More Information

For more information about our proposals, click the subjects below:

Introduction

The last two years have given us all plenty of challenges, and we have tried to do what we can to meet them.

Covid Blast

We’ve continued to improve and introduce new digital services - helpful for everyone staying home during the pandemic, and we made wellbeing telephone calls with tenants who aren’t online.

We’ve offered significant Rent Discounts through our unique Key Tenant Scheme, meaning over 80% of our tenants saw a Rent Freeze this year, and in recognition of increasing fuel costs, expanded our Money Advice Service to include Home Energy Advice.

Green Flashes

The Rent Increase Consultation is your chance to let us know if you think our rents are good value for money and make suggestions if you have ideas of ways we can improve our services.

Are you happy with our proposal to reduce the second year Rent Increase from inflation only to inflation minus 2%?

Please let us know what you think.

About Us

Our Homes

We own over 1,400 homes for rent all over East Lothian. We have built just under 70% of our properties (“own build” properties) using grant money provided by the Scottish Government and money that we borrow from banks and building societies.

The rest of the properties we own were bought from Scottish Homes in 1996 through a “Large Scale Voluntary Transfer” (LSVT properties), and the whole cost of buying them was funded by a bank loan (i.e. we didn’t get any grant towards the cost of buying these houses).

We also have around 40 Shared Ownership properties, and a number of garages, workshops and offices.

Our Rent Levels

Rent is our main income. We use it to run and manage the Association, and maintain our homes.

Historically, our rent increases have been set at inflation plus 1%. This is because most of the government funding we have received to build new homes, and the price we paid for the LSVT properties, assumed that we would increase our rents in this way. In most years we have had to apply this level of increase to ensure we can continue to manage and maintain our homes properly and repay the loans we took out to build them, including the interest. Over time, this means our rents have become more expensive in real terms, and this is of course of concern to us because one of our main aims is to ensure we continue to provide first class affordable rented homes.

We use the Retail Price Index or RPI as our measure of inflation, again because this is the same inflation measure used to calculate the government funding we get for new homes and the price we could afford to pay for the LSVT properties, but also because it includes housing cost inflation, so is the most appropriate measure of inflation in relation to the costs of our business and the services we provide.

Service Charges

Service Charges are assessed separately from rental charges. These are costs that we pass on to some tenants for extra services we provide such as stair cleaning, warden costs or factoring services. What we charge the tenant depends entirely on what the contractors charge us for providing these services. Costs can go up or can come down if we can find a cheaper way of providing services. Because of this, and because Service Charges only apply to some of our homes, they are not considered as part of the annual Rent Increase, and we will let tenants with Service Charges know separately what will happen to their charges for next year. But if there are any issues you would like to discuss about Services Charges individually, just get in touch.

What Your Rent Covers

We only receive Government grants to cover part of the cost to buy or build new homes. This means that everything else we do must be funded through our rental income.

Graph

Repairs & Maintenance

This is normally our biggest expenditure and it covers several different areas:
  • Reactive repairs - where something in your home breaks or wears out and we send someone out to fix or replace it
  • Planned maintenance - such as kitchen replacements, new heating systems, insulation upgrades, and so on
  • Cyclical maintenance - things like external paint work and clearing rhones

To keep costs down, we have our own in-house maintenance company, R3, which carries out around 85% of our repairs and maintenance. In recent years we have spent a lot of our repairs and maintenance budget on making sure all our properties meet the Energy Efficiency Standards for Social Housing (EESSH), and we are currently upgrading smoke alarms and moving to a five yearly inspection of all electric systems to comply with new legislation.

Our 2020/21 maintenance expenditure was lower than usual (it normally makes up around half of our costs), because we had to stop most repairs and maintenance work during both Lockdowns.

Running Costs

This is what is spent to administer our business and provide services to tenants, housing applicants and everyone else that we work with – employment of staff, insurances, tenant surveys, upkeep of our offices and the equipment we use, stationery, the Money and Home Energy Advice Service, legal and audit services and more.

Loan Interest & Repayments

While we do get some funding to help us buy or build new homes, the rest of the cost of new builds has to be covered through bank loans. We have to repay these loans over time and are also charged interest on the amounts outstanding. As there is not enough social housing in East Lothian to go around (we have around 2,500 families registered for housing with us at any one time, and currently only house around 70 of them each year from vacancies arising within our existing homes), we hope to continue to build new properties.

Keeping Rents Affordable

Each month we check all our new tenancies against an Affordability Tool provided by the Scottish Federation of Housing Associations (SFHA). This tool enables us to assess how affordable our rents are and helps us identify any new tenants who may be eligible for additional financial support (such as Universal Credit or other welfare benefits).

In the last year, the Affordability Tool has continued to show us that our rents remain affordable, but has also helped us to provide additional support or advice services where they are most needed.

Key Tenant Scheme & Rent Discounts

Our Key Tenant Scheme is unique in UK housing and we remain the only Housing Association offering monthly cash Rent Discounts to all our tenants.

All our tenants, including tenants on Universal Credit or Housing Benefit, are eligible for our Key Tenant Scheme Rent Discounts. If a tenant getting Universal Credit or Housing Benefit receives a discount, they are allowed to keep that money, in full (the net reduction in housing costs does not mean it is then deducted from their benefit entitlement).

82% of our tenants receive a monthly Rent Discount, either £5 each month for Bronze Key Tenants, £15 each month for Gold Key Tenants, or £25 each month for Platinum Key Tenants.

So, if you are not already getting Rent Discounts, there is no time like the present to find out how simple it is to qualify for them and make it a New Year’s resolution for 2022 to start claiming them! More information is available on elha.com, or log into your My Home account and click on the Key Tenant button to get started.

My New Home Rent Discounts & Other Services

New tenants using our unique My New Home service have access to Rent Discounts covering all of their first month’s rent, meaning that no one needs to struggle to pay rent at the very start of their new tenancy. We also provide paint packs to help new tenants decorate their new home.

We offer a free garden care scheme for our elderly or disabled tenants who live alone and are no longer able to manage their garden, and funding is normally available for medical adaptations to allow tenants with changing needs to remain in their home. We also hold a small Tenancy Sustainment fund to help tenants in unusual or exceptional circumstances, where their tenancy could otherwise be placed at risk and there are no alternative options available.

Money & Home Energy Advice Service

In 2010 we introduced an independent Money Advice service for our tenants. This service quickly proved its usefulness, and now achieves around half a million pounds of additional benefits, grant funding and charitable donations each year for our tenants (that’s not a typing error, we help our tenants claim around £0.5m every year in additional income!). In 2020, we expanded the Service to include Home Energy Advice.

Our Annual Rent Increase Consultation And Budget Setting Process

In January each year, we consult tenants on a proposed Rent Increase. In most years, we have consulted on an inflation increase (based on the published figure for November each year) plus 1%. All of the responses we receive to our consultation, including all comments made by our tenants (in full), are given to our Management Committee to review, before they agree the coming year’s Budget and Rent Increase.

Our Management Committee meets in February each year to consider our Budget for the coming financial year (1 April to 31 March). They need to consider what it will cost us to provide services to our tenants, while considering the feedback from the Rent Increase Consultation and looking for ways to keep costs down.

Rent Increases over the Last Six Years

Table Graph

* In 2017 we consulted with tenants about a larger Rent Increase to fund the introduction of the Key Tenant Scheme. Tenants supported this increase, and the Key Tenant Scheme was launched in April 2017.

** In 2018, as fewer tenants had received a Key Tenant Discount than initially expected, we were able to consult with tenants on a lower rent increase.

*** The April 2021 increase was slightly different. Inflation was 0.9% and so a normal increase would have been 1.9%. Instead, a £5 flat rate increase was applied which, on average, was equivalent to 1.2%. However, 82% of our tenants saw this matched with a new or increased Rent Discount of £5, so saw a Rent Freeze. Overall, this resulted in an average Rent Increase of 0.2%.

How To Reduce Your Rent Increase

Our Key Tenant Scheme Rent Discounts can reduce your rent by up to £25 a month

We remain the only housing association offering Rent Discounts in the UK, so use your unique opportunity to reduce your rent – and don’t forget that tenants receiving Housing Benefit or Universal Credit are allowed to keep their Rent Discounts in full.

If you are already receiving a Bronze or Gold Key Tenant Rent Discount, now is the time to upgrade further. The table below shows the difference upgrading can make. For a tenant not currently receiving any Rent Discounts, upgrading to Platinum actually lowers the rent by 0.65%. Or, for a Bronze Key Tenant, upgrading to Platinum reduces the increase to 0.5%, whilst upgrading to Gold reduces the increase to 2.8%, over 4% below inflation.

So, what are you waiting for? Just login to your My Home account and click on the Key Tenant Scheme box to find out more.

Graph table

The table shows the increase to the average weekly rent of £100.34

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Why are your rents higher than East Lothian Council (ELC)?

A: There are a great many reasons for this, we can’t list all of them, but to give you an idea:

  • Until ELC re-started their new build program, they had no loans to service and repay as they had paid in full for all their properties
  • The way most of our new build properties have been funded by the Scottish Government, and the price we paid for our LSVT Properties, assumed that our rents would continue to rise by inflation plus 1%, which keeps initial grant down, but does have an impact on our rents through time
  • As we must meet certain financial obligations, such as loan covenants, which are agreed over the long-term, we need to plan our rent increases over a similar long-term basis, and so we cannot necessarily make changes to our overall approach on a year to year basis

Having said that, in recent years, our annual Rent Increases have generally been lower than the Council’s, so although our rents are higher, Council rents have slowly started to catch ours up. In addition, our Rent Discounts also help to close the gap. The table below compares our rent increases over the last five years.

Graph table

* This was our net increase taking into account new Rent Discounts – see the section “Our Annual Rent Increase Consultation and Rent Setting Process” above for more information.

Q: Why can I only get a Rent Discount if I go online?

A: We launched the Key Tenant Scheme as an incentive to get tenants to use their My Home accounts online for several reasons:

  • My Home is the most cost-effective way for us to manage your tenancy, so if we keep our costs down, that helps us keep your rent affordable
  • Universal Credit accounts can only be managed online, and we wanted to give all our tenants an incentive to get used to managing their tenancy online, so if they do receive Universal Credit at any point in the future, it won’t be such a shock to the system
  • Anyone getting Housing Benefit or Universal Credit can keep their Rent Discounts in full, and an extra £25 every month (or £300 extra every year) certainly helps

We are also very interested in expanding our Energy Advice services and helping our tenants get lower energy bills. All the cheapest tariffs need to be booked and managed online. Where we can help our tenants improve their digital skills, as well as reducing rent costs, this should help reduce other bills too. We are also continuing to provide services to help those tenants that still find the digital world a bit of a challenge, and are introducing our Healthy Happy Home Checks to try and find ways to help a bit more.

Finally, the Coronavirus pandemic has shown many of us the benefits of the digital world, and lots of people have gained new digital skills as a result of it. Just a year ago, who would have thought so many of us would have got used to meeting our friends and family through video calls! Hopefully these new skills are something useful to have come out of the challenges we have all faced over the last year, and we can continue to do our bit to help our tenants access more services and increase their incomes.

Q: Why do you use the Retail Price Index (RPI) instead of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) when you increase rents?

A: RPI is the measure of inflation that includes housing costs, so is the most applicable to the costs of our business.

Q: How do you calculate rents in the first place?

A: We use a points system for all our new builds. Each property feature is given a number of points. For example, a double bedroom is 5 points, a single bedroom is 3 points, a separate dining room is 3 points, a large garden is 3 points, and energy efficiency measures can be anything from 0 to 6 points. Each point has a cost, which is how the rent is calculated. For example, if the cost per point was £1.20 per week, and a property had 80 points, the rent would be £96 per week. Full details can be found in our Rent and Service Charge Policy.

Q: Why should I pay more rent when my wages haven’t increased?

A: Because our costs have increased, and we need to cover those costs. If the rent increases to the point where it is not affordable for you, please get in touch. Our Money Advisor can help you make the most of your money, and check if you qualify for any additional income or benefits such as Universal Credit, which may help make up the shortfall.

More Information

If you would like more information on any of these topics, we have a wide range of information on elha.com, leaflets are available from our offices, or just drop us an e-mail or call in.

This consultation is now closed

Click to Go to Consultation Results