Foreword

It gives me great pleasure as Convenor of Place, Neighbourhood & Corporate Assets to introduce East Dunbartonshire Council’s Tenant Participation Strategy for 2023 to 2028.

The Council’s new revised Strategy has been developed with the full and active participation of the Tenant Participation Working Group and tenants and service users of East Dunbartonshire. I would like to thank them for their input into the new Strategy.

Much has been achieved by working together and this Strategy aims to continue the successes achieved to date and to promote talking, listening and communicating with customers. The Council is committed to providing opportunities for tenants and service users to be involved and influence decisions at the highest possible level in relation to the development and monitoring of housing and services to Council tenants.

This document sets out a wide range of methods and support, which is available to all tenants to get involved. It also sets out how the Council will keep tenants informed, consult with them and listen to their views. The Housing service has taken on board the comments made by tenants, staff and a range of other key Stakeholders as part of the recent Tenant Participation Review and reflected these in the new aims of the Strategy.

I would like to thank all tenants and tenant representatives who have engaged with the Council by returning surveys, going to the Annual Tenant Event, giving up their time to represent their area, carrying out inspections and meeting with Council officers to discuss important housing issues. I look forward to working with you over the next few years.

I hope that more tenants will become involved and work with the Council through the opportunities available to assess its services. Together, we can demonstrate that involving our tenants is the way we work.

- Councillor Paul Ferretti

Tenant Participation Working Group (TPWG)

The TPWG has worked in partnership with the Council to develop this Tenant Participation Strategy for 2023-28. The TPWG firmly believes that the revised Strategy provides a range of opportunities for tenants and other service users to get involved and communicate the benefits of working together to improve services. The TPWG is proud to have been involved in continuing the success of the previous Strategy by revising and updating this new Strategy which covers the next five year period.

The TPWG works alongside the Council to improve the way housing and other services to Council tenants are delivered in East Dunbartonshire. This is supported by the participation and involvement of service users talking, listening and communicating ideas and by having an opportunity to have their say.

The TPWG encourages tenants to take up the opportunities to get involved in whatever level they choose; be that attending a meeting, completing a questionnaire, being a Scrutineer an Interested Tenant or by joining a tenants group. The TPWG hopes that encouraging underrepresented groups and hard-to-reach groups to get involved can be further progressed during the next five years. Taking an opportunity to have a say and have communication with the Council is an opportunity to influence decisions concerning tenants’ homes and communities in East Dunbartonshire. TPWG members look forward to working with tenants in the years ahead.

Talking, listening and communicating

"Talking, Listening and Communicating" sets out the Council’s commitment to developing effective consultation and participation across East Dunbartonshire. This Strategy sets out the different ways that tenants and service users can get involved to influence and shape housing and other Council services. It also details how the Housing service will keep tenants and service users updated. This Strategy has been developed in partnership with tenant representatives from the TPWG and the Scrutineers.

Tenant Participation is about the Council communicating, consulting and taking on board the views of service users to improve our housing and services to Council tenants. The Council is fully committed to working closely with tenants and other service users to improve housing standards and services. Over the next five years, the Council will be developing even greater opportunities for tenants and service users to get involved

This latest Strategy builds on the many achievements already made by tenant representatives and staff working in partnership to improve the Housing service and tenant participation throughout East Dunbartonshire. The Strategy takes into account the legal framework for tenant participation in place within the Housing (Scotland) Acts 2001 and 2010. In line with the Scottish Social Housing Charter (SSHC), this Strategy outlines how tenants and service users can get involved in monitoring the performance of our housing services.

The Council and the TPWG welcomes the opportunity to publish this Strategy to increase opportunities for tenants and service users to work together to make a difference. By working together, the Council believes it can make a difference to our housing services and local communities. This Strategy sets out what actions and objectives the Tenant Participation team aims to achieve over 2023-28.

People Talking
People Talking

Key principles

This Strategy makes clear that effective and meaningful participation requires partnership working between tenants, other service users, staff and Elected Members. The Council is committed to this partnership to ensure that tenants and other service users have real opportunities to shape and improve housing and services to Council tenants. The Council aims to put tenants and service users at the heart of its business and this Strategy is built upon the following principles.

Trust, respect and partnership

  • The Council will provide an environment of openness and honesty where differences of opinion can be worked through in a culture of mutual respect
  • The Council will ensure that the process of decision making is open, clear and accountable
  • The Council will continue to provide the maximum opportunity for tenants and service users to get involved and to influence housing decisions.

Decision making

  • The Council will make sure that tenants and service users have opportunities to influence and improve our services
  • The Council will provide good quality and accessible information
  • The Council will use effective consultation methods to seek service users views and use this information to provide better services that provide value for money
  • The Council will provide tenants with the opportunity to comment on proposed policy or service development proposals that affect them and will take account of their views before decisions are made
  • The Council will provide feedback to tenants and service users following consultations.

Sharing information and ideas

Everyone involved in tenant participation will share information and ideas. It is important that there is a shared understanding of the issue, so that those involved can work towards a joint solution to take this forward. The Council will ensure that everyone has the information needed to consider issues fully.

Setting the agenda together

The Council’s Tenant Participation team will agree the tenant participation agenda jointly with tenants.

Opportunities for all

  • The Council will take account of equal opportunities legislation and good practice
  • The Council will remove the barriers that prevent tenants and service users getting involved
  • The Council will be pro-active to encourage groups who may be excluded from mainstream tenant participation to get involved Groups such as black and minority ethnic groups, people with disabilities, young people and elderly groups
  • The Council will promote and increase tenant and customer awareness of their rights to participate and to get involved in the self-assessment of housing and other council services
  • The Council will recognise the independence and autonomy of tenant groups.

Supporting tenant participation

  • The Council will support its employees to provide effective responses to tenants and promote partnership working
  • The Council will provide adequate training, support and resources for tenants and service users, employees and Elected Members to engage in tenant participation opportunities by talking, listening and communicating ideas with one another in order to make a positive change.

Measuring success

  • The Council will develop and implement an effective monitoring framework in consultation with tenants to measure the effectiveness of this Strategy
  • The Council will meet the standards set out in the Scottish Social Housing Charter
  • The Council will involve tenants and service users in the self-assessment of housing and other Council services.

Equal opportunities

East Dunbartonshire Council is committed to encouraging equal opportunities in everything it does. The Council will work to actively remove any barriers that stop tenants and service users getting involved.

The Council will make sure all groups and individuals have equal access and an opportunity to take part

The Council will continue to consult with representatives from potentially excluded groups to encourage involvement of groups such as black and minority ethnic groups, older people, people with disabilities and young people.

The Council will monitor the effectiveness of its equality measures as part of the process to monitor the Tenant Participation Strategy. 

To ensure that tenants and other service users are treated fairly and are not disadvantaged in any way, an Equality Impact Assessment has been carried out on this Strategy.

Legal background

Legal rights to participate

The Housing (Scotland) Act 2001 introduced the first legal framework for tenant participation in Scotland. It places a duty on all Councils and Registered Social Landlords (RSLs) to consult with tenants and service users on a range of housing issues including:

  • The Tenant Participation Strategy
  • Changes to rents and service charges
  • Housing management, repairs and maintenance
  • Standards of service to be provided
  • Any proposal to change landlord. 

All Councils and RSLs are required to produce a Tenant Participation Strategy in consultation with tenants.

The Scottish Social Housing Charter

The first Scottish Social Housing Charter (SSHC) was launched in 2012 and sets out the standards that are expected of all Councils and RSLs. The Charter is used by the Scottish Housing Regulator (SHR) to assess and report on each landlord’s performance.

All Councils and RSLs are now required to carry out an annual self-assessment of how they are delivering housing and repairs services. Each May, the Housing service produces an Annual Return on the Charter Report (ARC) to the SHR outlining our performance. Every August the SHR publishes a summary of the Council’s performance and this Report is available to the public on the SHR website.

This report provides a useful way to compare our performance against that of other social housing landlords in Scotland.

Each October the Housing service produces an annual report entitled Your Housing News to provide tenants and service users with information on its performance against the Charter. Tenants from the TPWG are involved in the drafting of this report each year.

A copy of this report can be found on the Council’s website or can be requested by contacting the Housing Policy Team on 0300 123 4510.

From February 2019 the SHR requires all Councils and RSLs to carry out a self-assessment exercise following publication of the ARC and to present this Annual Assurance to their Board, or, in the case of local authorities, to a relevant Committee. In East Dunbartonshire Council, this is the Place, Neighbourhood and Corporate Assets Committee. The Annual Assurance Statement is submitted to the SHR every October and made available on the SHR website.

Achievements

Independent review

A Working Group of tenant and staff representatives was formed to review how well tenant participation is working and to consider what improvements can be made to encourage tenant participation and create opportunities for talking, listening and communicating ideas to improve services. A comprehensive review was carried out that included:

  • A review of the Tenant Participation Strategy and information sent out to tenants
  • Focus group meetings with tenants, service users and housing staff
  • A targeted survey of key stakeholders and customers.

The review highlighted that a great deal of progress has been made to get more tenants and service users involved in order to influence change across East Dunbartonshire.

Achievements to date

Here are some key successes achieved over the last five years:

  • The current tenant participation framework works well and provides a range of opportunities for tenants and service users to get involved and give their views
  • Registered Tenants Groups are working well in partnership with the Council and are actively working to improve local housing and wider community facilities and services
  • The TPWG, the main consultative body for tenants and service users throughout East Dunbartonshire, works closely with the Council and has been effective in influencing decisions, such as the annual rent increase, housing capital investment programme and asset management decisions
  • The annual rent setting consultation provides an excellent opportunity for tenants to have their say about future rent increases. This feedback is taken on board by the Council before decisions are reached
  • The TPWG annually reviews the Your Housing News annual tenant report to ensure that it is a useful and easy to read document
  • The Sheltered Housing Forum is actively working to develop and improve sheltered housing services
  • The Scrutineers is a group of tenants and residents which continues to independently scrutinise Council housing services to bring about an improvement in performance. These activities have included and influenced the right to repair standard, as well as improving the standard of temporary and emergency accommodation provided by the Council. The Scrutineers also recommended that the Council produce a specific Anti social Behaviour Policy for the Housing service instead of using the corporate one. Project 101 provides an excellent information and support service for young people
  • Project 101 held a job fayre open day for young people to attend which also promoted tenant participation activities to encourage more young people to get involved and have their say
  • The Council is committed to funding and supporting tenant participation and has a dedicated Tenant Participation Officer post
  • The Council has encouraged more tenants and service users to attend the Annual Tenant Event to give their views and priorities.
    Tenant Satisfaction Surveys have provided the Council with useful information about tenant’s views and priorities
  • The Council’s Taking Part newsletter is regarded as a useful way to provide tenants with information and to seek views and feedback
  • Estate walkabouts provide excellent opportunities to discuss ongoing issues within an area and agree solutions through working together
  • The Council in partnership with tenants developed a new Tenant Scrutiny Framework to outline how tenants can get involved in reviewing housing services.

The Housing service is proud of these achievements and plans to build on them over the next five years.

Priorities

Tenant Participation Strategy and Action Plan

In consultation with tenants and other service users, the Housing service identified a number of areas that will be developed in our Tenant Participation Strategy for 2023-28:

  • The new Tenant Participation Strategy for 2023- 28 includes tenant participation initiatives and tenant scrutiny
  • The new Strategy links to the Council’s commitment to communication and digital inclusion
  • The new Strategy includes an Action Plan that is agreed with the TPWG and staff
  • The Action Plan is reviewed and developed annually by the TPWG and the Council
  • The Action Plan includes information on how progress against the Charter is being measured
  • The Council in partnership with the TPWG develop key performance indicators to access the outcomes of tenant participation and scrutiny
  • The Council develops a performance management framework for tenant participation and tenant scrutiny
  • The Council aims to embed tenant participation and scrutiny into how it plans, delivers and reviews its housing and other Council services
  • The TPWG is involved in the development, monitoring and evaluation of the Tenant Participation Strategy and an annual review of the TP budget
  • An annual training and support programme is in place to support Registered Tenants Organisations (RTOs), Forums and the TPWG.

Getting more tenants involved

The Council should develop social and networking events throughout East Dunbartonshire, to build up contact with tenants and other service users:

  • The Council should be pro-active in identifying issues and engage with tenants who are underrepresented, whilst broadening activities to encourage engagement with harder to reach groups
  • The Council should encourage and support tenant involvement in areas where there is little to no tenant or community involvement
  • The Council should continue to develop the Interested Tenants List
  • The Council and TPWG will further develop and continue to publicise a Calendar of Tenant Participation Events
  • The Council will utilise the following methods to get tenants more involved:
    • Focus Groups
    • Social networking/Twitter/Facebook.

Tenants being involved in reviewing housing services

  • The TPWG will be fully involved in reviewing repairs, allocations, Greenspace, rents and value for money.
  • The Council will provide feedback to tenants following consultation exercises and make this information available on the Council’s website.
  • A more systematic approach needs to be developed to take account of tenant’s views before policies are reviewed and decisions are taken.
  • Tenants involvement in self assessment of the Housing service.
  • The Council will encourage, support and resource tenant and customer involvement in the self-assessment of housing services.
  • The Council will support the further development of the Scrutineers and scrutiny activities.

Improving communication

  • The Council will continue to further develop its newsletter to tenants and other service users.
  • The Council and TPWG will look at ways to utilise more fully the information collated from complaints, surveys and questionnaires.
    Operational, training and support needs to take tenant participation forward.
  • Training and support will be provided to tenants, employees and Elected Members to understand the new Tenant Participation Strategy along with the requirements of the Charter and tenant scrutiny.
  • Tenant participation is embedded into the planning and delivery of housing services. Employee training will take place to support housing staff to develop and promote tenant participation and scrutiny opportunities.

Ways to get involved

The Council want to use the experience of tenants and other service users and put this at the heart of decision making. There are a range of opportunities to get involved as part of our Tenant Participation Wheel.

The Council provides a range of different ways in which tenants can get involved and give their views.

Registered Tenants and Residents Organisations (RTOs)

Tenants and Residents groups that are registered with East Dunbartonshire Council work in partnership with the Council and other agencies to highlight local housing issues and find solutions. RTOs are fully funded and supported by the Council and are recognised as independent groups.

Some Tenants and Residents groups choose not to register with the Council. These groups are supported and are also recognised as independent groups.

Sheltered Housing Forum

This Forum is made up of representatives from the Sheltered Housing areas across East Dunbartonshire. The Forum aims to meet with the Council four times each year to raise and address any issues arising with sheltered housing.

Tenant Participation Working Group

This Working Group is the main consultative body for tenants throughout East Dunbartonshire. It is made up of tenant representatives and service users, Elected Members along with officers from Housing and other Council services. The group meets five times per year to ensure there are a range of opportunities for tenants and service users to get involved. The TPWG has been effective in influencing decisions about housing services.

Scrutineers – Tenant Scrutiny Group

The Scrutineers group is responsible for independently reviewing how good the Council is at delivering housing services. It is made up of tenants and other service users from across East Dunbartonshire. It works to ensure that the interests of tenants and service users are at the heart of how housing is delivered in East Dunbartonshire. The group meets monthly and is funded and supported by the Council.

Community Events and Open Days

The tenant participation team attends community events and open days, to provide more information about the housing service, as well as promoting tenant and customer involvement.

Tenants Conference

The Tenant Participation Team organises an annual Tenants Conference to provide an update on current housing issues, as well as seeking the views and priorities of tenants and other service users.

Surveys and Questionnaires

At certain times of the year, the Council will send out surveys or questionnaires for its customers to take part in. This helps staff to gather customer views on how well the Council is delivering housing services as well as determining future priorities.

Focus Groups

The Council invites groups of service users to one-off focus group meetings to find out about specific service delivery issues. These meetings also give staff the opportunity to keep up-to-date with the opinions of service users.

Consultations

The Council holds consultation events during the year to seek the views of tenants, service users and Tenants and Residents Groups, on topics such as rents and changes to housing policies. The Council provides copies of consultation documents to local Tenants and residents Groups, the Tenant Participation Working Group, the Sheltered Housing Forum, tenants (via the Taking Part newsletter) and other forums while also providing these groups with enough time to respond. The Council is committed to taking all consultation feedback into account before a final decision is reached.

Interested Tenants List

If you are interested in giving your views but you haven’t got time to come along to meetings, then the Interested Tenants List may be the right thing for you. The Council keeps a list of tenants and service users who have told us they want to be consulted on service issues that interest them. This can be done by post, email or by telephone.

Training and development opportunities

The Council provides a training programme for tenants and service users to enable them to increase their skills, knowledge and understanding of how housing services work and what standards to expect. The Tenant Participation budget also covers the costs of attending conference and seminar events.

Local Groups

The Council can support you to set up a new group or introduce you to an existing group in your area. This is a great way to get to know more people and to improve your local community. The Council is happy to support and consult with formal and informal groups.

Estate Walkabouts

Local Housing staff can arrange estate walkabouts with tenants. Service users can also be invited to take part in these. Walkabouts provide a great opportunity to progress any communal issues.

Tell Us

Tenants and service users can complain, compliment or comment about a housing service. The Council listens and learns from all comments that it receives.

To help you be involved

Contact the Tenant Participation Officer or your local Housing Officer if you are interested in getting involved. To make things easier the Council can:

  • Provide transport to get to meetings or events
  • Provide crèche or care arrangements to support your attendance
  • Make sure that meetings are held in locations and buildings that are accessible
  • Provide information, training and support to keep you involved and informed.

Information, consultation and feedback

Standards

The Council will use a range of ways to provide information to tenants and service users. This includes written and electronic communication as well as face-to-face meetings.

The Council will ensure that the information provided:

  • Is accurate and up to date
  • Is in plain English and free of jargon
  • Is available in a range of formats
  • Takes account of tenants and service users views
  • Gives tenants and service users enough time to understand the information and to respond.

The Council is aware that many people face barriers to communication because of language or disability and will use a variety of methods to ensure that information is accessible and clear to understand including:

  • Large print versions
  • Audio versions
  • Braille
  • Translations or providing documents in community languages.

At consultation or information events, you can request:

  • Loop systems
  • Sign language or community language interpreters
  • Information Methods
  • The Council will provide a range of information to suit the needs and priorities of its tenants and service users.

Information Methods

The Council will provide a range of information to suit the needs and priorities of its tenants and service users.

Newsletters

The Council will publish the tenant newsletter Taking Part, three times a year, to update you on key housing issues.

Annual Performance Report

Every year the Council will produce an annual performance report outlining our progress against the Scottish Social Housing Charter. The report, Your Housing News will be made available on the Council’s website and will be reviewed in partnership with the TPWG.

Text Messaging Service

The Council will promote the use of a text messaging service to update you about useful information and as a reminder of meetings and appointments.

Website

The Council will provide updated information on its website to keep people informed. The Council will use Twitter and Facebook to convey information and gather your views. The Council will work to review and improve the Housing information on its website to ensure it meets your needs.

Tenants Handbook

Every new tenant will receive a copy of the Tenants Handbook. The Council will keep this handbook updated.

RTO Database

The Council has a statutory responsibility to keep a public register of Registered Tenants Organisations in the East Dunbartonshire area. This is available on our Tenant Participation
webpage.

Improvements

The Council will send a letter to every household prior to any improvement, work such as kitchen and bathroom refits or, close painting, detailing the work that will be carried out. The Council will also provide tenants with the contact details of the staff member involved in the project.

Calendar of TP Activities (Diary of Events)

Three times each year the Tenant Participation team will produce a calendar of TP activities. The calendar will provide advance notice of events taking place for the next four-month period and will be included in the Council’s Taking Part newsletter. Read the Council's Taking Part newsletter.

Complaints Procedure

The Council publishes information about the Corporate Complaints Procedure. Find out more about the Council's Complaints Procedure.

Rents

The Council will give every tenant at least four weeks’ notice in writing before increasing rents or any service charge. The Council will consult tenants on any proposal to increase rents.

Housing Policies

Tenants have the right to request information about the terms of the tenancy agreement, rent setting policies, housing allocations policy, repairs and maintenance policies, the Tenant Participation Strategy and decision-making structures.

This information can be requested from the Housing Policy team and is also available on the Council’s website. It will be issued within 10 working days following receipt of request.

The Council’s ten pledges when consulting with you
The Council is committed to consulting with tenants and service users and to listening to your views before decisions are made. These 10 pledges on consulting with you include:

Number and Pledge

  1. Tenants and service users will be involved in the consultation process from the beginning.
  2. Consultation is a genuine process and not just a tick-box exercise.
  3. The Council will provide information, support and training to support tenants and service users to get fully involved.
  4. The Council will provide a name and contact details of staff member/department dealing with the consultation.
  5. The Council will give people a reasonable time to consider and give their response.
  6. The Council will listen carefully to what people have to say.
  7. The Council will take feedback into account before a decision is reached.
  8. The Council will keep tenants and service users updated on the result of any consultation
  9. The Council aims to give tenants and service users up to two months to respond to housing consultations.
  10. The Council will advise people of when they can expect changes to be implemented.

Tenant scrutiny

What is tenant scrutiny?

Tenant Scrutiny is about tenants and service users being actively involved in reviewing how housing services are being delivered and, even more importantly, how they can be improved. Changes to the regulation of housing in Scotland following the introduction of the Scottish Social Housing Charter and an independent Scottish Housing Regulator (SHR), means that landlords are required to be more pro-active in self-regulation, by involving tenants and services users in the scrutiny of housing services.

In Scotland, there is now an increased focus on housing organisations carrying out self-assessment and reviewing their housing services to evaluate how well they are doing and to plan improvements.

Tenant Scrutiny is the name given to tenants being involved in the self-assessment process where they independently scrutinise landlord performance.

"Tenant-led scrutiny enables tenants and service users to examine our services in a clear and open manner. Their findings help inform our business and operational decisions. Through the working partnership of Tenant Scrutiny, this has assisted us to deliver value for money services, increase customer satisfaction and improve services." Grant Mackintosh, Executive Officer – Housing

Tenant Scrutiny and landlord self-assessment are now key priorities for the Council’s housing department. Feedback from Tenant Scrutiny supports the Council to make service improvements based on talking, listening and communicating.

The scrutineers

The Scrutineers is a Tenant and Service User Scrutiny Group. It was launched in April 2015 and is at the core of the Council’s scrutiny framework. The Group is made up of tenants and service users, who independently review how well Housing Services as well as other Council services, are performing against the Charter, while also making recommendations for further improvements.

Membership of the group is open to tenants and service users in mixed tenure housing areas across East Dunbartonshire. The group meets monthly to:

  • Work on behalf of tenants and service users to ensure that housing services are developed to a high standard
  • Ensure service users are at the heart of the business
  • Continually review and improve housing services
  • Make recommendations to senior managers and Elected Members on how housing services can be improved.

The Council and the Tenant Participation Working Group has developed a Tenant Scrutiny Framework to outline the key role of tenants groups, the Scrutiny group and the decision making process. This is detailed on the next page.

Support for tenant participation

Support for Tenant Participation

The Council recognises that for tenant participation to be successful it has to be properly funded and supported. Each year the Council sets aside a budget for Tenant Participation.

Staffing

The Council recognises that for tenant participation to be successful it has to be properly funded and supported. Each year the Council sets aside a budget for Tenant Participation.

Tenant Participation Officer within the Housing Department.
Two Client Support Workers within the Project 101 Youth Housing Information Project.

The Tenant Participation Team can support you in the following ways:

  • Provide information about Council housing services.
  • Provide training as well as support to tenant and residents groups, forums, the TPWG and the scrutiny group.
  • Support tenants and resident groups to access funding.
  • Support the development of new and existing tenants and resident groups.
  • Organise information and consultation events
  • Support tenants to independently review housing services.
  • Produce publications such as the Taking Part newsletter.

Funding

The annual tenant participation budget is around £24,000. The budget will ensure that there is sufficient funding to support tenant participation activities throughout East Dunbartonshire and to deliver the Tenant Participation Strategy. The Tenant Participation Team prepares an annual report on the Tenant Participation budget spend and provides this to the TPWG. The Tenant Participation budget covers

  • Grants to RTOs (in line with registration requirements).
  • Funding for non-registered tenants groups
  • Running costs for forums, TPWG, scrutiny and other groups.
  • Access to local and national training, conference and seminar events.
  • Consultation groups and focus groups
  • Annual Tenants Conference event
  • Accommodation for meetings.
  • Travel, crèche and care costs.
  • Access to independent advice organisations such as TIS or TPAS.
  • Taking Part newsletter publication and distribution.

Training

The Council is committed to ensuring that both tenants and employees have the necessary skills, training and support to work in partnership. This may include joint training and attendance at conferences run by national organisations such as TIS and TPAS. In addition, training will be available to tenants and groups new to the process. The Council will regularly review training needs to ensure that tenants and employees have the skills and confidence to develop effective partnership working.

Support in Kind

The Council can also support tenants and groups in the following ways:

  • Provide meeting room spaces.
  • Photocopy or type group’s minutes and paperwork.
  • Employees from the Housing service will also be available to assist tenants and residents groups.

Measuring success

The Council has made a commitment to work with the TPWG to produce an Annual Tenant Participation Action Plan to assist with the delivery of the overall Strategy. The Action Plan will detail the key aims, tasks, responsibilities and timescales needed to deliver the tenant participation activities for the year ahead. The Council will work with the TPWG to agree realistic targets and methods to measure the impact of the Tenant Participation Action Plan annually.

The TPWG will meet annually to monitor progress of this Strategy.

Person reading spreadsheets
Person reading spreadsheets

Covid recovery

The Covid-19 Pandemic

There will be an awareness of the restrictions put in place from March 2020 by the Scottish Government as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. These restrictions had a direct impact on tenant participation as the Council immediately suspended all activities that involved meetings, as did local Tenants and Residents Organisations.

Our Annual Tenant Event from 2020 to 2022 was postponed and the scrutiny group, The Scrutineers, was also put on hold.

Even though meetings were not taking place, tenant participation and keeping tenants informed continued. The Taking Part newsletter was successfully issued to tenants. The Housing Service also facilitated Tenant Participation Working Group meetings online via Microsoft Teams and supported TPWG members to take part.

Despite the restrictions, tenant participation evolved and limited activities took place during this period, which included:

  • Assisting with the Council’s Helping Hands to help vulnerable tenants to get the advice and support needed during the Covid-19 pandemic
  • Issuing three Taking Part newsletters each year during the months of April/August/December, including a special Covid specific related issue in August 2020
  • Annually issuing the Your Housing News annual performance report
  • Continuing direct tenant participation support to groups/interested tenants (via telephone, email, Microsoft teams)
  • Carrying out a Covid Financial Survey with all EDC tenants which supported the development of a Hardship Fund for tenants
  • Producing a Repairs Safety Leaflet to outline to tenants what to expect when repairs were being carried out in their homes
  • Continuing to undertake the annual rent setting survey and collating the responses received from tenants
  • Continuing the growth and support of the TPWG which now meets online via Microsoft Teams
  • Continuing to support young people through Project 101 which continues to provide recipes in newsletters and advice and information via email, telephone, social media and video link.

Tenant Participation post pandemic

The Housing Service is committed to promoting and supporting tenant participation, as well as ensuring it evolves, adapts and utilises all opportunities for tenants as part of the post-pandemic recovery. This will be carried out sensitively to support people to take part in ways that they are comfortable with and at an appropriate pace.

The Tenant Participation team will support the reintroduction of activities in line with the Council’s recovery programme, ensuring that any face-to-face meetings are risk-assessed and held in venues that are spacious, ventilated, as well as having room to socially distance. The Tenant Participation team will support the reintroduction of activities in line with the Council’s recovery programme, ensuring that any face-to-face meetings are risk-assessed and held in venues that are spacious, ventilated, as well as having room to socially distance.

The team will support the use of face masks where this is a member’s preference and, if preferred, by hosting hybrid meetings. This list is not exhaustive and should the evolution of tenant participation require additional resources to fully support participation at all levels, this will be given full consideration as Council officers, tenants and other customers of the Council adjust to new ways of working going forward.

Getting in touch

For further information about getting involved, please contact the Tenant Participation Team on tel:0300 123 4510.
Detailed below are some useful addresses.

Tenant Participation Team
William Patrick Library, 2/4 West High Street
Kirkintilloch, G66 1AD
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: tenantparticipation@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Housing Operations Team
William Patrick Library, 2/4 West High Street
Kirkintilloch, G66 1AD
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: housing@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Housing Policy Team
William Patrick Library, 2/4 West High Street
Kirkintilloch, G66 1AD
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: housing@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Homelessness Team
William Patrick Library, 2/4 West High Street
Kirkintilloch, G66 1AD
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: homelessness@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Project 101
101 Townhead
Kirkintilloch, G66 1NX
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: project101@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Kirkintilloch Community Hub
William Patrick Library, 2/4 West High Street
Kirkintilloch, G66 1AD
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: customerservices@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Bishopbriggs Community Hub
Bishopbriggs Library, 170 Kirkintilloch Road
Bishopbriggs, G64 2LX
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: customerservices@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Bearsden Community Hub
Brookwood Library, 166 Drymen Road
Bearsden, G61 3RJ
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: customerservices@eastdunbarton.gov.uk

Lennoxtown Community Hub
Main Street,
Lennoxtown, G66 7JJ
Tel:0300 123 4510
Email: customerservices@eastdunbarton.gov.uk