Appendix 3 – Imposing Civil Penalties under the Tenant Fees Act 2019

Section 8 of The Tenant Fees Act 2019 provides local authorities with the power to impose a civil penalty in situations where a breach of the Tenant Fees Act 2019 has been identified.

Under the Tenant Fees Act, landlords are prohibited from imposing charges or payments in connection with a tenancy or licence unless that payment is one of a specified number of ‘permitted payments’. Each separate ‘prohibited payment’ represents a breach of the Tenant Fees Act 2019:

  • The Tenant Fees Act 2019 enables the Council to serve notices imposing Civil Penalties of up to a maximum of £5,000 where a landlord or agent has required a tenant to make a ‘prohibited payment’;
  • The Tenant Fees Act 2019 enables the Council to impose Civil Penalties of up to a maximum of £30,000 where a landlord or agent has required a tenant to make a ‘prohibited payment’ within 5 years of a previous conviction or the imposition of a Civil Penalty [as an alternative to instigating prosecution proceedings];
  • The Tenant Fees Act 2019 enables the Council to serve notices imposing Civil Penalties of up to a maximum of £5,000 where a landlord or agent is in breach of the requirement to repay the holding deposit.

This guidance outlines the Council’s policy in setting the level of a civil penalty in each case where it has been determined to issue a civil penalty, including cases where it has determined to impose a civil penalty as an alternative to prosecution proceedings.

Its primary objective is to promote both transparency and consistency in the imposition of Civil Penalties so that, for example, those affected know how the Council will generally penalise relevant offences and are assured that, generally, like cases will be penalised similarly, and different cases penalised differently.

For these reasons in particular, the Council will depart from this policy and the guidance below in exceptional circumstances only. It will consider carefully and on a case-by-case basis, whether any such circumstances exist, in light of the information with which it is provided. The further objectives of using Civil Penalties in particular as a means of enforcement are explained below.

Coventry City Council has developed this policy on deciding financial penalties and the appropriateness of prosecution as an alternative to imposing financial penalties under the relevant letting agency legislation.

It applies in relation to any decision to any decision made by the Council in its capacity as Enforcement Authority and Lead Enforcement Authority under Section’s 7 & 24 of the Tenants Fees Act 2019 respectively.

For clarity, “relevant letting agency legislation” means:-

  1. The Tenant Fees Act 2019, “the TFA 2019”
  2. Part 3, Chapter 3 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015
  3. Section 83(1) and 84(1) of the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013; and
  4. Sections 133 – 135 of the Housing and Planning Act 2016.

Legal reference

The TFA 2019 prohibits the charging of fees in respect of an Assured Shorthold Tenancy (“a tenancy”), other than those which are specifically permitted by Schedule 1 of the TFA 2019, and amends other legislation as follows:

a. in respect of the duty of letting agents to publicise fees etc. under Section 87 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015

b. in relation to the duty placed on enforcement authorities to have regard to any guidance issued by the Secretary of State (“the SoS”) relating to the enforcement of an order under s83(1) of 84(1) as per Section 85 of the Enterprise & Regulatory Reform Act 2013

c. in respect of the duty to enforce being subject to Section 26 of the TFA 2019 under Article 7 of the Redress Schemes for Lettings Agency Work and Property Management Work (requirement to belong to a Scheme etc.) England) Order 2014

d. in relation to the meaning of ‘Lead Enforcement Authority’, “the LEA”, under Section 135 (enforcement of client money protection scheme regulations) of the Housing and Planning Act 2016

e. in respect of the LEA as an alternative to the SoS where the SoS is not the LEA under Article 7 of the Redress Schemes for Lettings Agency Work and Property Management Work (requirement to belong to a Scheme etc.) England) Order 2014

TFA 2019 sanctions

The TFA 2019 provides that enforcement authorities may impose financial penalties of up to £30,000 depending on the breach as follows:

a. In respect of Prohibited Payments under s1 & s2 of the TFA 2019 a financial penalty not exceeding £5,000 for a first breach.

b. Under s12 of the TFA 2019 a second or subsequent breach within 5 years of the previous breach provides for a financial penalty not exceeding £30,000.00 and there is alternative power to prosecute in the Magistrates Court where an unlimited fine may be imposed.

The Council will determine what is the most appropriate and effective sanction and whether it is appropriate to impose a financial penalty or prosecute having due regard to the Coventry City Council Enforcement Policy and as the Enforcement Authority, the Private Sector Housing Enforcement Policy.

In appropriate circumstances consideration will be given to less formal action such as warning letters or advice, in an effort to secure compliance, and will be done so in accordance with the relevant Enforcement Policy.

Consequential amendments brought about by the TFA 2019

The TFA 2019 amends the legislation referred to in paragraph 1 above which separately provides that penalties may be imposed as follows:

i. In respect of a failure of Letting Agents to publicise their fees as required by s83(3) of the CRA 2015 a financial penalty not exceeding £5,000.

ii. In respect of a failure by any person engaged in Letting Agency or Property Management work who fails to hold membership of a Redress Scheme as required by Article 3 Redress Schemes for Lettings Agency Work and Property Management Work (requirement to belong to a Scheme etc.) England) Order 2014 (in respect of Lettings Agency work) or Article 5 (in respect of property management work) to a financial penalty not exceeding £5,000. Note that it is not sufficient to simply register for redress – the correct category of membership must be obtained depending on the work carried out.

iii. In respect of a failure by a property agent who holds client money to belong to an approved or designated Client Money Protection (“CMP”) Scheme as required by Regulation 3 of the Client Money Protection Schemes for Property Agents (Requirement to Belong to a Scheme etc.) Regulations 2019, a financial penalty not exceeding £30,000.

iv. In respect of a failure to obtain a certificate confirming membership or display that certificate as required or publish a copy of that certificate on the relevant website (where one exists) or produce a copy of the certificate free of charge to any person reasonably requiring it as required by Regulation 4(1) of the Client Money Protection Schemes for Property Agents (Requirement to Belong to a Scheme etc.) Regulations 2019 a financial penalty not exceeding £5,000.

v. In respect of a failure by a property agent to notify any client within 14 days of a change in the details of an underwriter to the CMP scheme or that the membership of the CMP scheme has been revoked as required by Regulation 4(2) of the Client Money Protection Schemes for Property Agents (Requirement to Belong to a Scheme etc.) Regulations 2019 a financial penalty not exceeding £5,000.

Statutory guidance

The Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (“MHCLG”) has published the following document; Tenant Fees Act 2019: Statutory Guidance for enforcement authorities.

This is statutory guidance to which enforcement authorities must have regard to in relation to enforcing the TFA 2019. This statutory guidance recommends certain factors that an enforcement authority should take into account when deciding on the level of financial penalties under the TFA 2019 and further recommends that enforcement authorities develop and document their own Policy on determining the appropriate level of financial penalty in a particular case.

Determining the level of the financial penalty

In accordance with the provisions of the TFA 2019 the level of financial penalties is to be determined by the Council. Although the statutory guidance recommends factors that may be taken into account it does not go into any significant level of detail in this regard. Each of the following factors will be considered as a part of the Council’s decision-making process and they are:

a. The history of compliance/non-compliance

b. The severity of the breach V4 4

c. Deliberate concealment of the activity and/or evidence

d. Knowingly or recklessly supplying false or misleading evidence

e. The intent of the landlord/agent, individual and/or corporate body

f. The attitude of the landlord/agent

g. The deterrent effect of a prosecution on the landlord/agent and others

h. The extent of financial gain as a result of the breach

Although the Council has therefore a wide discretion in determining the appropriate level of financial penalty in any particular case, regard has been given to the statutory guidance when making this policy.

The Council has also decided to base this policy on the principles set out in Coventry City Council’s policy entitled ‘Civil penalty as an alternative to prosecution under the Housing Act 2004’ with the recognition that with the exception of the limited power to prosecute referred to in Section 2.b of this policy prosecution is not otherwise an option under the TFA 2019.

The civil penalty as an alternative to prosecution under the Housing Act 2004 policy was reviewed in 2018 and was informed by the principles contained in; Sentencing Council Health and Safety Offences, Corporate Manslaughter and Food Safety and Hygiene Offences Definitive Guideline. The Council believes this to be a fair, relevant and reasonable model to follow.

Appendix 1 of this policy contains the processes that the Council will use in order to determine the level of financial penalty under the TFA 2019. All stages subsequent to the issue of a Notice of Intent are subject to statutory time limits and the suspension of the process should an appeal be made to the First Tier Tribunal. V4 5

Appendix 1 – The Council’s process for determining the level of penalty to set:

Step one – Determining the offence category

The Council will determine the breach category using only the culpability and category of harm factors below. Where an offence does not fall squarely into a category, individual factors may require a degree of weighting to make an overall assessment. Other discretionary factors may also be applied in order to reflect consistency and may consider decisions in other UK jurisdictions where they contain some relevant and persuasive content.

Culpability

Very high: Where the Landlord or Agent intentionally breached, or flagrantly disregarded, the law or has/had a high public profile and knew their actions were unlawful

High: Actual foresight of, or willful blindness to, risk of a breach but risk nevertheless taken

Medium: Breach committed through act or omission which a person exercising reasonable care would not commit

Low: Breach committed with little fault, for example, because:

  • significant efforts were made to address the risk although they were inadequate on the relevant occasion
  • there was no warning/circumstance indicating a risk
  • failings were minor and occurred as an isolated incident

Harm

The following factors relate to both actual harm and risk of harm. Dealing with a risk of harm involves consideration of both the likelihood of harm occurring and the extent of it if it does.

Category 1 – High Likelihood of Harm

  • Serious adverse effect(s) on individual(s) and/or having a widespread impact due to the nature and/or scale of the Landlord’s or Agent’s business
  • High risk of an adverse effect on individual(s) – including where persons are vulnerable

Category 2 – Medium Likelihood of Harm

  • Adverse effect on individual(s) (not amounting to Category 1)
  • Medium risk of an adverse effect on individual(s) or low risk of serious adverse effect.
  • Tenants and/or legitimate landlords or agents substantially undermined by the conduct.
  • The Council’s work as a regulator is inhibited
  • Tenant or prospective tenant misled

Category 3 - Low Likelihood of Harm

  • Low risk of an adverse effect on actual or prospective tenants.
  • Public misled but little or no risk of actual adverse effect on individual(s)

We will define harm widely and victims may suffer financial loss, damage to health or psychological distress (especially vulnerable cases). There are gradations of harm within all of these categories.

The nature of harm will depend on personal characteristics and circumstances of the victim and the assessment of harm will be an effective and important way of taking into consideration the impact of a particular crime on the victim.

In some cases, no actual harm may have resulted and enforcement authority will be concerned with assessing the relative dangerousness of the offender’s conduct; it will consider the likelihood of harm occurring and the gravity of the harm that could have resulted. To the community some offences cause harm to the community at large (instead of or as well as to an individual victim) and may include economic loss, harm to public health, or interference with the administration of justice.

Step two - Starting point and category range

Having determined the category that the breach falls into, the Council will refer to the following starting points to reach an appropriate level of civil penalty within the category range. The Council will then consider further adjustment within the category range for aggravating and mitigating features.

Obtaining financial information

The statutory guidance advises that local authorities can use their powers under Schedule 5 of the CRA 2015 to, as far as possible, make an assessment of a Landlord or Agent’s assets and any income (not just rental or fee income) they receive when determining an appropriate penalty. The Council will use such lawful means as are at its disposal to identify where assets might be found.

In setting a financial penalty, the Council may conclude that the Landlord or Agent is able to pay any financial penalty imposed unless the Council has obtained, or the Landlord or Agent has supplied, any financial information to the contrary. The subject of a Final Notice, or a Notice of Intent where the subject does not challenge it, will be expected to disclose to the Council such data relevant to his/her financial position to facilitate an assessment of what that person can reasonably afford to pay. Where the Council is not satisfied that it has been given sufficient reliable information, the Council will be entitled to draw reasonable inferences as to the person’s means from evidence it has received, or obtained through its own enquiries, and from all the circumstances of the case which may include the inference that the person can pay any financial penalty.

Starting points and ranges

The tables in Appendices 4-10 below give the starting points, minimum and maximum financial penalties for each harm category and level of culpability for each type of breach.

  • Appendix 4 First breach in respect of a Prohibited Payment
  • Appendix 5 Second & subsequent breach in respect of a Prohibited Payment
  • Appendix 6 Breach of Publication of Fees requirements
  • Appendix 7 Breach in respect of membership of a Redress Scheme
  • Appendix 8 Breach in respect of membership of a Client Money Protection Scheme
  • Appendix 9 Breach in respect of certificates in respect of a Client Money Protection Scheme
  • Appendix 10 Breach of transparency requirements in respect of a Client Money Protection Scheme

Context

Below is a list of some, but not all factual elements that provide the context of the breach and factors relating to the Landlord or Agent. The Council will identify whether any combination of these, or other relevant factors, should result in an upward or downward adjustment from the starting point. In particular, relevant recent convictions5 are likely to result in a substantial upward adjustment. In some cases, having considered these factors, it may be appropriate to move outside the identified category range which will not exceed the statutory maximum permitted in any case.

Factors increasing seriousness

Aggravating factors:

  • Previous breaches of the TFA 2019
  • Previous convictions, having regard to:
    • the nature of the offence to which the conviction relates and its relevance to the current breach; and,
    • the time that has elapsed since the conviction:

Other aggravating factors may include:

  • Motivated by financial gain
  • Deliberate concealment of illegal nature of activity
  • Established evidence of wider/community impact
  • Obstruction of the investigation
  • Record of poor compliance
  • Refusal of advice or training or to become a member of an Accreditation scheme

Factors reducing seriousness or reflecting personal mitigation

  • No previous or no relevant/recent breaches
  • No previous convictions or no relevant/recent convictions
  • Steps voluntarily taken to remedy the problem
  • High level of co-operation with the investigation, beyond that which will always be expected
  • Good record of relationship with tenants
  • Self-reporting, co-operation and acceptance of responsibility
  • Good character and/or exemplary conduct
  • Mental disorder or learning disability, where linked to the commission of the breach
  • Serious medical conditions requiring urgent, intensive or long-term treatment and supported by medical evidence

Step three - General principles to consider in setting a penalty

The Council will finalise the appropriate level of penalty so that it reflects the seriousness of the offence and the Council must take into account the financial circumstances of the Landlord or Agent if representations are made by the Landlord or Agent following the issue of a Notice of Intent.

The level of financial penalty should reflect the extent to which the conduct fell below the required standard. The financial penalty should meet, in a fair and proportionate way, the objectives of punishment, deterrence and the removal of gain derived through the commission of the breach; it should not be cheaper to breach than to take the appropriate precautions and a fundamental principle involved is that there should be no financial gain to the perpetrator from the commission of the breaches.

If issuing a financial penalty for more than one breach, or where the offender has already been issued with a financial penalty, The Council will consider whether the total penalties are just and proportionate to the offending behaviour and will have regard to the factors in STEP EIGHT below.

Step four - Issue Notice of Intent

The Council will issue a Notice of Intent within 6 months of the enforcement authority having sufficient evidence that the Landlord or Agent has breached the TFA 2019. If the breach is ongoing the 6-month deadline continues until the breach ceases. A Notice of Intent can be served spontaneously.

While there are slight variations in the Statutory requirements according to which breach is being addressed a Notice of Intent will typically contain the date of the Notice, the amount of the proposed penalty, the reason for imposing the penalty and how the recipient can make representations concerning the penalty.

Step five – Consideration of representations and review of financial penalty where appropriate

The Council should review the penalty and, if necessary adjust the initial amount reached at step four, and represented in the Notice of Intent, to ensure that it fulfils the general principles set out below.

Any quantifiable economic benefit(s) derived from the breach, including through avoided costs or operating savings, should normally be added to the total financial penalty arrived at in step two. Where this is not readily available, the Council may draw on information available from enforcing authorities and others about the general costs of operating within the law. Whether the penalty will have the effect of putting the offender out of business will be relevant but in some serious cases this might be an acceptable outcome.

Step six – Reductions

The Council will consider any factors which indicate that a reduction in the penalty is appropriate and in so doing will have regard to the following factors relating to the wider impacts of the financial penalty on innocent third parties; such as (but not limited to):

  • The impact of the financial penalty on the Landlord or Agent’s ability to comply with the law or make restitution where appropriate
  • The impact of the financial penalty on employment of staff, service users, customers and the local economy.

The following factors will be considered in setting the level of reduction. When deciding on any reduction in a financial penalty, consideration will be given to:

  • The stage in the investigation or thereafter when the offender accepted liability
  • The circumstances in which they admitted liability
  • The degree of co-operation with the investigation

The maximum level of reduction in a penalty for an admission of liability will be one-third. In some circumstances there will be a reduced or no level of discount. This may occur for example where the evidence of the breach is overwhelming or there is a pattern of breaching conduct.

Any reduction should not result in a penalty that is less than the amount of gain from the commission of the breach itself.

Step seven - Additional actions

In all cases the Council must consider whether to take additional action. These may include further enforcement action itself or reference to other organisations where appropriate.

Step eight – Totality of breaching conduct

Where the offender is issued with more than one financial penalty, the Council should consider the following guidance from the definitive guideline on Offences Taken into Consideration and Totality which appears to the Council to be an appropriate reference and guide.

As the total financial penalty is inevitably cumulative the Council should determine the financial penalty for each individual breach based on the seriousness of the breach and taking into account the circumstances of the case including the financial circumstances of the Landlord or Agent so far as they are known, or appear, to the Council.

The Council should add up the financial penalties for each offence and consider if they are just and proportionate. If the aggregate total is not just and proportionate the Council should consider how to reach a just and proportionate total financial penalty. There are a number of ways in which this can be achieved.

For example:

Where a Landlord or Agent is to be penalised for two or more breaches or where there are multiple breaches of a repetitive kind, especially when committed against the same person, it will often be appropriate to impose for the most serious breach a financial penalty which reflects the totality of the conduct where this can be achieved within the maximum penalty for that breach. No separate penalty should be imposed for the other breaches. Where a Landlord or Agent is to be penalised for two or more breaches that arose out of different incidents, it will often be appropriate to impose separate financial penalties for each breach. The Council should add up the financial penalties for each breach and consider if they are just and proportionate. If the aggregate amount is not just and proportionate the Council should consider whether all of the financial penalties can be proportionately reduced. Separate financial penalties should then be imposed.

Where separate financial penalties are passed, the Council must take care to ensure that there is no double-counting.’

Step nine – Recording the decision

The officer making a decision about a financial penalty will record their decision giving reasons for coming to the amount of financial penalty that will be imposed.

Appendix 2 – Non-exhaustive list of vulnerable people:

  • Young adults and children
  • Persons vulnerable by virtue of age
  • Persons vulnerable by virtue of disability or sensory impairment
  • People on a low income
  • Persons with a Drug or alcohol addiction
  • Victims of domestic abuse
  • Children in care or otherwise vulnerable by virtue of age
  • People with complex health conditions
  • People exploited where English is not their first language.
  • Victims of Trafficking or sexual exploitation
  • Refugees
  • Asylum seekers People at risk of harassment or eviction
  • People at risk of homelessness.

Appendix 3 – Non-exhaustive list of relevant offences /breaches:

  • Housing law or landlord and tenant-related
  • Offences under:
  • The Public Health Acts of 1936 and 1961
  • The Building Act 1984
  • The Environmental Protection Act 1990
  • The Town and Country Planning Act 1990
  • The Prevention of Damage by Pests Act 1949
  • The Protection from Eviction Act 1977
  • The Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Acts of 1982 and 1976
  • The Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996
  • The Local Government and Housing Act 1989
  • The Housing Act 2004
  • The Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008

Offences involving fraud

Offences in which the victim has been deprived of money, property or other benefit by misrepresentation/deception on the part of the offender including:

  • Theft
  • Burglary
  • Fraud
  • Benefit fraud (particularly where tenants are in receipt of Housing Benefit)
  • Conspiracy to defraud
  • Obtaining money or property by deception
  • People trafficking
  • Being struck off as a company director

Offences involving violence

A conviction for the offence of:

  • Murder
  • Manslaughter
  • Arson
  • Malicious wounding or grievous bodily harm
  • Grievous bodily harm with intent
  • Actual bodily harm
  • Grievous bodily harm
  • Robbery
  • Criminal damage where the intent was to intimidate or was racially aggravated
  • Common assault
  • Common assault which is racially aggravated
  • Assault occasioning actual bodily harm
  • Possession of an offensive weapon
  • Possession of a firearm

Offences involving drugs

Consideration should be given to the nature of the offence and what bearing it could have on the Landlord or Agents business activities. The nature, quantity, purity and class of drugs should be taken into account. In addition where an offence of possession with intent to supply is involved regard should be had to the role and importance of, the subject in the supply chain.

Offences involving sexual offences

An offence contained in schedule 3 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003.

Unlawful discrimination

Unlawful discrimination can include findings of an Industrial Tribunal on unlawful employment practice such as discrimination under the Disability Discrimination Act. Consideration should be given to the nature of the unlawful discrimination and what bearing it could have on the management of a licensable property.

Other offences

  • Modern Slavery/ Human Trafficking
  • Offences involving the recruitment, transportation, transfer, harbouring or receipt of persons, by means of the threat or use of force or other forms of coercion, of abduction, of fraud, of deception, of abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability or of the giving or receiving of payments or benefits to achieve the consent of a person having control of another person, for the purpose of exploitation is likely to attach a lower level of culpability.

Appendix 4 – Financial Penalty in the case of the first breach in respect of Prohibited Payments.

The table below gives the starting points, minimum and maximum financial penalties for each harm category and level of culpability. Where exceptional circumstances apply the Council may reduce the minimum penalties further but may not increase them above the maximum permitted of £5000.
Level of culpability Starting point (£) Minimum financial penalties Maximum financial penalties
Low culpability      
Harm category 3 1250 250 2250
Harm category 2 1500 500 2500
Harm category 1 1750 750 2750
Medium culpability      
Harm category 3 2000 1000 3000
Harm category 2 2250 1250 3250
Harm category 1 2500 1500 3500
High culpability      
Harm category 3 2750 1750 3750
Harm category 2 3000 2000 4000
Harm category 1 3250 2250 4250
Very high culpability      
Harm category 3 3500 2500 4500
Harm category 2 3750 2750 4750
Harm category 1 4000 3000 5000

Appendix 5 – Financial Penalty in the case of a second or subsequent breach in respect of Prohibited Payments within five years of a previous breach

The table below gives the starting points, minimum and maximum financial penalties for each harm category and level of culpability. Where exceptional circumstances apply the Council may reduce the minimum penalties further but may not increase them above the maximum permitted of £30000.
Level of culpability Starting point (£) Minimum (£) Maximum (£)
Low culpability      
Harm category 3 3500 2000 8000
Harm category 2 6500 4000 10,000
Harm category 1 8500 4500 15,000
Medium culpability      
Harm category 3 6500 4750 17,000
Harm category 2 10,500 5000 20,000
Harm category 1 12,500 5500 22,000
High culpability      
Harm category 3 10,500 5500 20,000
Harm category 2 15,000 6250 24,000
Harm category 1 18,000 7000 26,000
Very high culpability      
Harm category 3 15,000 7000 24,000
Harm category 2 17,500 7250 28,000
Harm category 1 20,000 7500 30,000

Appendix 6 – Financial Penalty in the case of a breach in respect of Publication of Fees

The table below gives the starting points, minimum and maximum financial penalties for each harm category and level of culpability. Where exceptional circumstances apply the Council may reduce the minimum penalties further but may not increase them above the maximum permitted of £5000.
Level of culpability Starting point (£) Minimum (£) Maximum (£)
Low culpability      
Harm category 3 1250 250 2250
Harm category 2 1500 500 2500
Harm category 1 1750 750 2750
Medium culpability      
Harm category 3 2000 1000 3000
Harm category 2 2250 1250 3250
Harm category 1 2500 1500 3500
High culpability      
Harm category 3 2750 1750 3750
Harm category 2 3000 2000 4000
Harm category 1 3250 2250 4250
Very high culpability      
Harm category 3 3500 2500 4500
Harm category 2 3750 2750 4750
Harm category 1 4000 3000 5000

Appendix 7 – Financial Penalty in the case of a breach in respect of a failure to obtain membership of a Client Money Protection Scheme

The table below gives the starting points, minimum and maximum financial penalties for each harm category and level of culpability. Where exceptional circumstances apply the Council may reduce the minimum penalties further but may not increase them above the maximum permitted of £30000.
Level of culpability Starting point (£) Minimum (£) Maximum (£)
Low culpability      
Harm category 3 3500 2000 8000
Harm category 2 6500 4000 10,000
Harm category 1 8500 4500 15,000
Medium culpability      
Harm category 3 6500 4750 17,000
Harm category 2 10,500 5000 20,000
Harm category 1 12,500 5500 22,000
High culpability      
Harm category 3 10,500 5500 20,000
Harm category 2 15,000 6250 24,000
Harm category 1 18,000 7000 26,000
Very high culpability      
Harm category 3 15,000 7000 24,000
Harm category 2 17,500 7250 28,000
Harm category 1 20,000 7500 30,000

Appendix 8 – Financial Penalty in the case of a breach in respect of issues relating to certificates of evidence of Membership of a Client Money Protection Scheme.

The table below gives the starting points, minimum and maximum financial penalties for each harm category and level of culpability. Where exceptional circumstances apply the Council may reduce the minimum penalties further but may not increase them above the maximum permitted of £5000.
Level of culpability Starting point (£) Minimum (£) Maximum (£)
Low culpability      
Harm category 3 1250 250 2250
Harm category 2 1500 500 2500
Harm category 1 1750 750 2750
Medium culpability      
Harm category 3 2000 1000 3000
Harm category 2 2250 1250 3250
Harm category 1 2500 1500 3500
High culpability      
Harm category 3 2750 1750 3750
Harm category 2 3000 2000 4000
Harm category 1 3250 2250 4250
Very high culpability      
Harm category 3 3500 2500 4500
Harm category 2 3750 2750 4750
Harm category 1 4000 3000 5000

Appendix 9 – Financial Penalty in the case of a breach in respect of transparency issues relating to Membership of a Client Money Protection Scheme.

The table below gives the starting points, minimum and maximum financial penalties for each harm category and level of culpability. Where exceptional circumstances apply the Council may reduce the minimum penalties further but may not increase them above the maximum permitted of £5000.
Level of culpability Starting point (£) Minimum (£) Maximum (£)
Low culpability      
Harm category 3 1250 250 2250
Harm category 2 1500 500 2500
Harm category 1 1750 750 2750
Medium culpability      
Harm category 3 2000 1000 3000
Harm category 2 2250 1250 3250
Harm category 1 2500 1500 3500
High culpability      
Harm category 3 2750 1750 3750
Harm category 2 3000 2000 4000
Harm category 1 3250 2250 4250
Very high culpability      
Harm category 3 3500 2500 4500
Harm category 2 3750 2750 4750
Harm category 1 4000 3000 5000

Housing Enforcement

Open 9am–5pm Monday to Friday (excluding bank holidays)

Address: PO Box 15
Council House
Earl Street
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Telephone: 024 7697 5495