Councillors have been informed that increasing numbers of people living in newer housing estates are trapped within problematic private management agreements, facing inflated costs and uncertain benefits.
A Caerphilly Council panel heard that some homeowners have received intimidating demands for payment for upkeep services, despite minimal proof that such work has actually been completed.
Penmaen ward representative Roy Saralis stated that across local communities, a growing pattern has emerged of homeowners being bound to compulsory private estate management arrangements upon purchasing their properties. He noted these agreements are non-negotiable, written into property deeds at the time of sale, and present formidable barriers to modification.
Addressing the council’s housing panel, he explained that residents feel unable to escape these private contracts, with irresponsible companies potentially engaging in deeply troubling conduct. Such conduct encompasses yearly fee rises lacking adequate explanation and challenging mechanisms, as well as legal notices dispatched for minor payment delays. He suggested these communications cause unwarranted worry for households already grappling with mortgage obligations and the broader economic climate.
The councillor added that residents have provided specific instances where the companies they are obligated to pay have failed to perform maintenance tasks. Those looking to sell their homes encounter transfer fees potentially reaching several hundred pounds, which may impede or undermine property transactions, he stated, noting that numerous residents have complained about persistent communication failures from their management providers.
The panel’s members gave unanimous backing to a proposal put forward by fellow Penmaen representative Elizabeth Davies, calling on the council to urge central government and regulatory bodies to impose stricter controls on private management contracts. In her proposal, Davies highlighted that such arrangements have proliferated because local authorities have increasingly declined to adopt responsibility for new housing estates.
Judith Pritchard expressed support for the proposal while suggesting that councils had previously avoided taking on new developments to reduce expenditure. Panel chair Andrew Whitcombe observed that the proposal had garnered widespread backing from councillors across different political groups.
In remarks delivered by Saralis, Davies also acknowledged the efforts of the late Caerphilly Senedd Member Hefin David, who had long championed the cause for fairer treatment of homeowners, and noted that Islwyn MS Rhianon Passmore had similarly backed Penmaen residents. The Senedd received cross-party calls for enhanced safeguards last September during a commemorative debate for Dr David, who had devoted a decade to this matter.
In December, the UK Government revealed proposals to strengthen residents’ ability to challenge unreasonable charges for maintaining communal spaces.
