Gas safety checks forced on Haringey tenants
Homes for Haringey is getting tough on tenants who refuse to let engineers in to their home to do an annual gas safety check.
By law, Homes for Haringey must inspect the gas supply pipe and appliances to each Haringey Council tenant’s home once a year. Every year however a few tenants repeatedly ignore appointments
or refuse entry.
From now this will no longer happen. As the landlord, Haringey Council can apply to the court for a warrant to force entry into a council tenant’s home to allow access for the annual gas
inspection.
Tottenham Magistrates Court issued 11 warrants on Monday August 18. The tenants, mainly from Wood Green and Tottenham, have been informed of the procedure and the date the engineer will carry out
the gas safety check.
If they still refuse access, council officials can immediately enforce the warrant and force entry into the property. More warrants will be issued for properties where safety checks remain
overdue.
Bob Watts, Executive Director of Repairs, said: “Most tenants know a potentially life saving free gas safety check makes sense and let us get on with our job. The few who don’t are
putting themselves and their neighbours at risk.
“Getting warrants to force these tenants to let us in will ensure that every council tenant’s home is up to the gas safety standard required by law and our performance rate is
100%.
"We can not rest until we have certified that every home is safe every year. It is in everyone’s interests to allow access at the earliest possible stage.”
Engineers do a thorough check of all gas pipes and gas appliances including boilers, cookers and fires and certify the property safe. All tenants are then provided with a copy of the gas safety
certificate which is valid for 12 months.
Obtaining a warrant is a last resort. Alternative methods to inform and alert tenants have been used. Last year over 100 tenants who refused access came home to find their front doors covered with
yellow tape.
The tape, which needed to be removed to get into the property, alerted the tenant, in six community languages and English, to the fact that a safety check is overdue and they must make an
appointment.
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