Bristol landlords’ £5,000 bill for illegal evictions and ignoring improvement notices
A landlord who harassed her tenants, turned up at the house unannounced and arranged viewings without their knowledge has been ordered to repay them more than £3,000.
Lucy Sherry was found to have breached the Protection from Eviction Act by harassing her tenants, aware that her behaviour would cause them to leave.
Following investigations by Bristol Council’s private housing rogue landlord unit, The First Tier Tribunal ordered Sherry to pay £3,080 back to the tenants along with £300 costs.
The court heard that these tenants had been handed an invalid notice to leave the property in an attempt to evict them, while she had also invaded their privacy, arranged viewings property without giving notice, ignored housing advice from Bristol City Council and sent harassing emails.
Failure
In a second case in the city, another landlord – Charles Banda – was ordered to pay £1,569 back to Bristol Council for housing benefit payments he received relating to non-compliance with an improvement notice.
Banda failed to fix problems identified by the council in an Improvement Notice it served in November 2018 over leaking sewage pipes and taps in a property that was occupied by his elderly tenant. The council was then forced to complete the work itself.
Councillor Paul Smith, cabinet member for housing, says: “This repayment order shows how important it is for tenants to come forward and assert their rights. The council is dedicated to assisting tenants where help is needed.
“If you’re a private tenant being harassed in your home or if you have been illegally evicted, then you may be able to claim your rent back and we urge more tenants to come forward.”
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DWP’s Universal Credit defeat in Court of Appeal will help both tenants and landlords, says expert
The Government has been ordered to come up with a new way of paying up to 85,000 Universal Credit claimants, which should benefit both tenants and landlords.
Court of Appeal judges have ruled the DWP’s failure to cater for ‘non-banking day salary shift’ is unlawful.
They agreed that the benefit system currently fails to factor in the fact that paydays for people on monthly salaries can vary because of weekends and bank holidays – and can mean many are paid erratically and fall into rent arrears.
In January 2019, the High Court decided in favour of four working mothers who argued that these rules meant their incomes fluctuated significantly, causing major cash flow struggles and rent arrears.
The Court of Appeal has now dismissed the Government’s appeal and ruled that it acted irrationally and unlawfully; Lady Justice Rose said one of the women worried that cash flow problems meant she was unable to pay her rent, jeopardising her tenancy.
Sympathetically
Universal Credit expert Bill Irvine tells LandlordZONE that the DWP will now have to deal with cases more sympathetically – but that a major fix could take a while.
He says: “These women had to feed their kids first and pay the rent later and some had been chased by their landlord, but it’s the inflexible system that’s at fault.
“Changing it should help both tenants and landlords, although the last time the DWP had a major issue, it took three years to sort out.”
If two monthly salary payments fall within one of the monthly assessment periods, their Universal Credit award drops dramatically because of their apparently high level of income and means that in the next assessment period they’ll typically receive no monthly salary payment and as a result will get a much higher Universal Credit award.
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BREAKING: Landlords who help homeless to be given their deposits direct from government
The government is to become more directly involved in the rental market than it ever has before following its latest announcement on rough sleeping.
Embattled housing secretary Robert Jenrick has today announced that his department is to provide £105 million to help homeless people secure tenancies in the private rental market, including providing their rental deposit to landlords.
“The funding will cover a range of interventions, from moves into the private rented sector, to extending or procuring interim accommodation such as hotels or student accommodation and supporting individuals to reconnect with friends or family,” a MHCLG spokesperson has told LandlordZONE.
The ministry has said that further details of how the deposits system is going to work will be released soon.
Jenrick’s ministry intends to fund the temporary conversion of empty student accommodation into temporary housing while more long-term solutions are sought.
15,000 people
The money will help some 15,000 homeless people find homes while a further 6,000 homes for longer-term provision are being built.
“In recent months, I have seen a huge effort across the country to keep almost 15,000 vulnerable people off the streets,” says Jenrick.
“This has been vital to ensure their safety during the peak of the pandemic and has changed the lives of thousands for the better.
“The additional funding announced today will allow us to continue to support these individuals – giving them access to the accommodation and support they need now while we continue with plans to deliver thousands of long-term homes in the coming months.”
Taskforce
Chair of the COVID-19 Rough Sleeping Taskforce, Dame Louise Casey, says: “We now have an extraordinary opportunity to help keep them in and turn their lives around if we get the next steps right.
“I am clear that there can now be no going back to the streets as people begin to move on from the emergency accommodation that has been put in place.”
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June Quarter Day is here and landlords face a cliff edge of rent non payment
Thousands of landlords with commercial properties will be watching their bank accounts nervously today as they wait to see if tenants are able or willing to pay their quarterly rent in advance.
Dubbed watershed Wednesday and largely predicted to be a disaster for many landlords who have tenants operating in vulnerable areas of the economy worst impacted by the lockdown, today is June quarter day.
The consensus among landlords and managing agents is that the payments won’t be arriving, and that many tenants will have already negotiated deals to get around this latest Coronavirus rent cliff face or will be making the brutal choice to prioritise staff pay over rent.
The government has also made this easier – tenants are in effect protected from eviction at the moment by measures introduced at the end of March.
“At present, landlords cannot exercise their rights to re-enter premises or forfeit leases if their tenants have not paid rent. This ban on evictions was due to end on 30 June 2020 under the provisions of the Coronavirus Act 2020,” says Katie Hickman of legal firm VWV.
“But the Government intends to exercise its powers to extend this period and has accordingly announced that no business tenant will be forced out of their premises for non-payment of rent until 30 September 2020 at the earliest. The Government has the power to extend this period further if necessary.”
£2.5 billion
Every quarter £2.5 billion is collected from high street, warehouse, retail and office tenants but one shopping centre owner recently revealed that it had only collected 56% during the last quarter day, and was nervous about what will happen this time around.
“I don’t believe that tenants will be paying up in a timely fashion today,” Adam Diamant of London firm Land Commercial Surveyors tells LandlordZONE.
“I think that today and going forward will result in more tenants struggling and asking for help, especially those involved in beauty and nail salons who are yet to be allowed to open. There will be lots more conversations between landlords and tenants in the coming days and weeks.”
Property industry commentator Russel Quirk agrees, saying that times have changed dramatically – “normally June quarter day is a highlight of the calendar for retail and office owners”.
“But today, I suspect, far from it. Hundreds of thousands won’t pay. But only some of them can’t pay.”
As Russell alludes to, the biggest question today for landlords is whether tenants will take matters into their own hands and withhold rent as they scramble to protect what cash flow they do have to pay other bills – for example many forget the furlough system is not a cost-free scheme for employers.
Late last month the government announced that it had set up a working group to establish a ‘fair and transparent’ code to help landlords and agents ‘spread the financial burdens created by the crisis across the sector’. But this will come too late for today’s deadline.
Read Tom Entwistle’s opinion piece on rent collection.
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Additional £105m towards interim housing for rough sleepers
Interim housing for thousands of rough sleepers taken off the streets during the pandemic is to be provided, ministers have announced.
The additional £105 million will be used to support rough sleepers and those at risk of homelessness into tenancies of their own
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