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The Housing Act 2004 (c. 34) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It introduced Home Information Packs , which have since been abandoned. It also significantly extends the regulation of houses in multiple occupation by requiring some HMOs to be licensed by local authorities .
Text of the Housing Act 2004 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk. Empty Dwelling Management Orders: Guidance for residential property owners. Department for Communities and Local Government, October 2006. Empty Dwellings Management Orders, The Facts, 2006, Empty Homes Agency
Housing Act is a common title of Acts of national legislatures in ... Housing Act 2004; The term Housing Act is occasionally also used to refer to housing-related ...
Under Part 5 of the Housing Act 2004 a Home Information Pack (HIP, on lowercase letters: hip), sometimes called a Seller's Pack, was to be provided before a property in England and Wales could be put on the open market for sale with vacant possession.
An Act to make further provision with respect to dwelling-houses let on tenancies or occupied under licences; to amend the Rent Act 1977 [w] and the Rent (Agriculture) Act 1976; [x] to establish a body, Housing for Wales, having functions relating to housing associations; to amend the Housing Associations Act 1985 [y] and to repeal and re-enact ...
Housing Act of 1937 (aka Wagner-Steagall Act) 1937: Public Housing Federal: Provided for subsidies to be paid from the U.S. government to local public housing agencies (LHAs) to improve living conditions for low-income families. Housing Act of 1949: 1949 [definition needed] Federal [definition needed] Housing Act of 1954: 1954: Public housing ...
The classifications were updated in 2010 [15] aligning the definitions of usage C3(a) (“single household”) and C4 ("house in multiple occupation") with those in the Housing Act 2004. This class is formed of 3 parts: C3(a): those living together as a single household as defined by the Housing Act 2004, what could be construed as a family.
The Decent Homes Standard is a technical standard for public housing introduced in 2006 by the United Kingdom government. [1] It underpinned the Decent Homes Programme brought in by the Blair ministry (Labour party) which aimed to provide a minimum standard of housing conditions for those housed in the public sector - i.e. in council housing or by housing associations.