Landlords fined more than £18,000 over dangerous Bridlington properties

The landlord of a five-storey block of rented flats in Bridlington has been ordered to pay a total of £12,377 for failing to ensure the property was safe for its tenants.
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London-based Gedulah Ltd bought the property, number 2 The Crescent, in 2021 and employed a management company based in Manchester.

However, it failed to undertake basic repairs or put in place adequate management arrangements to ensure the property was safe.

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East Riding of Yorkshire Council's private sector housing team found the property had inadequate heating and insulation, damp and mould, unrestricted low-level opening windows, a faulty fire alarm and lack of door locks to the main entrance.

The Crescent, BridlingtonThe Crescent, Bridlington
The Crescent, Bridlington

Some of the flats were rented by families with children, and the hazards represented a real danger, especially to the younger children.

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East Riding of Yorkshire Council served Gedulah Ltd with two improvement notices under the Housing Act 2004, but the company failed to comply, so the council began prosecution proceedings.

Gedulah Ltd did not attend Beverley Magistrates Court on 16 August 2023, but pleaded guilty by email to two counts of failing to comply with the improvement notices.

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The company was ordered to pay a total of £12,377, comprising a fine of £4,000 for each improvement notice, costs of £2,377 and a victim surcharge of £2,000.

Earlier this year, the council brought a prosecution against national social landlord My Space Housing Solutions after it continued to rent out a property in Bridlington with broken and inadequate heating, leaving tenants exposed to excess cold hazards.

Appearing at Beverley Magistrates Court on 26 April, My Space Housing Solutions, represented by its chief executive, John Manning, pleaded guilty to two counts of failing to comply with improvement notices served under the Housing Act 2004.

The company was fined £3,000 and ordered to pay costs of £1,553.70 and a victim surcharge of £1,200.

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Chris Dunnachie, private sector housing manager at ERYC, said: “In both cases, officers have tried to work with each landlord to rectify the dangerous hazards in their rental properties; but their advice and then legal notices have been ignored.

“The council does, and will continue to, take robust action when the safety of tenants is put at risk due to serious hazards from the properties they are living in.”