Alok Sharma will ban Statutory demands and Winding up orders

Alok Sharma will ban Statutory demands and Winding up orders

9:04 AM, 24th April 2020, About 4 years ago 5

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The Business Secretary, Alok Sharma, has indicated high street shops and other companies with a commercial lease that are under strain will be protected from what he calls ‘aggressive’ rent collection and asked to pay what they can during the coronavirus pandemic.

The majority of landlords and tenants are working well together to reach agreements on debt obligations, but some landlords have been putting tenants under undue pressure by using aggressive debt recovery tactics.

To stop these unfair practices, the government will temporarily ban the use of statutory demands and winding up orders where a company cannot pay their bills due to coronavirus, to ensure they do not fall into deeper financial strain. The measures will be included in the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Bill, which the Business Secretary Alok Sharma set out earlier this month.

Government is also laying secondary legislation to provide tenants with more breathing space to pay rent by preventing landlords using Commercial Rent Arrears Recovery (CRAR) unless they are owed 90 days of unpaid rent.

This will further safeguard the high street and millions of jobs by helping to protect them from permanent closure during this time. However, while landlords are urged to give their tenants the breathing space needed, the government calls on tenants to pay rent where they can afford it or what they can in recognition of the strains felt by commercial landlords too.

Business Secretary, Alok Sharma, said: “In this exceptional time for the UK, it is vital that we ensure businesses are kept afloat so that they can continue to provide the jobs our economy needs beyond the coronavirus pandemic.

“Our unprecedented package of support can help commercial landlords, including through the recent expansion of the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loans Scheme.

“I know that like all businesses they are under pressure, but I would urge them to show forbearance to their tenants. I am also taking steps to ensure the minority of landlords using aggressive tactics to collect their rents can no longer do so while the COVID-19 emergency continues.”

The temporary emergency measures are designed to acknowledge the pressures landlords are facing while encouraging cooperation in the spirit of fair commercial practice. They also come on top of a substantial package of business support measures, including a moratorium on evictions for commercial tenants for at least a 3-month period.

Communities Secretary, Robert Jenrick, said: “During this period of significant disruption, we are doing everything we can to ensure that commercial tenants are as well placed as possible to get back to business from the pandemic.

“We understand that landlords are facing their own very serious pressures and are concerned about their position with lenders. We are working with banks and investors to seek ways to address these issues and guide the whole sector through the pandemic.”

Chief Executive of the British Retail Consortium, Helen Dickinson OBE, said: “Rents are a huge burden for retailers that must be paid even where shops are closed. We have raised this problem with government and today’s announcement protects firms who – during these extraordinary times – are unable to meet their rent obligations.

“We thank Alok Sharma for his swift action, which will give retailers some vital relief and help safeguard millions of jobs all across the country. We look forward to the finer details, however it is clear government is listening and willing to act.”

Chief Executive of UK Hospitality, Kate Nicholls, said: “This is a very helpful and pragmatic response from the Secretary of State and will give hospitality businesses some very valuable breathing room.

“Many businesses in our sector have no revenue whatsoever coming in, so paying rents has been out of the question for some. This extra space will allow businesses to survive and to find a way to work with landlords. If social distancing measures are to be in place for some time, as we now believe they will, this measure may need to be extended to ensure that businesses can survive.”


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Comments

terry sullivan

12:40 PM, 24th April 2020, About 4 years ago

i assume this will also apply to lenders? if not? why not?

user_ 7167

12:55 PM, 24th April 2020, About 4 years ago

Obfuscated Data

Tim Rogers

13:45 PM, 24th April 2020, About 4 years ago

Am I the only one mystified as to why all the help and support seems to stop once the word landlord is invoked?

Bristol Landlord

15:39 PM, 24th April 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Tim Rogers at 24/04/2020 - 13:45
Sorry didn’t you get the email?
Landlords are Public Enemy Number One.
The Govt will soon announce that it was a Landlord in Wuhan who created the Corona virus.

Badger

12:22 PM, 29th May 2020, About 4 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Chris Harris at 24/04/2020 - 12:55
I have longed held the view that the word "fair" and its derivates should be permanently deprecated when it comes to communications intended to be between grown adults.

It just carries so much baggage which, when the "fair" word is deployed by politicians, is frequently and detrimentally intentional.

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