Council leaders call for longer eviction notice periods to prevent homelessness

Council leaders call for longer eviction notice periods to prevent homelessness

10:09 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago 83

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Council leaders from across the political spectrum have asked the housing secretary, Michael Gove, to support an amendment to the Renters (Reform) Bill that would give tenants more time to find a new home if they are evicted.

Sky News says it has obtained a letter, signed by 103 local authority leaders, including the leader of Rishi Sunak’s constituency council in North Yorkshire, that urges Mr Gove to increase eviction notice periods from two months to four.

The letter, which was co-ordinated by the campaign group Renters Reform Coalition, says that this change would ‘give tenants more security and time to find a new home which suits their needs in the event they are evicted’ and would ‘reduce the number of people claiming homelessness support following the end of a private tenancy’.

The Renters (Reform) Bill, which is currently going through Parliament will ban Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions which allow landlords to reclaim properties without giving a reason.

‘Scale of the crisis in the private rented sector’

The campaign manager at the Renters’ Reform Coalition, Tom Darling, told Sky News the Bill ‘has many positive aspects – but it is still insufficient to address the scale of the crisis in the private rented sector’.

He said: “The two months being proposed, like the status quo, will leave renters frantically scrambling to find a suitable new home in time, with many ending up presenting as homeless to their local council when this search comes up empty.

“Not only will increasing notice periods provide more security for England’s 11 million private renters and alleviate some of the suffering in our housing system, it will also provide some much needed respite to local authorities buckling under the growing cost of temporary accommodation.”

Evict tenants in England for specific reasons

However, under the Bill, landlords would only be able to evict tenants in England for specific reasons, such as selling their house or having a relative move in.

The Bill would keep a two-month notice period for these cases, which the Renters Reform Coalition argues is not enough for many people to secure alternative accommodation.

The coalition says that the end of private tenancies is the main cause of homelessness, with recent data showing that more than a quarter of eligible claims for homelessness support were made because a private tenancy had ended.

‘Many renters are unable to find new accommodation’

The letter states: “As you will know, Section 21 evictions are a leading cause of statutory homelessness – many renters are unable to find new accommodation in the two months available after being served an S21 eviction and end up being housed in temporary accommodation.”

The number of households living in temporary accommodation has doubled since 2012, reaching record highs, including the highest number of homeless children – more than 138,000 – since records began.

Last year, councils in England warned that spending on temporary accommodation was threatening to ‘overwhelm’ their budgets.

Analysis from the Local Government Association (LGA) last year showed that ‘at least’ £1.74bn was spent supporting 104,000 households in the year ending in March – the highest amount since records began in 1998.

And this week, London Councils warned that several London boroughs are facing bankruptcy trying to meet homelessness bills.


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Comments

GlanACC

10:38 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

What we need is a national register of tenants who have been evicted because of rent arrears. There isn't one, thats why I always register a CCJ against the tenant as its better than nothing

Happy housing

10:40 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by GlanACC at 01/03/2024 - 10:30
Yes I had the same court case ccj, it don't matter they know how to get around it. I'm in debt hired tracing agent said they can't locate the x tenant. They just change their name.

Happy housing

10:42 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by GlanACC at 01/03/2024 - 10:38
Ccj old news got same, very difficult to get your money after

GlanACC

10:47 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Happy housing at 01/03/2024 - 10:42
I used to work for a large credit reference agency - not many change their name. The most common problem is that they don't register for the electoral register and they don't have any finance agreements or mobile phone contracts. As soon as they do they will pop up and be visible again. The DWP and DSS were asked to provide peoples addresses but they declined. But DO give them a CCJ as this really helps.

Happy housing

10:52 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by GlanACC at 01/03/2024 - 10:47
Well hasn't helped me
Tracing agent said cannot be located. Been over 4 months now.

Philip Wright

10:58 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

lf the government doesn't engage with the private rental sector.... properly, there will be no houses to let out ,the councils will trash the system

Happy housing

11:00 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

Yes, major LLs with HMO with the bills so high licence fees tax list goes on

Sheralyne Stamp

11:00 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

Will they provide there tenants whom they are evicting an extra 2 months.
I was as of last week contacted by a recruitment agent with a job offer of working from home to serve S21 notices to the councils tenants and to put in place arrangement plans for the arrears ?
Oh and the pay was a good one to. £25.00 per hour, great to see where our money is going and they say they dont have a budget, Why are they not doing the job they are paid for.

Shining Wit

11:18 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 01/03/2024 - 08:15
The fact that seems to have been forgotten (or ignored):

When a family is evicted, a property becomes available for another family.

Consequently, longer eviction processes will definitely not prevent homelessness. It will simply mean greater stress for landlords and more months of missed rent payments. It will mean that potentially better tenants face a longer time waiting for a home.

toby marsden

11:19 AM, 1st March 2024, About 2 months ago

lol - let them continue with this LL hating socialist housing policies....
then we will be back to early 1970s and a housing crisis then these same fools will be begging us LLs to come back.

In the meantime for those LLs with the stomach to stay in the game, higher rents and no voids, but make sure you pick the best of a growing big bunch, reference only the very best tenants. Those that get the wrong tenants will be truly f ked

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