Allow Landlords to evict tenants where there are 14 days rent arrears

Allow Landlords to evict tenants where there are 14 days rent arrears

14:34 PM, 1st October 2020, About 4 years ago 99

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All Landlords, please SIGN this petition and share with as many landlords as possible. Click Here

You can’t go into a supermarket and steal your weeks’ groceries. There are laws in place to protect shopkeepers large and small. Not paying rent is also theft with the Landlord being the victim. In Australia, tenants can be evicted for being 14 days in arrears with the rent. Let’s have that system here.

The current system is unfair to Landlords. If a Tenant doesn’t pay rent then it can take a year for a Landlord to regain procession. In that time the Landlord still has to pay the mortgage and other costs. This can ruin many small scale Landlords. Furthermore, it incentivises Landlords to only rent their properties to tenants with higher than average income who are likely to care about getting a bad credit rating.

Let’s have an Australian style system which aims to be neutral between Landlord and Tenant.


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Comments

Whiteskifreak Surrey

11:41 AM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Outhere for the tenants at 07/10/2020 - 10:08
Please provide more comments like that. I suggest you also provide them on Shelter's page, so its naïve staff who believe all tenants are angels, can have a bit of a reality injected in their mind.
You and people like you - CRIMINALS - are the reason the whole PRS looks like it does now. I am disgusted.

Rennie

11:50 AM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Ian Cognito at 06/10/2020 - 22:49
Indeed! Why not? It sends a clear message to the tenant that you are ready to proceed. It is still going to take months and months until you actually gain possession again

NewYorkie

12:03 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Mick Roberts at 07/10/2020 - 07:05
5 months...... are you serious? The law says 6 months 'notice' must be given for a s.8 and then it begins. You'll be lucky if you get your property back within 12 months.

Ian Cognito

12:03 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Rennie at 07/10/2020 - 11:50
Yes, it will take months and months to regain possession.

Therefore, a change in legislation that ebables speedy EVICTION of a tenant with 2 months rent arrears would be of far greater benefit to landlords than a change in legislation (which won't happen) that simply enables the current laborious eviction process to start after 14 days.

Changing the process is key. The change to 14 days is not.

Clint

12:13 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Outhere for the tenants at 07/10/2020 - 10:08I disagree with you as, if landlords were only allowed to have one house or property, there would be an even bigger shortage of property for people to live in and more people living on the streets. It is plain common sense.

With regards to the protocol; Landlords have to follow much more so than tenants, and if this was all reduced to be clear and sensible in terms of laws, licensing, etc. rents would fall and landlords would be able to concentrate more on providing a good service which the majority do in any case.
Tenants are allowed to destroy properties, not pay rents, etc. with very little or no consequences.
You seem to be the typical tenant that landlords would not want, and you are one of those that definitely needs accommodation in prison to be right and that too is probably too good. It is tenants like you that we are petitioning against and I would think that most landlords reading your post would be more inclined to sign the petition. Thanks for your post.

NewYorkie

12:21 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Chris @ Possession Friend at 07/10/2020 - 11:37
Yes, 'outhere for tenants' is a thieving ... (and you wonder how he managed to get through tenant referencing so many times!), but as so many have said on here, 14 days is both pointless and simply plays to the narrative that all landlords are greedy and heartless. The more this is publicised, the worse it will be.

NewYorkie

12:32 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Clint at 07/10/2020 - 12:13
I would sign a petition which seeks to 'out' tenants like that.

I cannot see why, if a tenant acts in this way, it isn't reflected on his/her credit record and published in an online reference database like we used to have with LandlordReferencing. I know the usual DPA nonsense is always trotted out, but rather like our Libel laws, if it is factual and supported by data controlled by the landlord/agent, then it can't be defamation, and the onus should be on the tenant to go to the courts to try to stop it being published.

Paul Shears

12:53 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Outhere for the tenants at 07/10/2020 - 10:08
Exactly who is this great "We" that can be trusted with this ridiculous task?

NewYorkie

13:49 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

You will not be aware that landlords; the great 'We', had access to a tenant referencing database where 'we' could post our factual stories of tenants who have refused to pay rent and/or damaged our properties. Such a shame it is no longer available because you would have been a prime candidate!

NewYorkie

17:22 PM, 7th October 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Paul Shears at 07/10/2020 - 12:53
Sincere apologies for accidentally replying to you with my comment below. It was aimed at that areshole 'outhere for the tenants'. I guess the great 'we' he refers to will be him Vs his various landlords in court, but it wouldn't surprise me if it was him and an equally immoral 'adviser' e.g. shelter or generation rent Vs his landlords in court.

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