Tenants from hell pictures – £500 competition gimmick!
Yes we know it is a marketing gimmick and you will be giving your name and email address to Hillarys, who sell not completely unrelated curtains and blinds, but they are running a competition to upload your worst tenants from hell pictures showing the mess left behind.
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Is Shelter a charity?
Or is it a commercial enterprise, a sub-contractor to government or a left-wing pressure group financed by the general public?
The answer to all of these is yes. In the year to March 2017 Shelter received £2.1m from legal services contracts
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We need to wake up and smell the coffee!
It is easy in life to think that you as one person can make little difference – wrong.
Shopping in B&Q for example!
You spend a few or a few hundred pounds on materials for your rented house –
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Nottingham lose £95k appeal against landlord
Nottingham City Council, who have been heavily crticised by our own Mick Roberts and Property118 members for their selective licensing scheme, are now under fire for wasting £95,000 of tax payers money on a failed Supreme Court appeal case.
The Council lost both cases against a landlord who was taken to court over the size of two student HMO bedrooms built into attics with a sloping roof.
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Do Housing Associations have a responsibility?
I am a freeholder living next door to a Housing Association tenant. Yesterday, she drove her car into our boundary fence. It is my boundary fence and I am responsible for the upkeep.
She is an absolute nuisance
The post Do Housing Associations have a responsibility? appeared first on Property118.
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Change to Universal Credit rent arrears payments
If you tenant is in rent arrears landlords can apply for third party deduction, the maximum that DWP can recover per month is up to 20 per cent of off the claimants personal allowance.
DWP are now changing the way Universal Credit Full Service pays rent arrears
The post Change to Universal Credit rent arrears payments appeared first on Property118.
View Full Article: Change to Universal Credit rent arrears payments
North-South divide to be turned on its head during 2019 to 2023
A recent article by Savil’s predicts that the North-South divide will be turned on its head during 2019 to 2023, with the biggest price rises in the North West (21.6%). All of this making ‘now’ an incredibly exciting time to invest in the North.Â
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Support for Shelter’s discrimination campaign is completely out of date
Polly Neate and Greg Beales took over the management of Shelter in August/September 2017. In August this year Shelter started to harass letting agents over alleged bans on housing benefit (HB) claimants. Click here
On 11 September Shelter obligingly published a guide for letting agents and landlords on avoiding discrimination
The post Support for Shelter’s discrimination campaign is completely out of date appeared first on Property118.
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Spiteful tenant caused £6k of damage and refused to pay rent…
Rogue Tenant:
46 years old tenant, David Pearson, refused to leave his landlord’s property and caused nearly £5,700 of damage with rent arrears after a minor disagreement with his Cornwall landlord.
Pearson appeared at Truro Crown Magistrates Court last week, where he pleaded guilty to causing the damage to the rented home in Delabole, Cornwall earlier this year.
The court heard that Pearson, now living in Torrington, Devon, had committed the damage to the property after a breakdown in the relationship between him and his landlord.
The prosecuting barrister, Phillip Lee, told the court that Pearson had moved into the property with his elderly mother in 2017. But when the owners (landlords) Deborah Roberts and her husband went to inspect the property in early March this year, Pearson wouldn’t allow them entry and there followed was a verbal altercation.
After this incident, Parson refused to pay his rent, and told his landlord that he would be squatting at the property from then on.
Later the owner entered the property in April, following a concern they had for the welfare of the tenant’s mother, and they discovered that the property had been badly damaged, including damage to the boiler, a kitchen cupboard, an electrical socket, a wall and a ceiling, while a built-in cupboard and door were also missing. The garage also contained a pile of builders’ rubble.
Mr Lee said the case was a “…a sorry tale, and “would appear to be deliberate damage following the altercation in March.�
Pearson, who had previous convictions for violence, admitted he made alterations and caused damaged but claimed he intended to make good. He also said that shoddy workmanship had caused some of the problems.
Defending Pearson, Chris Andrews said: “The defendant said he never had difficulties with Mrs Roberts, but his relationship with Mr Roberts deteriorated. There was an argument between the two of them over a gateway.
Sentencing Pearson, Judge Simon Carr said:
“This was deliberate, malevolent criminal damage. You deliberately sought to destroy the property out of pure spite.�
But, “Malicious though it was, it can be met by a community penalty.� Judge Carr sentenced Pearson to a 12-month community penalty, including 25 rehabilitation activity requirement sessions and 120 hours of unpaid work. He must also pay £1,000 in compensation to the victims and was told they may pursue further damages through civil proceedings.
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Millennials stumble on the Property Ladder
With the average semi-detached house costing £225,674 in the UK, the housing crisis has left many of those within the younger generations short of an opportunity to own their own home. As the UK experiences a widening generational wealth gap
The post Millennials stumble on the Property Ladder appeared first on Property118.
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