North Yorkshire Council Housing Improvement Strategy 2025-30
As part of our
Council Plan, North Yorkshire Council (NYC) aim to ensure that
all residents are ‘free from harm and feel safe and
protected’ and to deliver ‘good quality affordable and
sustainable housing which meets the needs of our
communities’. Our
Housing Strategy 2024-29 sets out the Council’s ambition
to be an ‘Exemplar Social Landlord’.
Following the creation of NYC in 2023, and a subsequent restructure of the housing service, NYC identified a range of issues within our tenant services which led to a self-referral to the Regulator for Social Housing (RSH) and a C3 Regulatory Judgement.
Those issues included a lack of reliable information about the condition of its homes, a failure to meet aspects of landlord health and safety requirements, a lack of reliable information to support its understanding of and response to the diverse needs of its tenants and limited and inconsistent meaningful opportunities for tenants to influence and scrutinise its services.
We have undertaken a root cause analysis to understand the background to non-compliance, to ensure lessons are learned and sustainable improvements are implemented.
Using this information, alongside our ambition to deliver high quality services based upon tenant needs we have developed a Housing Improvement Plan, designed to ensure that we understand and meet those needs, deliver transparent services, make data led service improvement and provide a safe and secure home for everyone.
Since we made the self-referral we have made some immediate changes to the services we deliver for tenants. In the background we have also strengthened our governance around Housing Services, created a Housing Improvement Board and a Housing Improvement Plan which focusses on addressing those known areas of non-compliance.
We are basing our Improvement Plan on our internal review of compliance with the regulatory standards, our root cause analysis, internal audit of our rent compliance and feedback from residents.
We are also linking in with the Councils wider Transformation Programme, understanding where we can join up with projects around ‘Customer’ and ‘The Way we Work’ to maximise value for money.
Our goal is to improve the quality of our tenant and leaseholder services in North Yorkshire
By delivering the actions within the plan we hope to achieve the following strategic outcomes:
1. The presenting issues and underlying root causes of the regulatory downgrade have been understood and addressed with learning embedded in revised governance and reporting structure.
2. Culture reflects high performing organisation seeking continuous improvement.
3. Robust policy framework in place which supports delivery of the strategy.
4. Governance is sustainably fit for purpose to manage the risk profile of the housing function.
5. Mitigations to presenting risks are in place and effective.
6. Systems and Data are right size and effective to support service delivery, reporting and oversight.
7. All properties have an up-to-date stock condition survey.
8. Data relating to assets and compliance is robust and maintained.
9. All properties have valid and evidenced compliance certificates for all elements of landlord health and safety.
10. Effective complaints handling approach which meets the expectations of the Housing Ombudsman complaints handling code and consumer standards.
11. Governance and reporting framework is robust and provides sufficient oversight of complaints.
12. Staff have sufficient knowledge to effectively handle complaints.
13. Resident engagement framework is comprehensive and in place with clear feedback and learning loop established throughout the governance framework.
14. The repairs service delivery is effective, and any backlog is cleared.
15. A clear framework of service standards, policies and procedures is developed for all service areas and reporting framework against these standards established.
16. Approach to tenancy management is clear, set out in policy, monitored, and delivers the outcomes of the Tenancy Standard.
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Stronger Governance – We have established an Improvement Framework, Overview and Scrutiny Committee, Housing Improvement Board, Tenant Scrutiny Panel and Performance Framework. |
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Regulatory Engagement – We are working positively with the Regulator for Social Housing (RSH) to improve our compliance position and to work towards a C1 position; that overall the landlord is delivering the outcomes of the consumer standards. |
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Landlord Compliance – We have developed Management Plans for the ‘Big 6’ Health and Safety concerns. We have also commenced a programme of Decent Homes Surveys and implementation of an Asset Management System. |
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Listening and Engaging with Residents - Over 2000 tenants took part in our first Tenant Satisfaction Measures (TSM) survey, we are conducting quarterly surveys to keep a better track on performance. We have developed a Tenant Involvement Strategy, recruited to the Tenant Panels and launched ‘Open Door’ the tenant newsletter. |
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Policy Harmonisation – We have developed a policy framework which details the priority policies we will seek to harmonise and timescales. We have already harmonised critical policies on Allocations, Domestic Abuse, Tenancy Strategy, Repairs and Anti-social Behaviour. |
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Complaints Handling – We have created a dedicated resource within the Community Development Directorate and have improved our complaints classifications and data collection to ensure we can now report on and learn from our complaints. |
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Damp and Mould – We have improved our damp and mould processes to be compliant with Awaabs Law and launched an online reporting tool to make it easier for tenants to let us know when there is a problem. |
Our Housing Improvement Plan focusses on 7 key themes:
1. Governance and Oversight
2. Understanding Stock Quality
3. Keeping Homes Safe and Compliant
4. Understanding Tenants and Responding to Diverse Needs
5. Effective Repairs and Maintenance Service
6. Working with Others to Ensure Safe Neighbourhoods
7. Allocate and Let Homes Fairly and Manage Tenancy
Themes 1-4 directly address issues of regulatory concern highlighted in the Regulatory Judgement. Themes 5-7 pick up other areas, not highlighted within the Regulatory Judgement but where NYC are aware work is required to further our compliance position.
Actions within the current improvement plan are scheduled to be complete by March 2027 and split into seven phases
Phase |
Start date |
End Date |
Phase 1 |
Sep-24 |
Dec-24 |
Phase 2 |
Jan-25 |
Mar-25 |
Phase 3 |
Apr-25 |
Jun-25 |
Phase 4 |
Jul-25 |
Sep-25 |
Phase 5 |
Oct-25 |
Dec-25 |
Phase 6 |
Jan-26 |
Mar-26 |
Phase 7 |
Apr-26 |
Mar-27 |
Phase 8 |
Apr-27 |
Onwards |
Further, operational, actions plans have been developed to address those areas of the Consumer Standards where we feel further development is required in order to achieve our ambition to receive a C1 grading and ultimately to become an exemplar social landlord.
We recognise that a staged approach to recovery is required, and we have aligned these stages with our ambition to achieve regulatory upgrade:
Stage |
Description |
Position |
Indicative Time Frame |
Stage One |
Recovery |
C3 |
May 2024 - June 2025 |
Stage Two |
Stabilisation and Adjustment |
Journey to C2 |
June 2025 -March 2027 |
Stage Three |
Strategic Review |
Journey to C1 |
June 2025 – April 2029 |
Stage Four |
Continuous Improvement |
Exemplar |
April 2029 onwards |
The Housing Improvement Strategy will be delivered in the knowledge that recovery is not a linear journey and there may be both internal and external factors (such as tenant feedback, regulatory engagement and additional legislative change) which cause us to pause and modify our response.
The stages of improvement are not distinct, Phases Two and Three could (and should) happen concurrently, as the service focusses on harmonisation and compliance in the short to medium term whilst framing scenarios for longer term improvement post-recovery and stabilisation.
In order to ensure that all those involved are kept up to date with progress on delivery of the Strategy and of any service improvements which might impact directly on tenants a Communication Plan has been developed.
Our Tenant involvement strategy sets out how we will ensure that tenants have opportunity and means to be involved in our service improvement and delivery reviews. It also details how we will engage with and inform tenants of changes which affect them and their households.
Ensuring transparency with tenants is critical to our approach and we will strive to make our service data available and accessible to tenants, leaseholders, elected members and external bodies both as standard through our performance information and publication scheme and upon request.
Our Performance Framework details the performance data which will be collected.
Our performance will be monitored, by the Housing Improvement Board and the Regulator for Social Housing on a monthly basis, progress will be reported to Overview and Scrutiny, Management Board and Executive Committee quarterly.
Financial Monitoring reports will be published regularly. These reports set out our progress against our budgets.
We will measure our performance through the annual Tenant Satisfaction Measures and incorporate learnings and feedback into the Housing Improvement Plan.
Using the 2023/24 TSM survey results as our baseline we will seek to improve our performance.
We have appointed an external consultant, Savills, to be a critical friend to us, and challenge and support us to deliver on our Improvement Plan.
The Housing Improvement Strategy will be agreed by the Executive Committee and monitored via the methodology above on a quarterly basis.
An annual Housing Service Improvement and Performance Report including Complaints Handling and TSM performance (the statutory requirement) will be reported to Overview and Scrutiny, Executive and Tenant Panel – this will also serve as the strategy review document, ensuring that sufficient progress is being made and impact is being felt, on an annual basis.
Do you have ideas on how we can improve our housing services? Whether you can spare a few hours or want to be involved regularly, we'd love to hear from you.
Contact us at myhousingvoice@northyorks.gov.uk
Find out more about Tenant Involvement : >>link<<