Hyde Housing are awful
looking at their behavour overall, rather than Lee's recent experience, it still backs up my impression that many people don't want to live in social housing, not necessarily because of any kind of snobbery, but because social landlords are not seen as being very good.
Again, this may or may not be fair, but it's something many on the Left are in denial about, as in housing, like other issues, they prefer to retreat to their comfort zones. I raised it in an email to one would be London 2016 Mayoral candidate recently, linking to a blog I wrote elsewhere, referring to the Sydenham Labour Party meeting last year with Dianne Abbott:
How to Evade the Housing Crisis: A Guide for 2016 London Mayoral CandidatesOn the Left, the typical evasion is to think only about social housing. We need more social housing, and local councils should have more freedom to build it; of all involved, local councils are best positioned to help increase overall supply. But most people don’t want to live in social housing: tellingly, at the public meeting I attended, there was significant dissatisfaction with the performance of both Housing Associations and local authority housing management.
So thanks for the additional evidence.
Meanwhile, I'm brushing up on my German, having learned recently that since the 1980s there has been a system whereby typical rent levels have been published by municipalities, so providing one essential element of what is needed for a rental market to work well. The lack of such data is an open invitation for tenants to be ripped off.
A German lesson in rent controls
(Sorry about the paywall

It is a mystery to me how a system for capping annual rent rises, which is just about to be introduced in areas of Germany with high demand, can be seen as eviidence for anything, other than what people hope might happen. For me, the experience of 30 years and well established economic theory about the value of open data count for rather more.