Conveyancers unite against stress and frustration of dealing with management companies

Answers from parliament provide a platform for our campaign to help the industry and its clients, says Eddie Goldsmith
It can take management companies up to eight weeks to respond to requests for
the information conveyancers need to progress a sale. When you consider that 200,000 leasehold transactions take place every year, it’s an awful
lot of waiting time.
Members of the Conveyancing Association wrote to their local MPs last October highlighting these issues, which led to a number of meetings.
We outlined how a legal change that required management companies to deliver information in a set time – and at a set cost – would make
a huge difference to transaction handlers and homebuyers (see www.solicitorsjournal.com/node/18982).
Ian Mearns MP kindly agreed
to table some parliamentary questions to find out more
about the problems experienced by those buying leasehold properties, which have now
been answered.
Questions to the Department for Communities and Local Government
Ian Mearns: “To ask the secretary of state for communities and local government if he will extend the redress scheme to include management agencies for leasehold properties.”
Kris Hopkins MP: “The requirement that letting and property management agents in England must be a member of an approved redress scheme will apply in both the leasehold and the private rented sector.”
Ian Mearns: “To ask the secretary of state for communities and local government: (1) what estimate his department has made of how many people buying leasehold properties in (a) 2012 and (b) 2013 were charged over £500 by management companies for
the information they needed
to complete the purchase; (2) what estimate his department has made of how long it took people buying leasehold properties in (a) 2012 and (b) 2013 to obtain from management companies
the necessary information
they needed to complete
the purchase.”
Kris Hopkins: “This information
is not centrally held.”
Question to the Department for Business, Innovation
and Skills
Ian Mearns: “To ask the secretary of state for business, innovation and skills whether consideration was given to including schemes to protect leaseholders within the Consumer Rights Bill.”












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