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National would ditch proposed rental regulations

The Government’s controversial tenancy law reforms would be among the first regulations National would throw on to the regulations “bonfire” it is planning if elected.

National Party leader Simon Bridges today announced a Regulation Reduction package as part of his party’s five-part economic plan.

Unnecessary red tape and regulation is getting in the way of a stronger economy, he says. “It’s holding us back from having more money in our pockets, lower daily costs and affordable housing.”

That’s why, if elected in September, National would light a “bonfire of regulation” to get rid of 100 regulations in their first six months and to ensure that for every regulation introduced, two are removed.

To oversee this, a senior cabinet minister would be appointed to the role of Regulatory Reduction Minister.

Among the first lot of regulations to be scrapped would be the Coalition Government’s proposed reforms to the Residential Tenancy Act, along with much of the heating standard contained in the new Healthy Homes Minimum Standards.

National’s Finance spokesperson Paul Goldsmith pointed to these regulations as a good example of unnecessary and burdensome regulations.

“They reduce property rights of landlords, increase costs, discourage the supply of rental properties and increase rents for low income households. That’s not good for the landlord, or the tenant.”

In a document accompanying National’s economic plan, the regulations that would be repealed are detailed. Prime among these are “rent increasing rental regulations”, which are, essentially, the proposed tenancy law reforms.

Most notably for landlords, they include rules making it difficult to remove problematic tenants.

But they also include provisions which limit landlords to raising rents once a year; provisions which give government departments the power to inspect rental properties; and provision which allow tenants to make minor modifications to rental properties without landlord permission.

Regulations around the heating output of heaters and the location of heaters in rental properties as proscribed in the Healthy Homes Minimum Standards, which became law in 2019, would go.

Additionally, regulations that prescribe standards that are either replications from the Building Code or establish higher standards than the building code would also be ditched.

National’s policy in this area doesn’t come as a surprise: National MPs roundly opposed the tenancy law reforms during the first reading of the Residential Tenancies Amendment Bill in Parliament in February.

Also, back in February, Bridges told media that, if elected, National would reverse the Healthy Homes Minimum Standards, aside from the insulation rules.

At that time, he also said that they would reverse the Government’s changes to the rules around the ring-fencing of rental losses.

Read more:

RTA reforms pile pressure on landlords 

Tenancy reform submissions due March 25 

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