Evictions latest: New legislation is savaged as a ‘bit of a mess’
As proposed changes to the Housing Act 1988 move swiftly through parliament without debate – so far – campaigners worry the ‘evictions ban’ isn’t what Boris Johnson promised last week.
Renters haven’t been given the extra protection they were promised by the Government, which could spell a spate of evictions in June and won’t prevent existing eviction proceedings from being completed, it has been claimed.
While
the Government has announced that landlords can’t start proceedings
to evict tenants for at least a three-month period, the
pressure group says the Coronavirus Bill simply extends the notice required for
possession from two months to three.
Leading housing lawyer and RLA spokesman David Smith says the way these changes are being introduced is a ‘bit of a mess’: “The residential provisions appear to be rather different from those specified by the government,” he says.
“There is nothing in
them about stopping existing evictions or preventing eviction proceedings from
being issued.”
He says the full details of the eviction ban, which is an amendment of the Housing Act 1988, will not become clear until tomorrow. But he worries it will allow existing eviction proceedings to continue and only stop new ones, and that it doesn’t cover any of the more unusual tenancies.
Promises not delivered
Caitlin
Wilkinson, policy manager at Generation Rent, says: “This legislation fails to
deliver on these promises in every respect.
“It
is disingenuous. All these measures do is extend the notice period for
evictions to three months, which will provide little comfort to those faced
with losing their homes during a pandemic.”
Generation
Rent says landlords can still serve eviction notices during the three months,
which could mean a rush of evictions at the end of June. “Eviction is the
leading cause of homelessness, so the Government must act now to avoid another
crisis in three months’ time,” she adds.
However,
Gavin Dick, local authority policy officer at the National Landlords
Association, believes most landlords would not serve notices, as if they tried
to start an eviction now, it would be frowned upon when it came to court in
June.
“If
you went to court in 12 weeks’ time and said you were evicting someone, would
the judge give a landlord back the property straight away? Probably not,” he
tells LandlordZONE.
He says local authorities are trying hard to work with landlords to find solutions to help tenants who are in difficulty, including offering discretionary housing payments. Landlords are also doing their bit, he adds: “One landlord I spoke to has given his tenant – a barmaid who’s just lost her job – a rent holiday for a couple of months to help her.”
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