Labour wants to prevent tenants being evicted for two years

Party's shadow housing spokesperson has added an amendment ot the Renters (Reform) Bill that would see landlords wait for two years after a tenancy has started before being able to sell - or move back into - the property.

Labour wants to prevent tenants being evicted for two years
An amendment has been added to the Renters (Reform) Bill that would prevent landlords selling a property for two years after a tenancy has begun.

The rule would only apply to landlords wishing to sell a property or move back into it as introduced by Labour’s shadow housing secretary Matthew Pennycook (main image).

This amendment is one of eight new amendments added to the Bill, the list of which already stretches to 112 pages.

Other significant amendments, which will now have to be debated and voted through as the bill goes through its third reading next week, include preventing tenants from giving notice to quit until they have been in a property for four months.

This means, given that they have to give two months’ notice, will reassure landlords that renters won’t be leaving a property for six months, which is the current position with ASTs, in effect.


Natalie Elphicke

Tory MP Natalie Elphicke has also added an amendment that would require landlords to pay renters an unspecified relocation fee if they asked them to leave a property within the first two years of a tenancy.

But next week, when the Bill is due to be debated again, a more important ‘bunfight’ is likely over some amendments as the ‘rebel’ 49 Tory MPs attempt to ensure theis, which were added earlier this year, are included. These are:

• Banning section 21 evictions but only when the court system has been upgraded and backlogs have been cleared;
• Loosening the proof of evidence when evicting anti-social tenants;

• Getting rid of selective licencing schemes when the national register goes live as the two are basically the same thing;
• Requiring tenants to commit to at least four months in a property before giving notice;

• Protecting student HMO landlords from the introduction of periodic tenancies, which are not appropriate to tenants at
• Universities who have no intention of staying in their properties for long periods.

Propertymark says it is pleased to see the amended proposals incorporate additional standpoints including a promise to review the health of the private rented sector every year, and also backs some of the amendments by the rebel MPs including their call for property licencing to be reviewed or even abolished once the new Property Portal goes live.

Timothy Douglas - Propertymark - image

Timothy Douglas

Timothy Douglas, its Head of Policy and Campaigns, adds: “Throughout the passage of the Bill, we have worked hard to highlight the importance of retaining fixed-term tenancies and the need for improvements to the court system if the abolition of Section 21 is to work”.
 

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