Housing WOF field tests to start in Wellington
NEWS RELEASE
16 December 2013
Housing WOF field tests to start in Wellington
The first step in a nationwide project aimed at making rental housing safer to live in – especially for children, students and the elderly - is to start with ‘warrant of fitness’ field tests in five cities, including Wellington, in January.
Some 125 rental properties – 25 in each city – are to be given the once-over by home assessment experts inAuckland, Tauranga, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin.
The field tests will not result in the immediate issue of WOFs for the 125 houses but will be an important step towards standardising methodologies and checklists to ensure the credibility of the WOF scheme.
“Too many people live in cold, damp housing,” says Wellington Mayor Celia Wade-Brown. “It’s bad for health and productivity. We want children, students and older people to have warm, dry and safe homes.
“I made a personal commitment at the election campaign to introduce a rental housing warrant of fitness. The first steps are now being taken between the five councils and other.”
“Regardless of the reasons why the houses were built to these standards in the first places, it is well-known that poor housing conditions contribute to more severe asthma, rheumatic fever and other housing-related illnesses,” adds Cr Paul Eagle, Chair of the Council’s Community, Sport and Recreation Committee.
The WOF will be an innovative tool that will benefit both landlords and people looking to rent,” says Buildings Portfolio Leader Cr Iona Pannett. “Landlords will be able to attract good tenants more easily and renters will be given information on whether a property meets a good standard or not before they sign on the dotted line.”
The rental housing WOF field test involves the Auckland, Tauranga, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin councils, ACC, New Zealand Green Building Council and the University of Otago (Wellington).
The assessment tool was developed by the NZ Green Building Council and the University of Otago (Wellington) with feedback and input from the five councils, ACC and other housing experts.
ACC's Programme Manager for Home Safety, Megan
Nagel, says: "ACC is supporting the warrant of fitness trial
as part of our focus on reducing injuries in and around the
home.
"Environmental factors such as poor lighting and
maintenance, slippery surfaces and steps and stairs
contribute to many home injuries, so by helping to address
factors such as these, a housing warrant of fitness will
potentially support efforts to bring injury rates
down."
Leigh Featherstone, Homestar Director at the New Zealand Green Building Council, says the support of ACC and the cities involved shows a strong joint commitment to improving local housing and health. “We hope that by the end of this project there’ll be a working tool to rate rental standards nationally. This will make sure rental housing isn’t endangering the health of the families living in it. The long-term payoff will be better health, particularly of our kids and elderly.”
“The agreement to pre-test the rental warrant of fitness is an outstanding example of what can be achieved by local councils working together to improve rental housing quality for families and communities” says Professor Philippa Howden-Chapman, at the University of Otago, Wellington.
“Over a decade of robust research by the Housing and Health Research Programme has enabled us to develop a world-class rental housing WOF, which we are pre-testing before it’s rolled out more widely.”
When will the field tests
start?
The field test will start in January and
run through to the end of February. The results will be
published in March.
What will the assessment
cover?
The assessment uses 28 criteria, an
associated checklist and a technical manual. See Attachment
1 for the criteria and checklist.
How long will it
take?
The assessment should take only about an
hour from when the assessor enters the front door to when
they leave.
What does the assessment aim to
achieve?
The assessment aims to identify whether
the rental property meets basic housing quality standards
that impact on the following areas: warmth (or ability to
effectively heat), dryness, mould and dampness, injury risk,
sanitation, basic state-of-repair and basic living
needs. These factors impact the health and safety of the
occupants.
Why is a WOF being considered in the
first place?
Housing is one of the key
material determinants of health and wellbeing. New
Zealand housing is of a lower quality than most OECD
countries and several national surveys and research studies
have shown that private rental housing is in poorer
condition than either social housing, or houses that are
owner occupied. Living in substandard housing is seriously
damaging the health of New Zealanders with children from
low-income families, Māori and Pacific peoples
disproportionately affected. Over 70% of all children who
are in poverty live in rental accommodation (20% in Housing
New Zealand housing and 50% in private rentals).
The Children’s Commission’s Expert Working Group on Solutions to Child Poverty recommend the introduction of a Rental Housing Warrant of Fitness (WOF) as a means to addressing the health and safety of a large proportion of children living in poor quality private rental housing.
In addition, each year, ACC receives around 600,000 claims for injuries that happen in or around the home. It is estimated that around 30% of home injuries are caused by environmental factors such as poor maintenance, slippery surfaces, paths, steps and stairs as well as poor lighting.
The overall aims of this partnership group for a WOF is to improve the health, quality of life and energy bills for those in rental accommodation.
What is the Government
doing?
The NZ Government signalled it wants to
develop a WOF for use initially on its 69,000 Housing NZ
properties with a potential wider roll-out to other
areas http://www.beehive.govt.nz/release/housing-wof-be-developed-and-trialled
How
does this field test relate to the Government’s
project?
The parties in this agreement will
share the assessment tool and the findings with the
Government with a view to collaborate to create one WOF
assessment tool that can be applied in the social and
private rental markets.
Have other countries
implemented a warrant of fitness?
Yes, in 2001
the United Kingdom established a ‘Decent Homes’
standard, which states that houses should be warm,
weatherproof and have reasonably modern
facilities. Rather than assessing against a fixed
standard, the HHSRS employs a risk assessment approach to
enable risks from hazards to health and safety in dwellings
to be minimised. The system applies to all dwellings,
regardless of ownership.
What type of properties
will be involved?
There will
be a mixture of private rental properties and Council social
housing properties.
How will the homes be
selected?
The individual councils involved in
the field test will recruit landlords to volunteer to
participate and the councils will also select a sample of
their social housing portfolio for the field
test.
Who will conduct the
assessments?
Each council involved in the
project will be responsible for identifying service
providers to conduct the assessment. This may be Council
staff (i.e. environmental health officers or eco design
advisors) or independent contractors with experience in home
assessments. All of the assessors will undergo training with
the checklist and technical manual prior to the assessments
beginning.
Will the homes be getting an actual
“warrant of fitness” rating?
No, this
project is just to test the draft assessment tool to see how
practical and usable it is. The homes will not receive an
actual WOF rating.
Landlords will be presented with the assessment findings to help them understand how their properties performed in the assessment. Landlords will also be provided with information such as insulation schemes, curtain banks and other informative material.
What
are you predicting for pass/fail rates?
We are
predicting a relatively high fail rate. New Zealand’s
housing stock has well-documented quality problems (i.e.
lack of insulation, dampness and inadequate heating) and
there are some fundamental things that are missing in many
homes to keep them warm, dry, healthy and
safe.
What other objectives do you
have?
We want to gather feedback from
participating landlords on effective and transparent ways of
engaging with the rental housing sector. We want to
understand landlords’ experiences to having their house
inspected, their feedback on the field test and their
post-inspection intentions.
We want to understand what type of tenant-education material will be effective and useful to be delivered in conjunction with a housing WOF assessment to help address issues related to occupant behaviour (e.g. venting the home properly and the use of un-flued gas heaters causing moisture problems and health issues).
We want to understand tenants’ experiences towards having their homes inspected and their understanding of the benefits, or otherwise, of a WOF.
We want to share the results of the field test with the Government and collaborate with a view to producing one effective WOF tool for all of New Zealand.
Assessment
Criteria
1. Is there a functional,
safe stove-top and oven? (Yes/no)
2. Is there
adequate space for food preparation and storage?
(Yes/no)
3. Is there an adequate supply of hot
and cold potable water? (Yes/no)
4. Is the
hot-water at the tap 55°C (±5°C?)
(Yes/no)
5. Is there a functional toilet,
which does not have a cracked or broken seat, cistern or
bowl? (Yes/no)
6. Is there a suitably located
bath or shower in good working order?
(Yes/no)
7. Are there secure or high level
cupboards or shelves for storing hazardous or toxic
substances out of children's reach?
(Yes/no)
8. Is there a fixed form of safe and
effective space heating? (Yes/no)
9. Do the
bathroom, kitchen and all bedrooms have some form of
ventilation to outside? (Yes/no)
10. Is the house
reasonably free of visible mould, i.e. the total area of
mould is less than an A4 sheet of
paper? (Yes/no)
11. Are the power outlets and light
switches safe and in good working order?
(Yes/no)
12. Is there adequate indoor lighting?
(Yes/no)
13. Does the house have adequate working
smoke alarms? (Yes/no)
14. Have the windows got
effective latches? (Yes/no)
15. Have high windows
got security stays? (Yes/no)
16. Do glass doors have
safety visibility strips? (Yes/no)
17. Does the
house have ceiling insulation to WOF standards?
(Yes/no)
18. Does the house have underfloor
insulation to WOF standards? (Yes/no)
19. Is the
house weathertight with no evident leaks, or moisture
stains on the walls or ceiling? (Yes/no)
20. Is the
house in a reasonable state of repair?
(Yes/no)
21. Is the storm and waste water drainage
being adequately discharged? (Yes/no)
22. Is there
any water ponding under the house? (Yes/no)
23. Is
there adequate outdoor lighting near entrance
ways? (Yes/no)
24. Does the house appear to be
structurally sound? (Yes/no)
25. Are there
handrails for all internal stairs and all outdoor steps that
access the house, and do balconies/decks have balustrades to
the current Building Code? (Yes/no)
26. Is there
fire egress to the current Building
Code? (Yes/no)
27. Is the address clearly labelled
and identifiable?
(Yes/no)
ENDS