Commission provided legal representation to man in bringing his case
The Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission has welcomed a ruling issued today from the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) in favour of a man who challenged a letting agency for the discrimination he faced as a recipient of the Housing Assistance Payment (HAP). The Commission provided the man with legal representation in taking his case. The 32 year old father, who moved to Dublin to secure work, had viewed the rental property, agreed a tenancy, signed the agreement and paid a deposit. Then while finalising the rental he disclosed that he was using the Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) only to be chastised by the letting agent for not disclosing this sooner as the landlord didn’t like HAP. Subsequently he was informed by the agent that the landlord had rented the property to someone else. The man shared custody of his then 2 year old daughter, and having his own place was a priority to allow him have his daughter stay with him. As a direct consequence of walking into the premises in April 2019, and experiencing an outright rejection of his agreed tenancy, the WRC heard that he experienced emotional trauma, which caused him to leave his job, suffer increased anxiety, move home and completely withdraw from the world. His recovery from this has taken a considerable period. The WRC ruling noted that the letting agent had not engaged with the WRC investigation process, noting that this amounted to “staggering disrespect for a statutory Tribunal.” The WRC found that the man had been discriminated against on the grounds of Housing assistance, and that the discrimination had an enduring and detrimental effect on his personal life which is contrary to the intention of the HAP scheme. Housing assistance as a grounds for discrimination was introduced in 2016. The WRC ordered that the letting agent pay compensation of €8,500 to the man. It also ordered the agency to immediately equality-proof the application process for its tenancies, to include a standard operating procedure with a chronological documentation of the process to record both parties involvement in the entire process. The letting agent was finally ordered to familiarise themselves with HAP and the statutory importance of the Equal Status Act. WRC Adjudication Officer Patsy Doyle in her adjudication stated: “To have a housing need carries a certain vulnerability. The Government body had sanctioned the Complainant for a Social House but did not have one available to allocate. HAP is a stop gap between Homelessness and Housing and is an empowerment for tenants and a commercially sound transaction for Landlords. A Universal declaration of dislike of HAP coupled with withdrawal of service constitutes a blanket ban.” The father who took the case stated: “I’d like to thank the IHREC for their dedication and perseverance. Discrimination against citizens for receiving financial assistance from the State is abhorrent, elitist and utterly archaic. It inhibits and undermines social progress. I hope this decision will encourage landlords and estate agents to uphold citizen’s rights, and will give tenants the confidence to demand the same.” Sinéad Gibney Chief Commissioner of the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission stated:“Landlords and letting agents need to get the message that discriminating against tenants and prospective tenants on the basis of being in receipt of rent allowance, housing assistance payments, and other social welfare payments is illegal. “The first half of 2020 has seen almost 20% of all public queries to our advice line about discrimination in services related to housing. It’s clear that we are seeing a trend of systemic discrimination against people in receipt of housing assistance payments, which needs to be tackled not only through individual complaints but through additional policy measures.”ENDS/ For further information, please contact: Karen Joynt, IHREC 01 8589601 / 085 1746883 kjoynt@ihrec.ie Follow us on twitter @_IHREC