The Federation of Private Residents Associations has responded to the Fuel Poverty enquiry by calling on the next Government to prioritise leasehold flats which make up some the most fuel poor households in the Country.

The FPRA has joined forces with a major coalition of anti-poverty, energy, environmental and health campaigning organisations that have produced a charter of measures needed to eradicate the scandal of fuel poverty.

The Federation of Private Residents Associations are calling on the next UK Government to commit to making all fuel poor homes as energy efficient as a home built today.

The Federation is warning that although the Government has taken some welcome steps, targets to end fuel poverty in England by 2016 will be impossible to meet unless there are changes made to the current leasehold system to address blocks of flats many of which are not connected to the mains gas grid.

Federation Chairman Bob Smytherman and Fuel Poverty Coalition Member Bob Smytherman, said:

‘It should be a right, not a privilege, for everybody to have warm, dry home that they can afford to heat, including leaseholder flat owners. The main political parties have all exchanged rhetoric on the importance of ending fuel poverty but what we need now is concerted action. Any political party serious about ending the hardship millions of fuel poor households are facing must commit to make existing fuel poor flats as energy efficient as those flats that are built today.’

‘The Federation is worried about the confusing and uncoordinated range of energy efficiency measures and their lack of measurable energy efficiency targets for ‘hard to reach’ properties like leasehold flats. Unless an improved national energy efficiency scheme is introduced to include leasehold flats, many more vulnerable pensioners, families and disabled people will be pushed into fuel poverty.’

‘Although such a scheme would require significant investment from landlords and freeholders, it would help lift millions of the poorest flat-dwellers out of fuel poverty and at the same time dramatically cut CO2 emissions, create more than 35,000 jobs, and put over £6 billion back into the economy.’

The FPRA are joining forces with The Association of Residential Managing Agents (ARMA) to call on the Energy Retail Association and OFGEM to investigate -

  • VAT on supplies to common parts of flats
  • Failure of utility companies to appreciate that resident management companies (RMC’s) that have responsibility for blocks of flats cannot be assessed like other commercial businesses. There is a lack of open competition for supplies to common parts and RMC’s are being charged unreasonable tariffs which fall on leaseholders through the service charge payments.
  • Disconnection protocol for supplies to common parts of blocks of flats to avoid supplies being disconnected which will result in no fire alarm or emergency lighting in the blocks endangering life in the event of a fire.

Media Contact:

Bob Smytherman

Chairman – Federation of Private Residents’ Associations

Mobile: 07867 562538

Direct email: Bob@fpra.org.uk

For further information cContact:

Bob Smytherman
Chairman – Federation of Private Residents’ Associations

FPRA

Mobile: 07867 562538
Direct email: Bob@fpra.org.uk

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