Coming down your street
Series: Inside Housing ; 21(23) 11 June 2004, 43-44(2)Publication details: 2004Subject(s): Online resources: Summary: Looks at the criticisms from local authorities and the private sector of the plans to register all private landlords in Scotland through amendments to the Anti-Social Behaviour Scotland Bill being debated by the Scottish Parliament, which stand to become law in the autumn. The proposed registration has stretched from covering rogue landlords and bad neighbours to cover an estimated 160 000 rented properties in all parts of Scotland. Some critics believe that this planned provision and the Scottish houses in multiple occupation law will drive many private landlords out of the market. View the progress of the Anti-Social Behaviour (Scotland) Bill at www.scottish.parliament.uk.| Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journal article | London Journal article | ABS67937 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 126595-1001 |
Looks at the criticisms from local authorities and the private sector of the plans to register all private landlords in Scotland through amendments to the Anti-Social Behaviour Scotland Bill being debated by the Scottish Parliament, which stand to become law in the autumn. The proposed registration has stretched from covering rogue landlords and bad neighbours to cover an estimated 160 000 rented properties in all parts of Scotland. Some critics believe that this planned provision and the Scottish houses in multiple occupation law will drive many private landlords out of the market. View the progress of the Anti-Social Behaviour (Scotland) Bill at www.scottish.parliament.uk.