment in Committee today, but we are having conversations across all Departments. This is an issue that the Government have considered, and I keep it under review. I recognise…” housinglocal-government | 171 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “I will be fairly brief on these two clauses. Licensing requirements are a fundamental part of ensuring that HMOs and other rented properties are safe and well managed. Clause 102 ensures that superior landlords can be liable for the offences of failing to ensure that a property is properly licensed. In a situation in w…” housinglocal-government | 315 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “We expect that the vast majority of landlords will do the right thing and meet their new legal responsibilities, but there will be a minority who fail to do so. That is why, for this package of reforms to be effective and achieve its aims, consistent and effective enforcement by local authorities is absolutely necessar…” housinglocal-government | 448 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “I will be fairly brief, because I am more than happy to go away and check whether this is an error on my part rather than that of the shadow Minister, but we have to be very clear which provisions in the Bill these enforcement powers relate to. Clause 104 sets out that every local housing authority has a duty to enforc…” housinglocal-government | 256 |
| 5 Nov 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Seventh sitting) “It is a pleasure to continue our proceedings with you in the Chair, Mr Betts. We now turn to clauses 84 to 86, which deal with access to the data collected on the database and the circumstances in which that may be shared. Let me start by speaking to clause 84. One of the central objectives of the database is to provid…” housinglocal-government | 853 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “It is an absolute pleasure, Mr Betts, to continue our consideration of the Bill with you in the Chair, not least because you will have extensive knowledge of what we are talking about as we proceed through the clauses. Before we proceed to the substantive matter, I draw the Committee’s attention to the letter that I se…” housinglocal-government | 96 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “First, what research has the hon. Lady done on the administrative burden on local authorities of subdividing the amounts of money they take in through breaches to give that 20%? It is easy to say, “Increase the amount and the 20% is covered,” but, as I have put to her, there would be significant additional administrati…” housinglocal-government | 159 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “If the hon. Lady will give way, I can address that point.” housinglocal-government | 12 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “Let me develop this point; then the hon. Lady is more than welcome to come back on it. Even if the loss of 20% of the £7,000 were covered by an increased fine, there are good reasons why we do not think that the fine should be higher in the Bill. Setting that aside, we think there would be significant administrative bu…” housinglocal-government | 342 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “Can I make a further point, which I have made before but is clearly not registering? This is where we need to take a step back and look at which different parts of the Bill do what. The ombudsman can review each complaint on a case-by-case basis. Complaints can be about discrimination and the ombudsman has the powers t…” housinglocal-government | 178 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “On the point made by my hon. Friend the Member for North West Cambridgeshire, it is conventional to put the amount of the fine on the face of the Bill. There are provisions in the Bill that allow the Government to increase the fine to reflect the increase in inflation over time, so it is not a static, once-and-for-all …” housinglocal-government | 223 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “If the hon. Lady answers it, I apologise. I want to make two points. First, I understand her concern about tenants not having an incentive to take a complaint to the local authority. We want tenants to make legitimate complaints about rental discrimination, and I think that can be encouraged through Government messagin…” housinglocal-government | 100 |
| 31 Oct 2024 | Renters' Rights Bill (Fifth sitting) “I do not think I would make that particular point. To expand further, we have taken this particular approach because we think there is a benefit provided by the burden of proof that local authorities are required to meet. It is also the case that making breaches of rental discrimination provisions a single civil matter…” housinglocal-government | 329 |