Document 6442763

Transcription

Document 6442763
 Understanding Section 20 Consultations
As a leaseholder or tenant paying a variable service charge, you are obliged
under the terms of your lease or tenancy agreement to pay towards the cost of
services, repairs, maintenance or improvements to your flat, building and estate.
Section 20 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 requires us to provide you with
details and ask for your opinions about intended works and services. This is
known as consultation. Section 20 sets out the way we must consult with you.
If we do not do this, we might not be able to charge you the full cost of the
works and services.
This leaflet is provided to help you understand the consultation process and
provide answers to some frequently asked questions.
This leaflet accompanies a notice of intention to enter into a qualifying long term
agreement.
This leaflet is not a substitute for the formal notice which should be read in full.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why was a notice of intention sent to me?
The notice of intention is served on:
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leaseholders
tenants paying a variable service charge
secretaries of Recognised Tenants’ Associations
leaseholders who have purchased off plan, but might not yet have signed
their lease.
The notice has been addressed to named Leaseholders where there are
correspondence or forwarding addresses and addressed to ‘the tenant’ where
delivered to the property address.
If you have received the notice and you are not the leaseholder for the property
please pass this notice on.
Why was a notice of intention necessary?
As your landlord, we are obliged to serve you with a notice when we intend to
enter into a qualifying long term agreement in excess of 12 months. We have
27/03/14 served you the notice of intention to ensure compliance with our legal
obligations to enable us to recover the full costs for works and services.
What is a qualifying long term agreement?
A qualifying long term agreement is one where the cost of services or works is
likely to be more than £100 (one hundred pounds) for a leaseholder in any
accounting period. Most of our service charge accounting periods run from April
1 to March 31.
A qualifying long term agreement is sometimes referred to as a ’long term
agreement’ or a ‘QLTA’.
QLTAs are used because they provide an efficient way to get work done and are
more cost-effective for our leaseholders and tenants. Giving contractors a
longer contract helps keep costs down.
Metropolitan are not the Freeholder of my building?
If Metropolitan is not the freeholder of your building, then it is possible the
responsibility for maintaining the estate areas may rest with a third party. If
this is the case, this notice may not be relevant to you. In some instances, we
may still be responsible for maintaining some external areas of a block, in which
case this notice will be of relevance to you. If you are unsure whether the s.20
notice of intention applies to you please, contact us or send in any observations
that you may have about the consultation. Our contact details are at the end of
this leaflet.
How will Metropolitan select the contractors?
Metropolitan will advertise the opportunity to bid for the QLTA in the Official
Journal of the European Union. This will be carried out under a procedure which
restricts bidders based on their financial standing and technical and professional
abilities.
Metropolitan will use a pre-qualification questionnaire to select the contractors
who will be invited to tender for the QLTA. Following selection, tender
documents will be issued with clearly-defined evaluation criteria.
The contract will be awarded on the basis of the most economically
advantageous tender - in other words, the best value for money.
27/03/14 May I nominate a contractor?
Rules require us to give public notice across Europe of the opportunity to bid for
the QLTA. You may suggest to a contractor to look at the public notice on the
website of the Official Journal of the European Union and to express their
interest through the official process.
If the contractor doesn’t perform well, will they keep getting work?
The contract will say that if works or services are not delivered or are not value
for money, we may end the contract. It will, therefore, be in the contractor’s
interest to ensure it carries out the works and services well and gives value for
money.
How do I make observations?
Observations must be delivered to the address below or by email on or before 16
May 2014. The notice is dated 31 March 2014 and the consultation period ends
on 16 May 2014.
A reply form is included for your convenience.
Observations received after 16 May 2014 or sent to another address will not be
considered.
You can send written observations about the relevant matters specified in the
notice of intention to:
Jo Hinton – Leasehold Manager
Metropolitan Housing Trust Ltd
The Grange
100 High Street
Southgate
London,
N14 6PW
Or you can email your observations to:[email protected]
Please ensure you note your name and address with your observations and
make reference in the title to ‘Estate Services Consultation’.
What will you do with my observations?
Regulations require us to have regard to your observations, which we will.
27/03/14 What happens next?
The process outlined above is the first stage of the consultation process.
The second stage includes us sending you a notice of proposal. In that notice,
we will advise you of our contract proposals and provide you with the details and
costs of the associated works, services and goods. Sometimes this information
is too large to send in which case, we will make this available to you to view at
our local offices. You will be made aware of how and where to view any
documents within the notice of proposal. Where we cannot provide you with
costs, we will let you know why and when these will be made available to you.
The notice of proposal will contain the statement referred to above summarising
your observations and setting out our response to them.
You will have a further chance to make observations during the second stage
and we will again have regard to, summarise and respond to your observations.
Once we have completed the second stage, we will look to enter in to the QLTA.
Contacting us:
If you wish to have an informal discussion about the consultation please contact
Customer Services on 020 3535 3535 or email us at
[email protected]
Thank you
27/03/14