9:35 AM, 29th December 2023, About 11 months ago 22
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Will landlords bail out in 2024 as the Renters (Reform) Bill gets closer or will we stick it out for our tenants?
I only ask because this is the time of year to come up with resolutions.
I’ve explained at length that the Bill effectively transfers the control of a rented property to the tenant.
Is that right? I say not but tenants, politicians and tenant groups will say that it is their home so yes, power should be transferred.
We also have the prospect of a General Election, and the smart money now says it will be in May.
I still can’t believe Labour will win if they don’t tell people what plans they have in store.
We already know what they think about the private rented sector, so it won’t be good for landlords.
Motormouth Angela Rayner has already claimed that section 21 notices will be abolished on day one of a Labour government.
That will create a very interesting situation when landlords kick back and say no, and then file eviction notices.
There will be so many that the courts will grind to a halt.
And tenants will be left wondering what they are going to do for a home.
Perhaps you as a tenant should have thought about that before believing the Labour lies and spin.
But let’s give a big round of applause to the likes of Shelter and Generation Rent who have been campaigning for this.
They don’t actually provide homes so don’t appreciate how difficult and challenging a landlord’s life can be. And expensive.
And the ramifications of lots of tenants being made to look for a new home won’t impact them either.
They’ll stand on the touchlines complaining about how heartless we are.
Egged on, no doubt, by their cheerleaders in the media who also don’t understand how the PRS works.
There is, however, a silver lining on the horizon.
It involves when the General Election is held.
If it is the autumn, then I think the PRS goose will be cooked, and the Renters (Reform) Bill will be enacted.
If Rishi pushes the button for May, then I don’t think the Bill will finish in this Parliamentary session – or the next one.
It could be wishful thinking, but I’d like to see the housing situation for landlords AND tenants improve in 2024.
I’d like to see the public see the sector in a positive light, appreciate more of what we do and help protect our service.
I could be fantasizing of course but any law that doesn’t account for the selfish antics of thoughtless tenants cannot possibly become law.
Perhaps common sense will prevail, and we will embrace the changes when they come.
Or, as I genuinely hope, the Bill gets kicked into touch OR we as a body of landlords deliver eviction notices on the same day.
Election fever or not, that’s the only way we will get across to our critics just how useful we have been – and can continue to be.
Because the alternative of falling house prices and families living in tents as landlords vote with their feet will be just too ironic to enjoy.
Any co-ordinated action from landlords will see the government freezing rents and evictions – just to stabilise the housing sector.
Then we will know where we stand, and I hope the landlords who don’t seem too bothered by what could come with the Bill AND a Labour government might just wake from their stupor.
Time is running out in the face of political dogma for us to demand a seat at the negotiating table.
And, even worse, we are sleepwalking towards a PRS catastrophe that we didn’t create but will get the blame for.
Let’s see what 2024 brings – most people are optimistic when a New Year beckons but not for landlords this time – things look bleak. Very bleak.
To help, here are my New Year’s resolutions for the PRS:
The next 12 months are going to be incredibly difficult for landlords with a new law and biased scrutiny that paints us as bad people.
We aren’t obviously, and as I keep saying: The PRS will miss us when we are gone but I never thought the comment would ever become reality.
Until next time,
The Landlord Crusader
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JB
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Sign Up19:19 PM, 29th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Is it possible for Labour to abolish section 21 on their 1st day in power? Wouldn't it require legislation? How long would that take? If you'd already served a section 21 would that be invalidated? .... I'm getting my exit plan ready!
Crouchender
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Sign Up21:25 PM, 29th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Old Covid legislation allows for 'any' emergency legislation to be passed within days. Scotland have abused it so many times with PRS. So get the plan oven ready!
Cider Drinker
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Sign Up21:39 PM, 29th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Until people realise that Section 8 has many grounds that are no fault of the tenant, I don’t expect anything positive from HMG in 2024.
There will be an election, probably in May.
The RRB will not pass through the House of Lords and Labour will undoubtedly win the election. Probably with landslide.
David100
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Sign Up10:03 AM, 30th December 2023, About 11 months ago
I'll be voting with my feet in 2024. I have a question for other landlords.................I want to sell one property that has long term tenants. Does anyone know if selling with sitting tenants really hurts the selling price of the property, or is it much the same? Many thanks.
Obiter
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Sign Up11:00 AM, 30th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by JB at 29/12/2023 - 19:19
Assuming the Bill has received Royal Assent before the election, there doesn't seem anything to prevent them from bringing forward Regulations to commence the relevant sections immediately. You don't need to pass an Act to bring another Act into force, you just need to set a date for it to do so.
Obiter
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Sign Up11:02 AM, 30th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 29/12/2023 - 21:39
What makes you think the RRB won't pass the Lords? The Lords doesn't block legislation implementing manifesto commitments.
Cider Drinker
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Sign Up20:49 PM, 30th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Obiter at 30/12/2023 - 11:02
The RRB as presented to the House of Lords will be somewhat different to any manifesto pledge.
Obiter
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Sign Up20:56 PM, 30th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 30/12/2023 - 20:49
Nevertheless, the abolition of s.21 was clearly in the 2019 Conservative manifesto, and the Lords will not block it.
Crouchender
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Sign Up21:08 PM, 30th December 2023, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Obiter at 30/12/2023 - 20:56
The RRB (better the devil you know!) HAS to cross the line as Labour will just run with it and bolt on stuff to it later when in government. IF it does not through then Labour will bring their own RRB which will be really bad for LLs (judging by the amendments that they have put forward at committee stage). Volatile 2024 ahead for PRS LLs and sadly I can't see this changing for better.
john thompson
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Sign Up18:26 PM, 8th January 2024, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Grumpy Doug at 29/12/2023 - 17:56
Exactly...I was able to dump 15 desperate tennants with less than perfect applications in the bin.
5 of which were really good and would once had priority but the perfect couple, good references, great full time professional jobs, big incomes, good rental history and nice people etc, etc were desperate for my house and got the prize.
Sad situation thanks to lousy tennants, shelter, gen rent, the twisted one sided media coverage and the pathetic and weak vote chasing government.