14 Feb 2024

Housing qualifications throughout the UK: What the Welsh sector snapshot tell us

The Westminster Government has started an eight week consultation on its Competence and Conduct Standard for social housing. A result of the Social Housing (Regulation) Act which received Royal Assent last year.

It was the act that mandated qualifications for specified social housing management positions, as well as wider requirements on housing organisations to demonstrate continued professional development of staff.

In short, this is the Westminster Government’s response to the much-publicised issues around disrepair, damp and mould in particular, and specifically, the tragic death of Awaab Ishak in Rochdale.

Competency of the workforce and the reassertion of the importance of the role of the housing officer/manager, was a key theme that also emerged from the Better Social Housing Review, a report from an independent panel of housing experts appointed by CIH and the NHF.

Around the same period, CIH Cymru and Community Housing Cymru (CHC) jointly wrote to the Welsh Government Minister with responsibility for housing. Noting the context is different in Wales we proposed to work with stakeholders to consider how in Wales we can learn from the report and its recommendations.

Additionally, following the UK Government’s amendment to the Social Housing Bill (now Act), seeking to make qualifications mandatory for some housing management roles in the English social housing sector, the Welsh Minister noted the stakeholder group should also consider the nature of the social housing workforce in Wales and the support which may be needed to ensure services are the best they can be.

CIH Cymru, together with CHC and Welsh Government, established a sector stakeholder group to look at the wider issues surrounding disrepair. Together we identified several themes that needed consideration, including one around a competent workforce and how assurance is provided through governance mechanicalness across tenures.

That work is ongoing, and the group is about to make some recommendations to the Minister. The Minister has publicly ruled out mandating qualifications at this stage. However, at CIH Cymru we decided to undertake a snapshot sector survey to provide a better understanding of where the sector currently sits in terms of its commitment to continued professional development, including knowledge through qualifications.

The response wasn’t as wide as we had hoped, with only 26 per cent of housing associations and stock-retaining local authorities filling in the survey, but nonetheless it threw up some interesting data.

The survey identified that the majority of relevant housing managers were employed in the role of head of housing as shown in figure below.

Respondents also highlighted that even though neighbourhood managers or area housing officers would be the officers who have day to day management of the organisation’s properties, they are not always part of the senior management team. This led to some uncertainty as to whether they would be covered by the English legislation.

The data also revealed that 171 individuals held housing qualifications, but for 75 per cent of organisations less than half of those colleagues with a housing qualification were in roles that met the definition of a relevant housing manager.

Over half of those currently in one of those housing management roles identified in the English legislation is currently undertaking a qualification, with 58 per cent undertaking a housing qualification all are undertaking a CIH accredited qualification at level three, four or five.

Another strand that came through strongly from the data was support for apprenticeships with 90 per cent of respondents highlighted the fact that there is a need for higher level apprenticeships in Wales, but that there’s a lack of pan-Wales provision as only one centre in Wales offering it.

So, in conclusion:

  • Overall, there is support for qualifications in Wales
  • Barriers include capacity constraints, and a lack of learning centres pan-Wales
  • Lack of clarity around what roles fit the definition of a relevant housing manager
  • If we in Wales were to move towards mandated qualifications, we need to ensure the right level of funding is made available.
Written by Matt Dicks

Matt is the national director of CIH Cymru and leads the team in Wales. Matt took his current role armed with a breadth of knowledge of the Welsh policy landscape following 17 years of working as a senior communicator at the heart of Welsh civic and political life.

Find out more about the research and the Competence and Conduct Standard consutlation
Sector Snapshot: Qualifications in Wales

Members can read the full report here

Discover more about the Competence and Conduct Standard consultation

Find out more about the Competence and Conduct Standard consultation in this news story which includes CIH's reaction and links to find out more with a member exclusive what you kneed to know guide and lunch and learn events.  

Read the news story.