Ben Beadle supports abolition of Section 21 but calls for urgent court reforms

Ben Beadle supports abolition of Section 21 but calls for urgent court reforms

10:54 AM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago 95

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Ben Beadle claims that the NRLA does NOT oppose the abolition of Section 21, but the court system urgently needs reform to handle evictions.

During the committee stage hearing of the Renters’ Rights Bill, the chief executive of the NRLA, Ben Beadle said: “The court system is on its knees and landlords are having to wait months for a bailiff.”

Also in the committee hearing, chair of the Lettings Industry Council, Theresa Wallace warns the Bill will cause unintended consequences and increase homelessness.

The Bill will ban Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions and make it easier for tenants with children and pets to find homes.

NRLA’s position is very clear we do not oppose the abolition of Section 21

Mr Beadle says the NRLA welcomes the Bill and recognises the government’s efforts to address housing issues.

He told the Committee hearing: “We are largely supportive of the Bill and the Minister should take credit for how quickly the government is bringing in these reforms.

“Our position has been very clear that we do not oppose the abolition of Section 21 providing the alternative is workable and fair.”

Mr Beadle says more balance is needed in the Bill when it comes to court reforms.

He said: “We need real confidence in court reform because, right now, it’s taking an average of seven months to get a property back. With the move to Section 8, this is going to become even more important.

“We also need investment in the court system as otherwise we will not be delivering what landlords or tenants need.”

Mr Beadle pointed to an NRLA survey revealing that 60% of landlords said they were less confident or not confident about remaining a landlord without proper court reforms in place.

Bill will cause homelessness

Theresa Wallace warned that the Renters’ Rights Bill will cause homelessness.

She said: “The Bill has the best intentions but it has unintended consequences and one of these will be more homelessness.

“We know that Section 21 will be abolished but it will not solve the issues in the private rented sector.

“Figures from the English Housing Survey reveal more than one million tenants in the PRS are in receipt of benefit payments and the majority of those should be in social housing. If we had those social homes we wouldn’t have the supply and demand imbalance.

“We have figures which show a 12% increase of properties on the market now which is the highest since 2014 per agent.

“The private landlord is very scared about the Bill and is exiting the sector. We need these homes in the PRS, and we’ve got to keep these landlords because tenants rely on them.”

Confidence in the PRS decreases

Mr Beadle says the Bill has missed the robust grounds needed for landlords to retake possession.

He said: “I don’t see a doubling of notice for serious rent arrears and an increase of the serious rent arrears threshold from two months to three months as either sending the right message or being fair and proportionate.

“Those tenancies will largely fail, whether it’s two months or six months. What we want to see is to avoid rent arrears from building up in the first place.

“We are supportive of a pre-action protocol where responsible landlords can signpost tenants to manage their arrears.”

Mr Beadle added: “There’s an average of 21 people chasing every property. Whatever a nip and a tuck we make, whether landlords are leaving or not, that’s only going to worsen as confidence in the PRS decreases.”

The committee hearing will also hear from tenant groups such as Shelter and Generation Rent.

Watch a clip of Ben Beadle at the Committee hearing below


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Lordship

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16:57 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Any other NRLA members on here? Just read through the annual financial statements just put out by them. 138 staff - Shocking the amount of money being paid out to them for so little!

Sadly it's just become a money making scheme for those employed.

Michael Johnson - Amzac Estates

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16:57 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Ben Beadle doesn’t represent landlords, in fact at the last NRLA roadshow no open questions are allowed and are moderated via an App. Personally the more legislation the higher our rents increase.
Remember the NRLA make their money from more and more ‘education’ courses so of course they welcome more legislation. The only ones who suffer will be those tenants who can’t afford their rent.

JohnSnow

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17:57 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Downsize Government at 22/10/2024 - 11:09
What were the total legal and eviction costs I wonder? (excluding rent areas and any damages caused by tenant etc)

Dennis Forrest

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17:59 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 22/10/2024 - 12:15
Regarding calculating the deposit is it OK to round it down to the nearest pound? or would that be illegal?

Chris @ Possession Friend

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18:03 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Dennis Forrest at 22/10/2024 - 17:59
A maximum of 5 weeks rent as an amount of deposit, - allows ANY lower amount

Cider Drinker

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18:13 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Dennis Forrest at 22/10/2024 - 17:59
Of course you can take less than 5 weeks’ rent as a deposit. I don’t take any.

NigelH

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18:17 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Chris @ Possession Friend at 22/10/2024 - 15:12
I have never heard of the Housing Coalition and a Google search gave no results!

moneymanager

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18:48 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Luke P at 22/10/2024 - 13:39
I don't, I just round down to the whole Pound.

Niwdog

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19:41 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Have they considered how abolishing section 21 will affect the management of an HMO that is let room by room?
If a new sharer moves in and turns out to be noisy, nasty, dirty or unreasonable, how will the court system protect the well being of the other residents?

Mike Thomas

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20:13 PM, 22nd October 2024, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Paul Essex at 22/10/2024 - 12:32
Regrettably, the NRLA only pay lip service to supporting landlords, and are only in the business of self promotion. If Beadle is in support of the removal of S21, then he's either incompetent, or has another agenda, because if 60‰ of his members are thinking about exiting the PRS, then he's obviously not listening to their concerns. Section 21 needs modifying, but not removing, and everything Labour is proposing will just drive more landlords to quit, and increase homelessness, and I'm sure they'll find someone else to blame for that.

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