What Can The Local Authority Do
Compulsory purchase orders (CPOs)
Serving compulsory purchase orders (CPOs) on empty properties may be justified where there appears to be no other chance of a suitable property being used as a home. Before a CPO is confirmed, we will have to show that we have taken steps to encourage you to bring the property into acceptable use. We will also need to show that our reasons for making a CPO justify interfering with your human rights or those of anyone else with an interest in the property.
Housing Act 1985, section 17
This Act gives us the power to take over land, houses or other properties to increase the number of houses available or improve the quality of the housing stock. The main uses of this power are to get land for housing. This includes bringing empty properties back into use as homes, and improving substandard ones. Where we get control of a property through this power, we will usually sell it to:
- a private-sector developer
- an owner-occupier or
- a registered social landlord
Town and Country Planning Act 1990, section 226
The powers in section 226 are intended to help local authorities which have planning powers to take control of the land they need to put in place their community strategies and local development documents. These planning powers are wide enough to allow us to take over land for redevelopment.
Enforced sales procedures
Law of Property Act 1925 (link) Where we have issued and enforced a charge against a property you own, we have all the legal rights of a mortgage lender under the Law & Property Act 1925. We may have issued the charge against the property because you did not:
- obey the terms of a statutory notice we issued or
- pay Council Tax or other debts you owed to the local authority.
Dangerous or dilapidated Buildings or structures
Building Act 1984, sections 77 & 78 We can order you to make property safe or allow us to take emergency action to make it safe.
Statutory nuisance (statutory nuisance or premises which can affect health)
Environmental Protection Act, 1990, Section 80 (link) Building Act 1984, Section 76 (link) We can order you to make your property safe or allow us to take emergency action to make the building safe.
Unsecured properties
These are empty properties that are not secure so they can be broken into, vandalised, set on fire and so on. Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1982, Section 29
We can order you to
- make your property secure or allow us to board it up in an emergency or
- allow us to fence off the property.
Empty dwelling management orders
The Housing Act 2004 allows us to take out an empty dwelling management order (EDMO) to make sure that your empty property is used for housing. We can make EDMOs on properties that have been empty for at least six months. There are two types of EDMO – interim and final. An interim EDMO lasts 12 months but a final EDMO can last up to seven, 14 or 21 years.
An EDMO allows us to:
- 'step into your shoes' if you own an unoccupied building and
- make sure that empty properties are occupied and managed properly.
We will bring the property back into use but you will still own it. We can take any costs to improve the property from the rents we receive when we let the property.
The Housing Act 2004 gives us new powers to make sure that properties are safe and suitable to live in. The powers may also apply to empty properties. These changes came into force in April 2006. For more information, see the Housing Act 2004 .
- Powers of entry – these allow us to enter a property to inspect it if you refuse to let us in (we have to give you at least 24 hours’ notice). If you stop our officer from getting in, we may get a warrant to enter from the courts. This allows us to force our way in if we have to.
- Power to require information – we can serve notices asking for certain information, for example, about who owns a property. This allows us to act to improve the property using the other powers described.
- Hazard-awareness notices – these will make sure that you or the person responsible is aware of a danger and the need to carry out repairs or alterations (Housing Act 2004) .
- Power to serve notices – we can serve improvement notices when work needs to be done to improve living conditions for occupiers or neighbours. The work we specify depends on the conditions we find and what the law allows us to do.
- Powers to enter a property and carry out work (emergency remedial action) – if you do not carry out work to the standard specified by a notice, we have the option of doing the work and charging you for it.
- Power to take over managing properties – there are a number of reasons why we may do this, including not being able to issue a licence or if a property has been empty for a long time (Housing Act 2004) .
- Power to close a property (prohibition order) – we would issue this notice only after we had carried out a detailed assessment to decide the best course of action to deal with a seriously substandard property. We might close a property where improvements are too expensive or the condition of the property is too bad to repair. The notice would mean that nobody could live in the property. (Housing Act 2004) .
- Power to order a property to be domolished or an area is cleared – this is done in similar circumstances to closing a property.
Other Powers
Blocked or Defective Drainage or Private Sewers
To need the owner to address obstructed private sewers |
Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976, Section 35 |
To need the owner to address blocked or defective drainage |
Building Act 1984, Section 59 |
To need the owner to address defective drainage or private sewers |
Public Health Act 1961, Section 17 |
Vermin (Risk of Attracting Vermin that may Detrimentally Affect People’s Health)
To need the owner to remove waste so that vermin is not attracted to the site |
Public Health Act 1961, Section 34
Prevention by Damage of Pests Act1949, Section 4
Public Health Act 1936, Section 83
Environmental Protection Act 1990, Section 80
Building Act 1984, Section 76 |
Unsightly Land and Property Affecting the Amenity of the Area
To need the owner to remove waste from the property |
Public Health Act 1961, Section 34 (see above) |
To need the owner to address unsightly land or the external appearance of a property |
Town and Country Planning Act 1990, Section 215 |
To need the owner to take steps to address a property adversely affecting the amenity of an area through its disrepair |
Building Act 1984, Section 79 |
Forfeiture Proceedings
The Authorities are a major landowner and it is inevitable that some properties identified as being in a poor condition will either be Authority owned or the Authority will have an interest as the freeholder. Authorities can therefore take either by sale (where the property is owned) or forfeiture proceedings where the Authority has an interest |
top of page