Email from council about my notice to tenant?

Email from council about my notice to tenant?

0:02 AM, 27th October 2023, About 7 months ago 64

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Hello, S21 has been issued and now in accelerated stage. Awaiting a date from judge. Council has just contacted me about tenant asking the following…

When did tenant move into the above address?
How much is the rent at the above address?
Why has tenant been served with notice to leave his/her accommodation?
Did tenant accrue arrears at the above address? If yes, when did the arrears begin to accrue and what are the current outstanding arrears?
If applicable, please provide details of any payment arrangements entered into with tenant to clear the arrears and the outcome of these arrangements.
Have there been any other management issues relating to tenant tenancy at the above address? If yes, please provide further information.
Can anything be done at this stage that would prevent you from pursuing their eviction from the above address? If yes, please provide further information.
Is there any other information that you consider may be relevant to my enquiries?

I could just say S21 and that a reason does not have to be given as it is not a mandatory requirement. Does that mean they have to assume it’s not her ‘fault’ and maybe help her to leave earlier so I don’t have to get the bailiffs in?
Do I just lie and say it’s because I am looking to sell? Do I just ignore the email completely?

Thanks,

Mark


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Comments

Easy rider

22:38 PM, 28th October 2023, About 7 months ago

Councils do NOTHING to help landlords. This is your opportunity to return the favour.

Just tell them that you cannot discuss individual cases due to the Data Protection Act. That’s what the Council would do.

Easy rider

22:45 PM, 28th October 2023, About 7 months ago

Tell them you charge £50 to answer their questions.

If they pay, just say no.

Russell Cartner

8:57 AM, 29th October 2023, About 7 months ago

Why would you tell them that

Matthew Jude

10:54 AM, 29th October 2023, About 7 months ago

Hi, to reply to Reluctant landlord, we still have the tenant. She has five children so we were reluctant to make them homeless. The s21 shook her up, so she pays on time now. We have raised her rent, but left the arrears in case we need to use a section 8 in the future. If the repeal of s21 is dependent on court reform, it may never happen. My worry is that a new government may declare the court process satisfactory immediately and abolish it straight away. I'm on my second round of big rent increases in two years and most tenants are expecting them. This is the worst turmoil in the prs that I can remember in over twenty five years of being a landlord. It seems the only winners are the anti landlord pressure groups. Not landlords and certainly not tenants.

Russell Cartner

11:09 AM, 29th October 2023, About 7 months ago

Most lefty organisations anti landlord Shelter, Generation Rent etc that do not actualy provide any homes, but pontificate, whilst on fat salaries. Would love to see them investigated for abnomalities

Jessie Jones

12:12 PM, 29th October 2023, About 7 months ago

There is no obligation on you to answer this letter, and many correctly argue that it could well not help you.
However, if you are repossessing the property because you are going to sell it, or move back in yourself, and the tenant has been a model tenant, then this might sway your position. The tenant would be more likely to get LA housing as they have done nothing that could be construed as making themselves deliberately homeless. This in turn could make your repossession easier if your tenant is given somewhere to go.
However, informing the council of some failure on the part of the tenant could well result in the council helping the tenant fight your repossession, in which case you would be better off not responding at all. As someone with properties in several council areas, I have experienced councils with a reasonable approach, and others, example Nottingham City, with whom you are better off not engaging with at all.

EL1111

15:25 PM, 29th October 2023, About 7 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Rachel Wilks at 28/10/2023 - 17:23
If who goes on housing list? Tennant or landlord.
My first correspondence was to say, as the landlord they were in receipt of correspondence from council and could confirm that said Tenant was in their property and had been delivered a s21. Landlord is not required to say any more.

Wrighty

21:11 PM, 29th October 2023, About 7 months ago

You shouldn't provide any information to the local authority as it is personal info relating to the tenant and may breach the data protection act...ask yourself if the roles were reversed would the council give you that info about one of their tenants

JR2023

7:38 AM, 30th October 2023, About 7 months ago

The reason for this is because you can't do an accelerated S21 if your tenant has rent arrears not sure why but that's 1 reason the other is you can't make any action against them if they've been in the property for 6 months or less. If neither of these is the case your claim can move forward

EL1111

9:03 AM, 30th October 2023, About 7 months ago

The contract is between the tenant and the landlord, providing all is in order there is no reason for the local council to become involved.
If the landlord has followed all the relevant 'rules of renting' laws, he has no questions to answer.
It's for that reason it makes me suspicious when the council start asking questions. It's delaying tactics, which just cost the landlord more money.

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