Housing Union Steering Group and Taskforce
SHAC is working with campaign partners to establish an independent, democratic, national union run by and for tenants and residents.
Download the proposal documents
- SHAC Vision Statement – a National Housing Union – November 2025
- SHAC – A National Housing Union – Steering Group Proposal – November 2025
Project planning is led by a steering group which meets once per quarter, and more detailed work is undertaken by a taskforce, which requires approximately one hour per week.
If you have some time to get involved, please use the form here. Please note, the Housing Union is not in existence yet, so this form is not an application to join the Union.
Suzanne Muna, SHAC Secretary and Co-Founder, speaks to Ben Jenkins on his Housing Sector podcast about the need for a housing union, and how SHAC is working with others to bring it about.
Why is it needed?
Members of SHAC and other housing campaign groups are all too keenly aware that a deep and devastating housing crisis has developed in Britain.
Tenants and residents are outflanked when trying to challenge large, powerful corporate landlords who have seemingly endless resources and superior access to decision makers in local and national government, and in the press.
This has created an environment in which the landlord narrative is dominant, and alternative perspectives are efficiently, sometimes brutally, silenced.
Whereas there are many community and campaign groups carrying out excellent work to help tenants and residents self-organise, there is currently no national tenant and resident union of sufficient scale to redress this power imbalance.
It is within this context that we see:
- Estates left with life-threatening disrepairs;
- Rising rents, service charge abuse;
- Race and disability discrimination, and a failure to provide accessible housing:
- Antisocial behaviour;
- A loss of low cost rental housing;
- The stigmatisation of renters and the concept of social housing;
- Lack of access to legal remedy for housing issues;
- Revenge evictions; and
- Landlord harassment.
These trends have a direct impact in our workplaces. Pay rises won by trade union activists are immediately siphoned off to landlords. Workers lose too many days to sickness caused by unhealthy homes, the psychological strain of persistent antisocial behaviour, and the cumulative stress of defending themselves against a landlord’s war of attrition. Maintaining stable employment is almost impossible when workers are forced to relocate regularly or even end up homeless due to unjustified evictions and the lack of genuinely affordable housing.
The establishment of a tenants’ voice has been attempted several times, but all have failed, primarily because they were top-down approaches, funded and controlled by government or charities. They did not seek to create tenant and resident self-organisation, or crumbled because demand outstripped supply.
This does not however mean that a tenants and residents union will inevitably end in failure, but that the initiative needs to emerge from the labour movement and be grounded in the principles of self-organisation and developing a layer of activists able to empower member self-advocacy.
Like a trade union, such a body would:
- Support tenants and residents with individual casework;
- Support and resource members to campaign collectively on their estates;
- Advocate for legislative and political policy changes that favour tenants and residents, not landlords.
- Provide an alternative narrative to the media based on the perspective of tenants and residents, not landlords.
Such a union would seek to end government endeavours to divide different categories of tenants and residents, applying protections to some and not others based on tenancy or landlord type, and conceding only to those with the loudest voices. We believe that this has been a factor in allowing the housing crisis to flourish.
A union on a mass scale will be able to unite renters, shared owners, and leaseholders. It will also be open to all, irrespective of their landlord, whether council, housing association, or private, and seek to address problems with managing agents.
SHAC is therefore working with campaign partners and the trade unions to explore the establishment of a housing union set up by the trade union movement and working to a collective self-empowerment model.
Resources:
- Download – Model motion to take to your trade union or trades council branch.
Sponsored by
- Unite Encirc Bristol SW/8220
- Unite Gloucester District SW/007 Branch
- Unite Housing Workers LE/1111 Branch
Supported by:















And the following tenants’ and residents’ associations:
- Akash Residents in Camden
- An Empty House Isn’t a Home
- Ashwood Social Group
- Auckland Rise and Sylvan Hill Residents Association
- Bawley Court Tenants and Residents Association
- Beck House Residents Association
- Bermondsey Spa Residents Association
- Birstall Park Court Residents Committee
- Bolney Meadow Community Board
- BPHA Residents
- Briar Close Tenants Association
- Bristowe Close Tenants and Residents Association
- Caldwell Gardens Estate Tenants and Residents Association
- Canada Court and Clifton Lodge Tenants and Residents Association
- Causeway Farm Residents
- Central Hill Estate Residents Association
- CityPoint Residents Association Brighton
- Community Housing Tenants Association
- Cranworth Residents
- Cumberland Market Management Committee
- Five Towers Residents Association
- Friary Park Preservation Group
- Gray’s Inn Tenants Association
- Guardian Court Residents Association
- Hastings Area Southern Housing Tenants Association
- Independent Tenants’ Association for Guinness Court
- India House Scrutiny Panel
- Kemsley Tenants Resident Association
- Leeds & District Housing Action Group
- Matilda Apartments Residents Group
- Merchants Walk Residents’ Association
- Minerva Estate Residents Association
- Mustchin Foundation
- North Warwickshire Borough Wide Tenant Forum
- One Housing Residents Action Group
- Palace Road Estate Residents Association
- Pinder Court Residents Collective
- Pioneer House Residents Association
- Rendall and Rittner Action Network
- Ripple Effect Riverside
- Ripple Effect Thames View
- Rohan Gardens Support Group
- Royal Mint Court Residents Association
- Salcombe Lodge Residents Association
- Sherwood Close Association
- Sir Thomas More Estate Residents Association
- Sittingbourne and Sheppey Residents Association
- Soothill Tenants & Resident’s Group
- South Thamesmead TRA
- Southampton Tenants Union
- St Martins Tenants and Residents Association
- Stockwell Towers Group
- Street by Street
- Suttons Wharf South (46 Palmers Road) Tenants and Residents
- Tenants Standing Together Association
- Thornton Park Residents Association
- Trellick Tower Residents Association
- Victoria Park Community Association
- Waterfront Residents and Tenants

Are individual tenants allowed to join the proposed union? There is no tenants association here and I doubt others would be willing to set on up as they prefer to simply moan not take action.
Thank you Nick. There is no NTRU to join as yet, but the idea is that the union would be open for people to join individually, and for other organisations to affiliate to if they wanted.
The support from SHAC members and non-members has been overwhelming, but we aren’t publishing individual names because we don’t want landlord reprisals. We are therefore only publicly naming housing campaign or community groups with an organisation or campaign name, not individuals.
Hope that clarifies!
Can this include Right To Manage (RTM) residents too?
Yes – write to manage would be included!
housing community legal support a CIC based in Southampton also Central housing Forum also based in Southampton both operating from 18 Northam road Southampton, i am also a member of he tenant union here in the city email wilsonjbennet@gmail.com….community advocate
We have our tenants WhatsApp group on our estate.
The other tenants voted for me to represent them against our landlord L&Q.
It would be nice to know we had other support if possible..
We have our WhatsApp group on our estate.
The other tenants voted for me to represent them against our landlord L&Q..
It would be good to know we could get more support with our fight.
Hi Dave – If your group has a name, just use the form on the page to add it to the list. We’ll keep in touch to make sure you’re alerted to any calls for action to get the project moving. We really need people like you to get involved!
Great way to let HA’s and Councils know that we will campaign, post on socials such as X they’re scamming, negligence and harassment, and I have court and email evidence to prove that Guinness are Not Fit For Purpose with the H Ombudsman and Social Housing Regulator obstructing these serious severe maladministration’s and more, Each estate could make better use of their rent and service charges revue, as now on my 5th attempt by K&T Heating to repair a boiler, RATS BATE BOXES REMOVES AGAIN and still no PEST CONTROL rebate.
We have decided we are not going to pay the rent and go to court.
At the court we will provide evidence that the Social Landlord is directly supporting and advising a Hate criminal tenant underneath us to terrorise, stalk, harass, falsely accuse, sign illegal ASBs, accuse us of running drug factories, accuse us of dumping toxic chemicals down the drains ….whilst at the same time threaten, insult, verbally abuse, racially abuse and spray toxic poison up into our windows so that we cannot sleep. eat, wash, relax, use the kitchen or bathroom….all the while this race hate criminal is supported by the landlord and allowed to carry this on.
The Police, the Housing Ombudsman, The RSH, The Council, The Mayors Office, The GOV…..ALL KNOW ABOUT IT.
But still the race hate crime and life threatening abuse continues unabated and unaffected….4 years ongoing which effects us from going to work, stops us from paying our bills, stops us from living as human beings.
This is all from a mafia landlord Anchor Hanover Group that allows tenants to terrorise other tenants to illegally evict and terrorise tenants that speak up for building safety and service charge accountability….to get them out, ruin them, sicken them and even have them killed or die due to all of this.
Our Landlords is 100% directly responsible for a perpetual life destroying daily existence they have become tyrants of the worst kind.
We live in a barbarous country with no rule of law.
and We have to pay for this.
Why ?
I’m unfortunate enough to be an Anchor Housing Association tenant. I was unaware of SHAC until very recently. I’ve published a number of articles in relation to the antics of my landlord on the TrustPilot site along with a number of other tenants. I’ve been asked by Rosamund, S Stevens and Jayg to find a way to contact them. You can email me at sofiejones@gmx.com (which is not my primary) as I’d like to assist in forming an action group.
Dear Nige,
I much enjoy your writing on Trustpilot concerning Anchor. It is so true. I am looking to leave Anchor and find somewhere else, as I have just had enough. I have my name on some Almshouses and other housing associations and next year I will be able to join the local authority’s housing register.
You have great journalistic skills and are an excellent writer.
Other tenants in my block complain, but don’t want to do anything. Anchor are a law unto themselves and I feel that my only option is to move. I have a shabby kitchen, with odd cupboards, two hotplates that don’t work, in spite of reporting this to Anchor for many months – nothing gets done. Anchor needs to be able to be held accountable. So many things are wrong including the old fashioned storage heats that only turn on/off and we are unable to regulate the flat temperature. At present, my flat is a 31.1 heatbox, in spite of every window available to open, albeit not very wide. Don’t mention the service charges.
Very much looking forward to the conference on Saturday. I formed the Sittingbourne and Sheppey Residents Association (SSRA) back in June 2025. Our local MP asked for us to form a group due to the large volume of enquiries he was receiving regarding Leasehold issues. This all came off the back of meetings I have had with him regarding issues we have had as an RMC dealing with our managing agent.
Roll forward to now, we have numerous ongoing enquiries from people down in Kent and beyond. We meet monthly and are assisting numerous estates with their issues. We have the local press on board, who have written two articles on us.
The SSRA are behind you every step of the way. A huge thank you for all your support too. Roll on Saturday 💪🏻
This is so inspiring – you are doing fantastic work and we are likewise ready to help with anything we can do to support you. Keep up that fantastic work!