TheBigShort
Registered User
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I work fulltime and so if I was unemployed there's lots more I could do around the house.
The point is that both parties need to engage.Lucky you, the point is about landlords not fixing or replacing things
Do you really think that the landlord should provide the petrol for the lawnmower?!!As long as it didnt cost anything or too much, right? Like paint, paint brushes, lawnmower, petrol for lawnmower, garden tools, window panes.
Can be a bit tricky sometimes on low-income or unemployment benefits.
That's what the Vinnie DePaul are for.Can be a bit tricky sometimes on low-income or unemployment benefits.
The point is that both parties need to engage.
Like I said, if some are able to pay rent but choose not to, then invoke an eviction (taking into account also the legitimate refusal to pay rent due to dire need of renovation).
If they are not able to pay rent, then reasons as to why they cant and all the other circumstances of family, schooling, employment prospects, re-housing or relocation options (hostel or hotel even?), would have to be factored before any decision could be made here.
Just to point out, if there are prospective tenants out there who are 'only too happy to pay' then I assume you are talking about people who already have accommodation with the means to pay, and not people who are housed in hostels or hotels without the means to pay?
In such circumstances, evicting a person or family for others who already have accommodation will only exacerbate the homeless crisis.
Sorry BS but you still seem to be missing the point.Yeh, great, I get legal obligation to continue to pay...but that may not stop some tenants taking it upon themselves to refuse to pay.
To avoid any misunderstanding I am referring specifically to those LA tenants who are on a differential rate who refuse to either pay the rent or make up the outstanding arrears.
that where someone is capable of paying but refuses to then fair enough, force an order to evict.
Who's worse; the fella going around in circles or us fools following him?Why do you want to go around in circles?
Absolutely, there are some really bad landlords out there who don't fulfill their legal requirements. They should be fined and/or imprisoned if they are putting lives are risk.Exactly, given the list of problems, some of them being quite chronic it would appear, and given the fact that the tenants had to go all the way to the EU for a judgement.
It would suggest that there was little, or inadequate engagement by the landlords for the issues to go all that way.
If a tenant does not pay their rent, their landlord has a valid ground to terminate their tenancy and ultimately evict them from the property. The fact that renovations may be required to the property is quite beside the point.
You are obviously entitled to your own personal opinions (however ridiculous I might find them) but you are not entitled to your own personal facts. The fact that renovations may be required to a property is not a legitimate ground for non-payment of rent. That's the law.
None of which constitute a legitimate ground for non-payment of rent. Your suggested "form of protest" leaves the tenants in question liable to be evicted.Tenants of a LA housing estates are experiencing a bad dose of 'sewerage invasion, water contamination, persistent mould'.
Are you suggesting that 'sewerage invasion, water contamination, persistent mould' is the reason why 15% of rents are not paid by LA tenants?Tenants of a LA housing estates are experiencing a bad dose of 'sewerage invasion, water contamination, persistent mould'. The contact the LA for help and assistance but whatever efforts are made, the problems persist.
As a form of protest, they refuse to pay their rent to the LA.
Your suggested "form of protest" leaves the tenants in question liable to be evicted.
Incidentally, evictions for non-payment of rent do not exacerbate homelessness as you have suggested - they simply free up housing units for other tenants that are willing and able to pay their rent.
Are you suggesting that 'sewerage invasion, water contamination, persistent mould' is the reason why 15% of rents are not paid by LA tenants?
Wherever they can afford. That may well be similar accommodation to wherever their replacement tenants came from.Where do the evicted tenants go?
It really is black and white - if you don't pay your rent you are liable to be evicted.
Wherever they can afford. That may well be similar accommodation to wherever their replacement tenants came from.
an eviction doesn't result in a loss of a housing unit
It simply results in the replacement of a non-paying tenant with a tenant that is willing and able to pay the rent
I will say that where someone is capable of paying but refuses to then fair enough, force an order to evict.
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