Council housing performance

Quarter 2 2023/24 (July to Sept 2023)

Coins with solid fill 

99.92%

Gas safety compliance

93.66%

Forecast rent collection rate

57 days

Empty home

re-let time

City with solid fill

Receiver with solid fill

Lightbulb with solid fill

95.9%

Dwellings meeting Decent Homes standard

86%

Customer services calls answered

74.1

Average energy efficiency (rating out of 100)

Call center with solid fill

Monthly calendar with solid fill

76%

Complaint responses within 10 working days

94%

Repairs helpdesk calls answered

91 days

Average time to complete routine repairs

A picture containing logo  Description automatically generated


Quarter 2 2023/24 council housing performance – key trends


Top scores (compared to target)

 

1.    Closed Tenancy Sustainment cases with positive outcome (100% vs 90% target)

2.    Calls answered by Repairs Helpdesk (94% vs 85% target)

3.    Surveyed tenants satisfied with repairs: customer service (98% vs 96% target)

4.    Surveyed tenants satisfied with repairs: standard of work (98% vs 96% target)

5.    Calls answered by Housing Customer Services (86% vs 85% target)

Bottom scores (compared to target)

 

1.    Average time to complete routine repairs (91 days vs 15 day target)

2.    Average re-let time excluding time spent in major works (65 days vs 21 day target)

3.    Stage two complaints upheld (28% vs 18% target)

4.    Routine repairs completed within 28 calendar days (49% vs 70% target)

5.    Average weeks to approve adaptations (12.8 weeks vs 10 week target)

Biggest improvements (since previous quarter)

 

1.    Stage two complaints upheld (36% to 28%)

2.    Closed Tenancy Sustainment cases with positive outcome (88% to 100%)

3.    Average time to complete routine repairs (102 to 91 days)

4.    Average re-let time excluding time spent in major works (60 to 57 days)

5.    Dwellings meeting Decent Homes Standard (95.8% to 95.9%)

Biggest drops (since previous quarter)

1.    Stage one complaints responded to within 10 working days (81% to 76%)

2.    Calls answered by Housing Customer Services (89% to 86%)

3.    Calls answered by Repairs Helpdesk (95% to 94%)

4.    Emergency repairs completed within 24 hours (95% to 94%)

5.    Rent collected from current council tenants (93.90% to 93.66%)

 



Housing performance report

Quarter 2 2023/24

 

This report provides updates on performance indicators covering a wide range of Housing services. There continue to be areas of strong performance, with 8 indicators on target and an improvement in 11 of the indicators. However, some delivery challenges remain. The report covers Quarter 2 (Q2) of the 2023/24 financial year and uses red, amber and green ratings, as well as trend arrows. Commentary has been included for all indicators which are red. The ratings and trends for the quarter are as follows:

 

G

Green – on target

(8 indicators)

Improved since last time

(11 indicators)

A

Amber – near target

(11 indicators)

Same as last time

(5 indicators)

R

Red – off target

(8 indicators)

Poorer than last time

(11 indicators)

 

 

 

 

 


 

Contents – performance areas

Page

Customer Feedback – all Housing Services

 

 

Compliments received

6

 

Stage 1 complaints

6

 

Stage 2 complaints

6

 

Private Sector Housing

 

 

Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMO) licensing

7

 

Property inspections completed

7

 

Requests for assistance (RFAs)

7

 

Private sector empty homes returned to use

7

 

Housing major adaptations – private sector and council

 

 

Time to approve applications

8

 

Time to complete works

8

 

Housing options and allocations

 

 

Homelessness preventions

9

 

Homelessness acceptances

9

 

Social housing waiting list

9

 

Rough sleepers

9

 

Temporary and emergency accommodation

 

 

Households

10

 

Rent collected

10

 

Empty homes

10

 

Gas safety compliance (Seaside Homes and leased)

10

 

Council housing supply

 

 

Additional council homes

11-12

 

Right to Buy sales

11-12

 

Other additional affordable homes

13

 

Council home buy backs

14

 

Council housing management

 

 

Rent collected

15

 

Universal Credit

15

 

Tenants evicted

15

 

Anti-social behaviour (ASB)

15-16

 

Calls answered (Housing Customer Services)

16

 

Tenancies sustained

16

 

Council housing – empty homes

 

 

Re-let times

17

 

Empty homes (snapshot figures)

17

 

Council housing repairs and maintenance

 

 

Repairs completed in time

18

 

Satisfaction with completed repairs

18

 

Calls answered (Repairs Helpdesk)

18

 

Council housing investment and asset management

 

 

Decent Homes Standard

19

 

Energy efficiency rating of council homes

19

 

Gas safety compliance (council homes)

19

 

Lift breakdowns

19

 

Leaseholder disputes

20

 

 

 

 

 


 


Customer feedback – all Housing services

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

9.1

 

Compliments received from customers

Info

87

92

n/a

n/a

9.2

Stage one complaints responded to within 10 working days

80%

81%

(164 of

203)

76%

(168 of 220)

A

9.3

Stage one complaints upheld or partly upheld

Info

46%

(93 of

203)

50%

(110 of 220)

n/a

n/a

9.4

Stage two complaints upheld or partly upheld

18%

36%

(9 of

25)

28%
(9 of

32)

R

Nine stage two complaints were upheld or partly upheld following investigation by the corporate Customer Feedback team, after they were escalated following the stage one response from Housing. These most commonly related to delays in completing repairs (4 of 9) and more information about this area of performance is provided on page 19 of this report.

 


 

Private sector housing

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

10.1

Total fully licensed Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs)

Info

1,390

1,500

n/a

n/a

10.2

Corporate KPI: HMOs where all special conditions have been met (for licences issued over 12 months ago)

71%

for Q2

72.04%

(1,680 of

2,332)

74.28%

(1,802 of

2,426)

G

The indicator above measures cases where the council has verified that works required via special conditions have been completed. This still includes HMOs covered by the additional licensing scheme which ended in February 2023, as the Private Sector Housing service are able to check conditions that were set as part of this scheme and will continue to do so to ensure that these properties are well managed and maintained.

10.3

Requests for assistance received (RFAs)

Info

124

187

n/a

n/a

Request for assistance top categories during Q2 were 74 disrepair (40%), 32 dampness (17%), 17 ASB relating to HMOs (9%) and 8 neighbour’s disrepair (4%).

10.4

Property inspections completed

Info

219

273

n/a

n/a

10.5

… of which RFA inspections

Info

50

61

n/a

n/a

10.6

… of which HMO licence inspections

Info

169

212

n/a

n/a

10.7

RFA cases closed

Info

98

85

n/a

n/a

10.8

Properties with Category 1 and 2 hazards resolved through informal action (closed RFAs)

Info

88%

(21 of

24)

91%

(21 of

23)

n/a

n/a

10.9

Properties with Category 1 and 2 hazards resolved through formal action (closed RFAs)

Info

12%

(3 of

24)

9%

(2 of

23)

n/a

n/a

These numbers relating to the two indicators above are relatively low for now as recording only began in Q4 2022/23

10.10

Private sector vacant dwellings returned into occupation (empty for more than two years)

9

9

8

A

 

 

 

 

Housing adaptations

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

11.1

Private sector housing – average weeks taken to approve Disabled Facilities Grant applications

10

22.0

15.1

A

11.2

Private sector housing – average weeks taken for contractor to complete works

Info

39.0

34.9

n/a

n/a

11.3

Council housing – average weeks taken to approve applications and commence works

10

12.8

12.8

A

11.4

Council housing – average weeks taken for contractor to complete works

Info

13.6

17.0

n/a

n/a

The amber threshold for the two targeted indicators above is set at 26 weeks based on historic guidance timescales, with the target of 10 weeks reflecting revised guidance timescales.

 

 

 


 

Housing options and allocations

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

12.1

Corporate KPI: Homelessness cases presenting during the prevention duty stage

45%

43.7%

(208 of

476)

41.0%

(142 of

346)

A

12.2

Corporate KPI: Homelessness prevention cases closed with a successful prevention outcome

55%

63.2%

(122 of

193)

69.9%

(137 of

196)

G

12.3

New households with a full housing duty accepted

Info

135

102

n/a

n/a

12.4

Number of households on the housing register

Info

7,707

7,611

n/a

n/a

 

The November 2020 figure above used a blended methodology of an estimate with a spotlight count, due to the national Covid lockdown at the time. Please note that estimates have only been carried out at times when counts have not been.


 

Temporary accommodation (including emergency accommodation)

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

13.1

Corporate KPI: Total households in temporary accommodation

1,595 for Q2

1,712

1,724

R

The target of 1,595 for the end of Q2 is set as a step towards a target of 1,472 at the end of Q4 2023/24. This is a challenging target which has been set to meet financial savings and requires coordination accross Housing and other council services. Key to this is reducing the number of households going into temporary accommodation through preventing homelessness (please see the indicators on items 12.1 and 12.2 on the previous page) and finding suitable longer term accommodation to move households into from temporary accommodation, such as social and private sector rented housing. However, this performance is in the context of there now being more households in temporary accommodation nationally than there has ever been before, which is largely due to factors outside the control of the local authority (such as the cost of living making the private rented sector less affordable, and also smaller due to many landlords selling their properties due to increasing mortgage costs).

13.2

Rent collected for emergency accommodation

95%

89.57%

(£812k of

£906k)

91.33%

(£1.63m of

£1.79m)

A

13.3

Rent collected for leased properties

95%

97.70%

(£1.52m of

£1.56m)

94.73%

(£3.00m of

£3.17m)

A

13.4

Rent collected for Seaside Homes

95%

94.17%

(£1.30m of

£1.38m)

93.75%

(£2.57m of

£2.75m)

A

The three indicators cover the financial year to date, and their methodology has been revised for 2023/24 due to the development of a new reporting system developed in consultation with Finance and the Corporate Debt Board, to align with other income collection indicators used across the council. This methodology excludes rent loss from empty homes but factors in changes to the amount of rent arrears over time.

13.5

Empty temporary accommodation homes

For info

48

47

n/a

n/a

The indicator above includes 22 block-booked, 14 private sector leased and 11 Seaside Homes dwellings. These are dwellings that were available to let as temporary accommodation.

13.6

Seaside Homes properties with a valid Landlord’s Gas Safety Record

100%

99.5%

(421 of

423)

98.8%

(418 of

423)

A

13.7

Leased properties with a valid Landlord’s Gas Safety Record

For info

85.2%

(471 of

553)

83.3%

(463 of

556)

n/a

n/a

 

 

Council housing – supply

Q1 2023/24

Q2

2023/24

14.1

Additional council homes (new supply)

60

15

14.2

… at Local Housing Allowance (LHA) rents

2%

(1 of 60)

33%

(5 of 15)

14.3

… at 37.5% Living Wage rents

7%

(4 of 60)

53%

(8 of 15)

14.4

… at 27.5% Living Wage rents

3%

(2 of 60)

7%

(1 of 15)

14.5

… at social rents

88%

(53 of 60)

7%

(1 of 15)

14.6

Other stock increase

16

0

The 16 homes above are counted separately from the new supply because they already had tenants when Charles Kingston Gardens was acquired as a new seniors housing scheme by the council. The 2 empty homes there have been counted towards new supply. All homes at this scheme are at social rents.

14.7

Council homes sold through the Right to Buy

7

6

Of the 6 homes sold during Q2, 3 were leasehold (flats) and 3 were freehold (houses).

14.8

Net change in the number of council homes – all rent levels

+69

+9

14.9

Net change in the number of council homes – social and 27.5% Living Wage rent homes only

+66

-4

14.10

Total council owned homes

11,888

11,897

Total council owned dwelling stock of 11,897 includes 10,825 general needs, 895 seniors housing, 38 council owned emergency accommodation, 72 council owned temporary accommodation and 67 NSAP/RSAP dwellings.

 


14.11 Further information on additional council homes

A total of 440 homes were completed between April 2019 and March 2023. This programme has been delivered during a period of unprecedented complexity due to the Covid-19 pandemic and recovery phase. A further 316 are forecast for 2023/24:

 

·         2019/20: 77 homes – buy backs (43 Home Purchase), Hidden Homes (6), Kensington Street (12), Tilbury Place (15) and Devon Lodge (1 lease handed back)

 

·         2020/21: 144 homes – buy backs (40 Home Purchase and 24 NSAP – Next Steps Accommodation Programme), Buckley Close (12), Hartington Road (38) and Hawkridge Court (30)

 

·         2021/22: 108 homes – buy backs (66 Home Purchase, 6 NSAP and 18 Rough Sleepers Accommodation Programme – RSAP), Hidden Homes (8) and Oxford Street (10)

 

·         2022/23: 111 homes – buy backs (52 Home Purchase and 17 RSAP) and Victoria Road (42)

 

·         2023/24: 316 homes – buy backs (74 Home Purchase, 5 RSAP and 13 Local Authority Housing Fund), Homes for Brighton & Hove rented units (49 at Quay View and 127 at Coldean Lane), Hidden Homes (8), Kubic Apartments (38) and Charles Kingston Gardens (2)

 

 

14.12 Other affordable homes

A total of 651 homes (193 rent and 458 shared ownership) were completed between April 2019 and March 2023. The total for 2022/23 (441) exceeded all previous years, and this programme has been delivered during a period of unprecedented complexity due to the Covid-19 pandemic and recovery phase. A further 509 are forecast for 2023/24:

 

·         2019/20: 87 homes – Montpelier Place (5), Kingsway (54) and Circus Street (28)

·         2020/21: 48 homes – Freehold Terrace (8), Plumpton Road (2), Nevill Road (4) and Preston Road (34 from two providers)

·         2021/22: 75 homes – Preston Barracks (19), Falmer Avenue (13), Hangleton Way (33) and Lions Gardens (10)

·         2022/23: 441 homes – Edward Street (33), School Road (104), Preston Barracks (67), Graham Avenue (125), Sackville Hotel (7), New Church Road (5) and King’s House (100)

·         2023/24: 509 homes – Homes for Brighton & Hove shared ownership units (55 at Quay View and 115 at Coldean Lane), York and Elder (22), Coombe Farm (29), Ellen Street (20), Davigdor Road (5), Anston House (30), Ovingdean Road (18), Sackville Trading estate (56) and Preston Barracks (159)

 


14.13 Council housing – buy backs (Home Purchase and Next Steps / Rough Sleepers accommodation)

Buy backs by application date

2017/18

2018/19

2019/20

2020/21

2021/22

2022/23

2023/24

to date

Total

Total applications

5

53

88

157

159

96

55

613

Of which, became purchases

2

32

53

91

82

36

6

302

Council declined

1

13

11

16

10

13

0

64

Owner declined offer

1

5

12

15

14

3

1

51

Owner withdrew

1

3

12

34

52

26

0

128

Outcome pending

0

0

0

1

1

18

48

68

 

Completed buy backs by rent level

2017/18

2018/19

2019/20

2020/21

2021/22

2022/23

2023/24

to date

Total

Completed purchases

1

13

43

64

90

70

21

302

… general needs social rent

0

0

1

4

0

2

0

7

… general needs 27.5% Living Wage

0

0

5

17

21

11

3

57

… general needs 37.5% Living Wage

1

5

24

14

43

39

12

138

… general needs at LHA rates

0

0

0

0

0

0

2

2

… temporary housing at LHA rates

0

8

13

29

26

18

4

98

 

Summary of all buy backs since start of programmes, September 2017

Total purchases

Social rent

27.5% LWR

37.5% LWR

LHA rate

No. rent reserve applied

Total rent reserve applied

Net modelled subsidy (surplus) over all properties to date (£)

302

7

57

138

100

53 *

£2.371m **

(£0.326m)

* Of the 126 purchases following Housing Committee decision to use rent reserve to keep rents as low as possible

** Applied up to 31 March 2023 – this leaves £0.891m to be carried forward to 2023/24 to be used against the future programme.


List with solid fill

Council housing – tenancy management

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

15.1

Corporate KPI: Rent collected from current council tenants

95.36%

93.90%

(£61.1m of

£65.0m)

93.66%

(£61.0m of

£65.1m)

R

The methodology for the indicator above excludes rent loss from empty properties but factors in changes to the amount of rent arrears over time. The Q1 and Q2 collection rates are forecasts for the 2023/24 financial year. Performance has been particularly impacted by staff vacancies in the Income Management team earlier in the year and the impact of Universal Credit on tenants’ incomes remains a challenge (please see commentary for indicator 15.2 below). As part of a recovery plan to improve rent collection, the team launched a recruitment campaign in June 2023 for eight vacancies, which was successful in recruiting to seven positions. One remaining vacancy will be advertised in November 2023. There have also been changes to arrears collection procedures which place greater emphasis on personal contact with tenants and early intervention, for example from Q2 new tenants now see their Housing Income Officer face-to-face so that officers can offer support and intervene (if required) to prevent arrears building up. A revised arrears escalation policy has now been agreed and is currently being set up on the housing management IT system, in preparation to go live. This will help officers categorise and prioritise casework and introduce a clear method for recording repayment plans and arrangements on the system. Tenants also have the offer of the money advice and debt provider (Money Advice Plus) service which is separate to but funded by Housing.

15.2

Current tenants known to claim Universal Credit

Info

1,659

1,727

n/a

n/a

At the end of Q2, around 15% of households (1,727 of 11,569) are known by Housing Income Management to have someone claiming UC, because they have an Alternative Payment Arrangement (APA) in place with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP). Based on data collected since the introduction of UC it is thought that around 35% of households (3,995 of 11,578) may potentially be claiming UC, but this is likely to include many who self-reported this when they started claiming it but no longer do. Households known to claim UC account for 37% of total arrears (up from 36% at the end of Q1) and those potentially claiming UC account for 67% of total arrears (up from 65%).

15.3

Evictions due to rent arrears

Info

0

0

n/a

n/a

15.4

Evictions due to anti-social behaviour (ASB)

Info

0

0

n/a

n/a

15.5

New reports of ASB from victims and witnesses

Info

154

194

n/a

n/a

Although the number of new reports of ASB has increased by 40 between Q1 and Q2, please note that the Housing service wishes residents to report ASB, so a higher number of cases can indicate higher reporting as well as higher incidents and the service welcomes the former.

15.6

ASB perpetrator cases opened

Info

108

113

n/a

n/a

15.7

ASB perpetrator cases closed

Info

88

125

n/a

n/a

15.8

Average days to close ASB perpetrator cases

Info

189

135

n/a

n/a

15.9

Active ASB perpetrator cases at quarter end

Info

164

152

n/a

n/a

The ASB indicators in this section were developed to reflect the way ASB is recorded on the housing management IT system, which includes reports from victims and witnesses as well as linked cases dealt with in relation to the perpetrators. There can often be multiple victims and witnesses linked to a single perpetrator.

15.10

Receiver with solid fill

Calls answered by Housing Customer Services

85%

89%

(6,089 of

6,874)

86%

(5,722 of

6,660)

G

15.13

Closed Tenancy Sustainment cases with positive outcome

90%

88%

(7 of

8)

100%

(5 of

5)

G

 


 

 

Key with solid fill

Council housing – empty homes

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

15.14

Average re-let time in calendar days excluding time spent in major works

21

60

57

R

Performance for this indicator improved with each quarter during the previous 2022/23 financial year (93 days in Q1, 80 days in Q2, 64 in Q3 and 61 in Q4) and has continued to for the first two quarters of the current 2023/24 financial year. Re-let times still remain high while recovery efforts remain underway to tackle a backlog of empty council homes, which includes many homes which have been empty for long periods of time. However, the number of re-lets during 2022/23 (560) and 2021/22 (472) were both up on 2020/21 (213) and above pre-pandemic levels seen during 2019/20 (445). There has also been the challenge of letting a large number of new homes delivered though two recently completed new build schemes in Portslade (42 at Victoria Road in March and 49 at Quay View in April). This is reflected in the high number of new council homes let for the first time during Q1 2023/24, which was 122 (this figure also includes other new homes such as Home Purchase policy buy backs). It is also expected that 127 new homes at Coldean Lane and 38 at Kubic Apartments (in Whitehawk) will become available for letting during the latter half of 2023/24.

15.15

Average ‘key to key’ re-let time in calendar days including time spent in major works

Info

106

96

n/a

n/a

15.16

Number of previously occupied council homes re-let (general needs and seniors)

Info

113

153

n/a

n/a

15.17

Number of new council homes let for the first time (general needs and seniors)

Info

112

20

n/a

n/a

15.18

Empty general needs and seniors council homes (includes new homes)

Info

175

142

n/a

n/a

15.19

Empty council owned temporary, NSAP and RSAP accommodation homes (includes new homes)

Info

22

13

n/a

n/a

The two indicators above provide a snapshot of empty council owned homes on the last day of the period, whether they were available to let or otherwise (for example, because they were undergoing major works at the time).


 

 


Council housing – Repairs and maintenance

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

16.1

Emergency repairs completed within 24 hours

99%

95.1%

(3,148 of

3,309)

94.6%

(3,092 of

3,268)

R

16.2

Corporate KPI: Routine repairs completed within 28 calendar days

70%

43.2%

(2,307 of

5,337)

49.2%

(2,431 of

4,944)

R

16.3

Average days to complete routine repairs

15

102

91

R

Repairs completed recently have included jobs from a backlog of older non-urgent jobs, which is in the process of being reduced. This means that these jobs took longer than their target timescales once they were completed. The latest result of 49.2% for routine repairs completed during Q2 (2,431 of 4,944) is impacted by the number of very old non-urgent jobs (888 were originally issued before 1 April 2023). Of the 4,056 newer jobs issued on or after 1 April 2023 and completed during Q2, 59.9% (2,431 of 4,056) were completed within 28 days, which is closer to the 70% target. There were increased pressures at the start of 2023 owing to poor weather and significantly higher levels of reported damp and condensation cases following the tragic Rochdale case. Repairs & Maintenance had registered 697 live damp and condensation cases at the end of September 2023, which is down from 862 at the end of June 2023. All recruitment has now been completed however the service is still looking to engage additional contractors, which is now in progress following committee approval and will be in place for April 2024. The service completed an average of 7,538 repairs per quarter (2,909 of which are emergency and 4,629 of which are routine repairs) during 2022/23. Since then, the quarterly average for 2023/24 to date has increased to 8,430 (of which 3,289 emergency and 5,141 routine). The average number of repairs per quarter between 2015 and 2020 when Mears held the contract for repairs was 8,102 repairs per quarter.

16.4

Receiver with solid fill

Calls answered by Repairs Helpdesk

85%

95%

(15,108 of

15,925)

94%

(14,571 of

15,581)

G

16.5

Surveyed tenants satisfied with repairs: standard of work

96%

98%

(1,754 of

1,787)

98%

(1,415 of

1,444)

G

16.6

Surveyed tenants satisfied with repairs: overall customer service

96%

98%

(1,754 of

1,787)

98%

(1,412 of

1,444)

G


Please note the figures for the first three indicators in the table above are provisional as there are currently issues with reporting of repairs data arising from the switchover of our main housing management IT system since the start of July 2021. At present two IT systems are being used and it is not yet possible to fully integrate reporting between them, meaning that performance data is currently being extracted and manually combined.


 

 


City with solid fill

Council housing – investment and asset management

Target

Q1

2023/24

Q2

2023/24

Status against target

Trend since Q1

17.1

Corporate KPI: Council dwellings meeting Decent Homes Standard

100%

95.8%

(11,315 of

11,813)

95.9%

(11,332 of

11,822)

R

There were 490 non-decent homes at the end of Q2, down from 498 at the end of Q1. Of these, 61% were because ‘key components’ such as windows and external doors were not up to standard. Another 36% were because ‘non-key’ components such as kitchens and bathrooms were not up to standard, and 3% were because of identified health and safety risks (which are prioritised). Delivery of planned works for all areas is ongoing following delays in establishing contracts and five-year improvement programmes are now in place for these, including kitchens, bathrooms, roofs, doors and external/communal decorations. A difficulty with works such as kitchens and bathrooms is that they are disruptive to tenants, and often have to be carried out while properties are empty. The Housing Investment & Asset Management service are preparing for the government’s upcoming review of the Decent Homes standard, including through appointing two new asset stock surveyors and beginning procurement of external consultants for a stock condition survey of 20% of council homes, which is expected to start in early 2024.

17.2

Corporate KPI: Energy efficiency rating of homes (out of 100)

73.8

74.1

74.1

G

17.3

Council properties with a valid Landlord's Gas Safety Record

100%

99.95%

(10,092 of

10,097)

99.92%

(10,069 of

10,077)

A

17.4

Lifts restored to service within 24 hours

95%

90%

(171 of

191)

90%

(125 of

139)

A


 

Contract RTL

Leaseholder disputes

Q1 2023/24

Q2 2023/24

18.1

Stage one disputes opened

1

11

18.2

Stage one disputes closed

2

2

18.3

Active stage one disputes (end quarter)

27

36

18.4

Stage two disputes opened

2

0

18.5

Stage two disputes closed

1

3

18.6

Active stage two disputes (end quarter)

8

5

18.7

Stage three disputes opened

1

0

18.8

Stage three disputes closed

1

0

18.9

Active stage three disputes (end quarter)

2

2