home.social

#section-21 — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #section-21, aggregated by home.social.

fetched live
  1. I've been fighting (and mostly losing) against severe #ADHD Functional Freeze, where task initiation has become extremely difficult.

    It's stress related. I have a lot going on, but most acutely my landlords said they wanted their house back and issued a #Section21 #NoFaultEviction. I had a contract until March, but if you are a UK renter they can do this to you at any time with 2mo notice.

    It's incredibly unsettling. #Section21 can get in the sea. Hopefully Labour will do something soon.

  2. I've been fighting (and mostly losing) against severe #ADHD Functional Freeze, where task initiation has become extremely difficult.

    It's stress related. I have a lot going on, but most acutely my landlords said they wanted their house back and issued a #Section21 #NoFaultEviction. I had a contract until March, but if you are a UK renter they can do this to you at any time with 2mo notice.

    It's incredibly unsettling. #Section21 can get in the sea. Hopefully Labour will do something soon.

  3. I've been fighting (and mostly losing) against severe #ADHD Functional Freeze, where task initiation has become extremely difficult.

    It's stress related. I have a lot going on, but most acutely my landlords said they wanted their house back and issued a #Section21 #NoFaultEviction. I had a contract until March, but if you are a UK renter they can do this to you at any time with 2mo notice.

    It's incredibly unsettling. #Section21 can get in the sea. Hopefully Labour will do something soon.

  4. I've been fighting (and mostly losing) against severe #ADHD Functional Freeze, where task initiation has become extremely difficult.

    It's stress related. I have a lot going on, but most acutely my landlords said they wanted their house back and issued a #Section21 #NoFaultEviction. I had a contract until March, but if you are a UK renter they can do this to you at any time with 2mo notice.

    It's incredibly unsettling. #Section21 can get in the sea. Hopefully Labour will do something soon.

  5. I've been fighting (and mostly losing) against severe #ADHD Functional Freeze, where task initiation has become extremely difficult.

    It's stress related. I have a lot going on, but most acutely my landlords said they wanted their house back and issued a #Section21 #NoFaultEviction. I had a contract until March, but if you are a UK renter they can do this to you at any time with 2mo notice.

    It's incredibly unsettling. #Section21 can get in the sea. Hopefully Labour will do something soon.

  6. The number of “no fault” evictions in London increased 52 percent in the last year — more than five times the rate seen in the rest of England and Wales, a City Hall analysis reveals.

    Sadiq Khan said the data showed how the Government’s failure to ban the evictions — also known as section 21 notices — had been a “huge betrayal”.

    Section 21 notices are used by landlords to evict tenants with two months’ notice and without any reason needing to be given, and are a significant factor in the increase in people becoming homeless and sleeping on the streets.

    According to the latest Government data, there were 11,880 of these “no fault” eviction claims in London in the year to the end of March 2024, up 52 percent from 7,834 in the year to March 2023.

    This rise compares to an increase of nine percent in the rest of England and Wales over the same period, City Hall said.

    “The Government’s failure to pass the Renters (Reform) Bill before the dissolution of Parliament today is a huge betrayal of London’s 2.7mn private renters, who are left with the threat of eviction hanging over their heads,” said Mayor Khan.

    “These latest stats from City Hall are shocking and the unacceptable delay to this vital bill will leave even more renters in the capital at unnecessary risk of housing insecurity and homelessness.

    “I’m doing all I can to build a better, fairer London for everyone by supporting tenants, but I cannot act alone. Renters’ rights must be a national priority and ‘no fault’ evictions banned for good.”

    The Conservatives pledged to deliver the ban in their 2019 manifesto, with Housing Secretary Michael Gove promising as recently as February this year that the ban would be in place before the next election.

    The Renters (Reform) Bill, intended to deliver the ban, was first introduced in the House of Commons in May last year. But its progress was delayed by several Tory MPs who wanted to strengthen protections for landlords, who they feared would sell up.

    Following Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s announcement of a July 4 election, it emerged that the necessary legislation would not be passed during the “wash up” period before Parliament was dissolved.

    Deputy PM Oliver Dowden told the Local Democracy Reporting Service last week: “As happens at the end of the Parliament, when you announce a general election, there are large amounts of legislation on the books. We’ve only got two days to conclude it all.”

    He added: “It just hasn’t been possible to get this legislation through in the ‘wash up’ period.”

    He said the Government had a strong record on housing overall, with 2.5mn new homes built nationally since 2010.

    In total, more than 30,000 renting households in London have faced a “no fault” eviction claim since 2019.

    https://fitzrovianews.com/2024/05/30/no-fault-evictions-increased-by-52-percent-in-london-in-the-year-to-march-2024/

    #GreaterLondonAuthority #homelessness #housing #RentersReformBill #roughSleeping #SadiqKhan #Section21

  7. The number of “no fault” evictions in London increased 52 percent in the last year — more than five times the rate seen in the rest of England and Wales, a City Hall analysis reveals.

    Sadiq Khan said the data showed how the Government’s failure to ban the evictions — also known as section 21 notices — had been a “huge betrayal”.

    Section 21 notices are used by landlords to evict tenants with two months’ notice and without any reason needing to be given, and are a significant factor in the increase in people becoming homeless and sleeping on the streets.

    According to the latest Government data, there were 11,880 of these “no fault” eviction claims in London in the year to the end of March 2024, up 52 percent from 7,834 in the year to March 2023.

    This rise compares to an increase of nine percent in the rest of England and Wales over the same period, City Hall said.

    “The Government’s failure to pass the Renters (Reform) Bill before the dissolution of Parliament today is a huge betrayal of London’s 2.7mn private renters, who are left with the threat of eviction hanging over their heads,” said Mayor Khan.

    “These latest stats from City Hall are shocking and the unacceptable delay to this vital bill will leave even more renters in the capital at unnecessary risk of housing insecurity and homelessness.

    “I’m doing all I can to build a better, fairer London for everyone by supporting tenants, but I cannot act alone. Renters’ rights must be a national priority and ‘no fault’ evictions banned for good.”

    The Conservatives pledged to deliver the ban in their 2019 manifesto, with Housing Secretary Michael Gove promising as recently as February this year that the ban would be in place before the next election.

    The Renters (Reform) Bill, intended to deliver the ban, was first introduced in the House of Commons in May last year. But its progress was delayed by several Tory MPs who wanted to strengthen protections for landlords, who they feared would sell up.

    Following Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s announcement of a July 4 election, it emerged that the necessary legislation would not be passed during the “wash up” period before Parliament was dissolved.

    Deputy PM Oliver Dowden told the Local Democracy Reporting Service last week: “As happens at the end of the Parliament, when you announce a general election, there are large amounts of legislation on the books. We’ve only got two days to conclude it all.”

    He added: “It just hasn’t been possible to get this legislation through in the ‘wash up’ period.”

    He said the Government had a strong record on housing overall, with 2.5mn new homes built nationally since 2010.

    In total, more than 30,000 renting households in London have faced a “no fault” eviction claim since 2019.

    https://fitzrovianews.com/2024/05/30/no-fault-evictions-increased-by-52-percent-in-london-in-the-year-to-march-2024/

    #GreaterLondonAuthority #homelessness #housing #RentersReformBill #roughSleeping #SadiqKhan #Section21

  8. The number of “no fault” evictions in London increased 52 percent in the last year — more than five times the rate seen in the rest of England and Wales, a City Hall analysis reveals.

    Sadiq Khan said the data showed how the Government’s failure to ban the evictions — also known as section 21 notices — had been a “huge betrayal”.

    Section 21 notices are used by landlords to evict tenants with two months’ notice and without any reason needing to be given, and are a significant factor in the increase in people becoming homeless and sleeping on the streets.

    According to the latest Government data, there were 11,880 of these “no fault” eviction claims in London in the year to the end of March 2024, up 52 percent from 7,834 in the year to March 2023.

    This rise compares to an increase of nine percent in the rest of England and Wales over the same period, City Hall said.

    “The Government’s failure to pass the Renters (Reform) Bill before the dissolution of Parliament today is a huge betrayal of London’s 2.7mn private renters, who are left with the threat of eviction hanging over their heads,” said Mayor Khan.

    “These latest stats from City Hall are shocking and the unacceptable delay to this vital bill will leave even more renters in the capital at unnecessary risk of housing insecurity and homelessness.

    “I’m doing all I can to build a better, fairer London for everyone by supporting tenants, but I cannot act alone. Renters’ rights must be a national priority and ‘no fault’ evictions banned for good.”

    The Conservatives pledged to deliver the ban in their 2019 manifesto, with Housing Secretary Michael Gove promising as recently as February this year that the ban would be in place before the next election.

    The Renters (Reform) Bill, intended to deliver the ban, was first introduced in the House of Commons in May last year. But its progress was delayed by several Tory MPs who wanted to strengthen protections for landlords, who they feared would sell up.

    Following Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s announcement of a July 4 election, it emerged that the necessary legislation would not be passed during the “wash up” period before Parliament was dissolved.

    Deputy PM Oliver Dowden told the Local Democracy Reporting Service last week: “As happens at the end of the Parliament, when you announce a general election, there are large amounts of legislation on the books. We’ve only got two days to conclude it all.”

    He added: “It just hasn’t been possible to get this legislation through in the ‘wash up’ period.”

    He said the Government had a strong record on housing overall, with 2.5mn new homes built nationally since 2010.

    In total, more than 30,000 renting households in London have faced a “no fault” eviction claim since 2019.

    https://fitzrovianews.com/2024/05/30/no-fault-evictions-increased-by-52-percent-in-london-in-the-year-to-march-2024/

    #GreaterLondonAuthority #homelessness #housing #RentersReformBill #roughSleeping #SadiqKhan #Section21

  9. The number of “no fault” evictions in London increased 52 percent in the last year — more than five times the rate seen in the rest of England and Wales, a City Hall analysis reveals.

    Sadiq Khan said the data showed how the Government’s failure to ban the evictions — also known as section 21 notices — had been a “huge betrayal”.

    Section 21 notices are used by landlords to evict tenants with two months’ notice and without any reason needing to be given, and are a significant factor in the increase in people becoming homeless and sleeping on the streets.

    According to the latest Government data, there were 11,880 of these “no fault” eviction claims in London in the year to the end of March 2024, up 52 percent from 7,834 in the year to March 2023.

    This rise compares to an increase of nine percent in the rest of England and Wales over the same period, City Hall said.

    “The Government’s failure to pass the Renters (Reform) Bill before the dissolution of Parliament today is a huge betrayal of London’s 2.7mn private renters, who are left with the threat of eviction hanging over their heads,” said Mayor Khan.

    “These latest stats from City Hall are shocking and the unacceptable delay to this vital bill will leave even more renters in the capital at unnecessary risk of housing insecurity and homelessness.

    “I’m doing all I can to build a better, fairer London for everyone by supporting tenants, but I cannot act alone. Renters’ rights must be a national priority and ‘no fault’ evictions banned for good.”

    The Conservatives pledged to deliver the ban in their 2019 manifesto, with Housing Secretary Michael Gove promising as recently as February this year that the ban would be in place before the next election.

    The Renters (Reform) Bill, intended to deliver the ban, was first introduced in the House of Commons in May last year. But its progress was delayed by several Tory MPs who wanted to strengthen protections for landlords, who they feared would sell up.

    Following Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s announcement of a July 4 election, it emerged that the necessary legislation would not be passed during the “wash up” period before Parliament was dissolved.

    Deputy PM Oliver Dowden told the Local Democracy Reporting Service last week: “As happens at the end of the Parliament, when you announce a general election, there are large amounts of legislation on the books. We’ve only got two days to conclude it all.”

    He added: “It just hasn’t been possible to get this legislation through in the ‘wash up’ period.”

    He said the Government had a strong record on housing overall, with 2.5mn new homes built nationally since 2010.

    In total, more than 30,000 renting households in London have faced a “no fault” eviction claim since 2019.

    https://fitzrovianews.com/2024/05/30/no-fault-evictions-increased-by-52-percent-in-london-in-the-year-to-march-2024/

    #GreaterLondonAuthority #homelessness #housing #RentersReformBill #roughSleeping #SadiqKhan #Section21

  10. @Ruth_Mottram @dmidk

    It could be worse Ruth. Thanks to #Section21 you could've been forced to move home and two businesses across the River Tamar!

    west-devon.info/2023/07/the-he

    Fortunately the weather was (too!) hot and dry when we were packing, and on the day(s) of the move. Since then it's been almost incessant rain!

    Several unopened cardboard boxes got soaked when the front of our new double garage got flooded.

    And to add insult to injury:

    #Drought2023 in #SWEngland

  11. @Ruth_Mottram @dmidk

    It could be worse Ruth. Thanks to #Section21 you could've been forced to move home and two businesses across the River Tamar!

    west-devon.info/2023/07/the-he

    Fortunately the weather was (too!) hot and dry when we were packing, and on the day(s) of the move. Since then it's been almost incessant rain!

    Several unopened cardboard boxes got soaked when the front of our new double garage got flooded.

    And to add insult to injury:

    #Drought2023 in #SWEngland

  12. @Ruth_Mottram @dmidk

    It could be worse Ruth. Thanks to #Section21 you could've been forced to move home and two businesses across the River Tamar!

    west-devon.info/2023/07/the-he

    Fortunately the weather was (too!) hot and dry when we were packing, and on the day(s) of the move. Since then it's been almost incessant rain!

    Several unopened cardboard boxes got soaked when the front of our new double garage got flooded.

    And to add insult to injury:

    #Drought2023 in #SWEngland