A ‘sorry’ state of affairs – tenant apologises to landlord
It’s
a topic I have spoken about many times before, but sadly it doesn’t appear to
be improving. Councils are still being
forced to respond to Britain’s housing crisis by telling tenants who have been
asked to leave by their landlords, to stay put until they are evicted. In many cases, landlords are left with thousands
of pounds of rent arrears and legal costs, as will be shown on this week’s
episode of ‘Nightmare Tenants Slum Landlords’ (Monday 24 June, 9pm, Channel 5,).
Landlord
Action was recently appointed by IT sales consultant, Dale Prime-Holder. He
came to Landlord Action desperately seeking help on behalf of his elderly mother,
whose tenant had stopped paying rent for over a year but was refusing to leave
the property. They had also discovered that the tenant had moved her daughter, her
daughter’s partner and their child into the property.
The
rent arrears had reached in excess of £10,000 and Dale’s Mother could no longer
afford to wait. I felt particularly saddened when she told me that she felt extremely
guilty for having to go down the eviction route and really didn’t want to go resort
to court proceedings, but felt like she had no choice as she had been using her
own pension money to pay for various bills at the property.
On
the flip side of this story is the tenant. Dale’s mother had used a reputable
letting agent who had carried out all the necessary referencing checks. Unfortunately, referencing cannot predict someone
falling into unforeseen financial difficulties. Dale’s mother found 62 letters
addressed to the tenant, nearly all of which were chasing money.
As
the population has swelled due to people living longer and immigration, the
country’s housing stock has failed to grow at the same pace. The resulting imbalance – and the exorbitant rise
in house prices, particularly in the south – has pushed rents higher.
It
has become very difficult for those on lower incomes to find suitable
properties when they try to move, and many are turning to local authorities for
help.
But those who approach the council
are being told they cannot get local authority assistance unless they are
homeless, and so should stay in privately rented properties until they are
forced out by bailiffs.
On
the day of the eviction, the tenant had already left the property before the
bailiffs arrived. Then, suddenly she appeared
after realising she needed a letter from the bailiffs to prove to the council
that she had been evicted. At this point, the tenant apologised to Dale’s mother.
You couldn’t help but feel sorry for her.
The
councils say they will work with households to avoid eviction yet contradict this
by advising that if tenants walk away from the property, they have a legal
right to stay in, then the council has no obligation to find them housing. Local
authorities only have a duty to rehouse them in emergency circumstances – and
that is only when the bailiffs are at the door.
Both landlords and tenants are trapped by this system and something needs to change. What’s more, many landlords use a ‘non-fault’ Section 21 notice to evict tenants and forfeit reclaiming rent arrears, which in many ways is to the benefit of the tenant. If the government abolishes Section 21, tenants who fall into rent arrears and are served a Section 8 notice, may found it more difficult to be re-housed.
Watch
Nightmare Tenants Slum Landlords on Channel 5, Mondays at 9pm
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If I move into my rental property will I pay future CGT?
I have now sold my main residence home and have given my son the cash from the sale.
I will now be moving into one of my rental properties which I have never lived in previously.
Once I have lived there it then becomes my main residence and as my principal residence for 12 months or more will I have to pay Capital Gains Tax (CGT) on any future sale?
The post If I move into my rental property will I pay future CGT? appeared first on Property118.
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It’s a numbers game
The latest experience if of a 22 year old couple with a young baby seeking a house, but there is non available. Left Wing journalists and organisations such as Shelter, no matter how well intended, need to understand and assimilate the information before rushing into print and allocating blame!
The post It’s a numbers game appeared first on Property118.
View Full Article: It’s a numbers game
A sorry state of affairs – Tenant apologises to landlord
It’s a topic I have spoken about many times before, but sadly it doesn’t appear to be improving. Councils are still being forced to respond to Britain’s housing crisis by telling tenants who have been asked to leave by their landlords
The post A sorry state of affairs – Tenant apologises to landlord appeared first on Property118.
View Full Article: A sorry state of affairs – Tenant apologises to landlord
Falling inflation defers interest rate rise…
Inflation Report:
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) last week (20 June 2019)
voted unanimously to maintain Bank Rate at 0.75%. The committee also voted
unanimously to maintain the stock of corporate bond purchases and UK government
bond purchases.
The latest amiable inflation figures from the Office for
National Statistics (ONS) show that the consumer prices index (CPI) was bang-on
the Bank of England’s target at 2% in May, trending down from 2.1% in April, in
line with previous forecasts.
Lower transport costs had helped to bring down inflation in
May, which eased the pressure on the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee
(MPC) to increase interest rates above the current 0.75%.
With a backdrop of a tightening labour market, with wages
rising, a flat lining economy ahead of any Brexit progress, and a potential
rise in fuel prices following the rising tension in the Middle East, the
committee have seen fit to leave well alone for the time being.
In April inflation had just topped the 2% target, the first
time for several months, due to the removal of Ofgem’s energy price freeze,
which prompted calls for a rise this time, but the downward trend since has
abated that, providing some breathing space for the policy makers.
A spokesperson for the British Chambers of Commerce, told The Times newspaper:
“With inflation relatively subdued and against a backdrop of
heightened political and economic uncertainty, the case for raising interest
rates any time soon remains weak, despite recent warnings by some monetary
policy committee members�
Some of the MPC members had been expressing their intentions
to vote to implement monetary tightening this time, until the recent trend
became apparent.
Andy Haldane, the Bank’s chief economist, had said
previously:
“The time is nearing when a small rise in rates would
be prudent to nip any inflationary risks in the bud,� while Ben Broadbent, the deputy
governor, had said that rates might have to rise further than expected if the
economy continued on its present trajectory.
The Committee said that it expects the economy to develop
broadly in line with its May Inflation Report projections based on an
assumption of a smooth Brexit, and that an ongoing tightening of monetary
policy over the forecast period would be appropriate to “return inflation
sustainably to the 2% target at a conventional horizon.�
The MPC also said that “the economic outlook will continue to depend significantly on the nature and timing of EU withdrawal, in particular: the new trading arrangements between the European Union and the United Kingdom; whether the transition to them is abrupt or smooth; and how households, businesses and financial markets respond…The Committee will always act to achieve the 2% inflation target,� it said.
Bank Rate maintained at 0.75% – June 2019
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