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Ammended Monday, 17 August, 2020 by the editor

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“NO DSS makes no economic sense - hence the only reason for its imposition can be prejudice based on uninformed stereotyping of a DSS tenant. It is not just landlords & letting agents that have to be taken to task over this - but mortgage lenders.”
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Update—July 2020
UK District Judge Victoria Mark in York County Court on 1 July has ruled: "Rejecting tenancy applications because the applicant is in receipt of housing benefit was unlawfully discriminating on the grounds of sex and disability".

And this was, therefore, contrary to the Equality Act 2010, she said.

Update—February 2016
Ireland has passed legislation outlawing landlord discrimination against recipients of State welfare rent allowance benefits.

Advertisement
“ Nice room to let in quiet secluded house. Use of all mod cons. Free radio broadband & unlimited telephone calls. Parking. No DSS.”

The above advertisement was taken from an Internet letting agency website. Similarly worded advertisements—No DSS (Department of Social Security claimants–recipients of state welfare)—appear daily in regional and national newspapers. If they are considered ‘legal’, then the author of this item considers this is contrary to established law relating to discrimination.

If a similar advertisement appeared in print stating ‘No Blacks’ or ‘No Pakistani’s, or ‘no single parents’ or even ‘no gays’ then the publisher would most certainly be faced with prosecution for permitting the publication of discriminatory advertisements.

To see how common this discriminate form of advertising and rental is, Google search the term ‘no dss’.

Some landlord’s refuse to accept recipients of DSS because they do not wish to disclose that they are letting properties on the rental market. Whenever a DSS claimant makes an application for housing benefit (social welfare rent payments), the landlord is registered on the local council’s records and as a result also with the Inland Revenue services.

However, many people in receipt of DSS allowances are not simply just out of work, they are in receipt of disability and incapacity allowances. And in their cases, advertisements that state ‘no DSS’ are actively discriminating against their status as disabled people. I am one of them. And what about people in receipt of state pensions?

Importantly, many people struggling to make a living receive (in the UK) Family Tax Credits—an income supplement, which also entitles them to housing benefit and council tax benefits. These people are all too often tarred with the brush of receiving DSS. Is this a just and fair system?

In 1988 I had parted from my wife and two daughters and although we attempted a reconciliation, in 1989 we agreed to divorce and go our separate ways, our daughters remaining with my wife. In 1990, I moved away to another location in the UK and started a new job.

In 1995, following my return from a charity trip into central Bosnia, I went through a very difficult personal crisis and quit my job and home in Hampshire and went to Ireland, and on to the USA for 12 months before returning to Ireland and settling in Limerick City in Ireland.

Health issues began to trouble me and in 1998 I was registered as disabled by the Irish health services. Unable to properly continue in my profession as a qualified staff journalist, I set up this news-based website. I was also able to continue working as a freelance journalist and over the years I spent in Ireland my work appeared in all of the daily national newspapers and most of the Sunday national papers. As a freelance writer/editor I was also asked to review and comment on new books due to go into print and my comments have been published in them.

I lost contact with my daughters after traveling to the USA and although I attempted to re-establish contact, I was unable to secure any replies from them or their mother and believed they had moved to another location. Extensive searches via the Internet failed to produce any results. Then, in December 2005, I located a reference on the Internet to my brother-in-law in Sussex. There was no contact information in the item but a letter to the Sussex Evening Argus produced an almost immediate response from someone who knew him.

Through this contact I was able to learn that my daughters and former wife in fact still lived at the same address and we re-established contact with each other. After six months of communicating with my former wife, who traveled to Ireland to visit me, she invited me to return to the family home in the UK.

Little did I realise just what indifference I would be returning when I decided to return to my home country in June, 2005.

I returned with nothing more than a few bags of clothing and my computer equipment and set about the business of applying for my disability allowance—in my case in the UK its equivalent being an incapacity allowance. European (EU) legislation means that any EU citizen in now entitled to receive an allowance awarded to him or her by an EU member country in any other EU member country. It is now November 2006 as I update this article, some 17 months since my return to the UK, and my allowance has still not been cleared or settled.

It took until November 2005 until the UK department dealing with it decided that my ‘claim’ had to be sent to Ireland as the ‘qualifying authority’—meaning the authority who had granted the allowance to begin. The idiotic and indifferent bureaucracy is absolutely beyond belief.

The attempted reunion with my former wife did not work and within six weeks of my having quit the life I had built for myself in Ireland, I found myself homeless in the UK. A good friend who I had first met in Ireland, a German man with a family, heard of my desperate situation and immediately offered his help, stating that I should come and stay with them until I was able to sort something else out.

That was in July 2005. Lacking any deposit money for a down payment on a place to live, I was unable to secure anywhere to live. Requests to Basildon council in whose region I had become homeless and where my family still lived fell on deaf ears. ‘We cannot help’ was the only response I received.

Likewise requests to the council in the area in which I was staying with my friends brought the same dismal lack of assistance. Despite living with a family of four, which includes two school-aged boys, and having to sleep in a makeshift bed in the family’s living room with my clothes still in a traveling bag, I was, the council said, not considered as a priority.

They could, a housing advisor said, point me towards a private landlord as the council maintained a list of such. When I explained that it was pointless me approaching a private landlord as I lacked the money for a deposit and monthly rental in advance, the only advice I was given was to approach the local JobCentre and request a community care grant or a budgeting loan. This I did, with the request for £750 to cover one month rental and deposit. The loan they granted was £420—useless to all intent and purpose.

Aside from my personal experiences related to this article — all events have a personal connection or they become meaningless — I return to the title of this article—No DSS here. A good friend in Ireland, aware of my predicament, came into some money and kindly offered to make available to me sufficient cash to cover a rental deposit for a place to stay and one month’s rental in advance.

Armed with this possibility, I began a search for available properties to rent and came across advertisements stating that the landlord would not accept any tenants who were in receipt of State welfare. True figures of claimant numbers are vey difficult to obtain from the UK Government to any degree of real accuracy. Statistics to measure those in receipt of unemployment or other state benefits have been manipulated to such a degree as to have become all but meaningless.

According to the UK Government's national statistics office website, the number claiming unemployment benefit, i.e., JobSeekers Allowance, stood at 919,700 in February 2006. It is unclear if these figures include all claimants, those on sick-related benefits such as disability and incapacity allowances.

What is clear is that if all landlords operated a policy of refusing to house DSS claimants, then in February 2006 there would have been 919,700 people, and their families where applicable, homeless. Is this an acceptable state of affairs?

It would surely be prejudicial discrimination if any landlord revoked a tenancy because a particular existing tenant became either unemployed or ill and as a result started to receive state benefits, including housing benefit. Why then are landlords—and more importantly publishers—able to publish advertisements that discriminate against people who have done nothing wrong?

Despite repeated requests for a comment from the Advertising Standards Authority with regard to their stance on this issue, no reponse has been received from them since this article was published.

VOTE on the issues
Back to story start

Should "No DSS" be unlawful prejudicial discrimination?
Yes - 50.6%
NEW Legislation should make it unlawful to say 'No DSS' - 34.6%
No - 8.9%
Publishers who print such ads should be prosecuted - 5.3%
I don't care - 0.6%
  Total votes: 975
Add comment 
andrewmellors andrewmellors@btinternet.com - 21/06/2007 09:43
i think it is unfair as i am on a low income in work and i would qualify for a small amount of housing benefit but the ads of no dss make it hard as effectively i am working and would require some help but landlords make it too difficult

Ed's note: Property providers please take note
 
Jerry Storie nativexile@yahoo.co.uk - 13/05/2007 04:55
Left school in 1977, and worked up until 2004 when my doctor told me my epilepsy was helping me none in the workplace...was involved in an accident 14 years beforehand, with serious head injury which led to me being in coma for 5 months, but decided to carry on upon release of hospital in March 1991 - had epilepsy soon after, but was given medication to retard it...but between 2002-4 was getting 'grand mal' fits, and as I was a chef, scared not only myself, but the new younger chefs who thought they had to act like Gordon Ramsey. Moved back to London, and realised searching for accomodation was not like it was when I was last there in the early eighties. It's a variation on the 'No Blacks, Irish & Dogs' thing of 40 years previously. Currently live with half-sister, who owns a B+B in south London, but she'll be going back to belfast come the end of the year. Been to many estate agencies, and as soon as I mention 'Invalidity Benefit' their eyes cloud over...I did think that being fairly tall and mixed-race might also add to the agencies' eagerness to shoo me out of their offices, but realised in 2007 Londoners (and perhaps Brits. in general) dislike anyone who won't use their hands to make money. Thanks to a wee lass in Norwich 17 years ago, I realised I wasn't going to be toiling until I was 65 (or is it 70 now for males?), despite carrying on as soon as I left hospital. Should have done what a friend told me in 1991 and claimed everything from then onwards. Not meaning to sound too ass-slapped, but I now regret leaving it until the fits got worse in 2004.
 
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Suzy spiritalknot@fsmail.net - 11/02/2007 07:24
We've just bought a property to rent out. I'm happy to let it out to those on the DSS as when we started out we were on the DSS and were given a break and really appreciated it. That was 20 years ago.We haven't advertised widely as yet but have had 2 applicants both, both DSS. The first was a single chap with a rottweiler and the second sounded ok, but he's been admitted to hospital the day before he was due to view the property for drunkedness. Turned up a few days later to view, stinking of fags. His gilfriend has just had a baby and they're deperate for somewhere to be together, but his whole conversation was about how the DSS would pay for this, how the social would help him. His dad was with him and was saying the same kind of things. He wasn't saying that he hoped to get a job etc . What are we meant to do? I don't want to rent out our property to a man with a rottweiler nor to a man who gets so drunk he has to be taken to hospital. Everyone keeps saying..don't rent to DSS. I really would prefer to rent to someone on the DSS, but don't know if I can take the risk? This is a new venture for us. Some people have said that those on the DSS now only get ?54 a week towards their rent. Is this correct? The guy that came to look said that because he and his girlfriend are classed as homeless they would get the whole rent paid..is this the case? Is it worth me approaching the council, and letting them know I'm open to DSS?

I haven't posted on this site before,

Thanks in advance for any advice.

Ed's reply: It is inadvisable to categorise all recipients of DSS in the same boat. There are many who wilfully abuse the system but likewise there are many genuine people on the DSS. It is up to you to investigate each and take them at their worth.
It is useful to notify the council that you accept DSS but you should also insist on valid references and check them out before agreeing to rent your property.
 
Denise den3371@aol.com - 13/01/2007 16:22
I have read your article with interest. I moved from Bristol to Berkshire because of a job offer 4 years ago and am a single parent. I had the money for a deposit etc and moved in without any problems. Once I was in the property I applied for Housing benefit with no problems from my Landlord, I was made redundant in November last year and am now on Income Support and full Housing and Council Tax benefit. I know the situation is not the same as yours but understand that if I had a money grabbing Landlord, my Son and I could have easily been turfed out onto the streets.

I wish you all the best.
 
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