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Housing hitch in discrimination bill

Posted: 03 June 2004 | Subscribe Online


Measures to tackle discrimination against disabled people could reduce their choice about the type of housing available to them, experts have warned.

An influential group of MPs and Lords has recommended that new disability legislation should include provisions to stop landlords from unreasonably withholding consent for disabled tenants to make appropriate physical changes to a property, and called on the government to consider setting up an accessible housing register.

But Peter Smith, project officer for equalities at the Local Government Association, said there could be problems with how "unreasonably withholding consent" was defined.
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He added that an accessibility housing register could result in councils and housing providers only offering already altered properties to disabled people, which could limit their choice about where they lived.

However, Sarah Davis, policy officer for the Chartered Institute of Housing, thought a register would help housing providers know what stock was out there and help match that with people's needs.

The parliamentary committee of review of the draft bill recommends the final version should have its title changed to the Disability Anti-Discrimination Bill. It also suggests duties on councils to promote "good relations" between non-disabled and disabled people, and a final deadline of 2017 for all trains to be fully accessible. The review also calls for the scope of disability to be extended to those suffering from HIV, cancer and multiple sclerosis from the point of diagnosis. 

- Report from www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/dddb.cfm


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