The Irish Mail on Sunday

SF TD told her refusal to pay rent stopped others from getting home

Charity repeatedly pleaded for debt to be settled

- By Michael 0’Farrell

THE refusal of a newly elected Sinn Féin TD to pay any rent for four years meant another deserving family could not be housed, according to the charity that provided her family with a home.

Violet-Anne Wynne – whose family was provided with a new three-bedroom home by a housing charity in 2011 – was warned of the consequenc­es of her actions in June 2013.

Ms Wynne and her partner John Mountaine were supposed to pay €63 a week for the home when they relocated to Co. Clare with the help of Rural Resettleme­nt Ireland (RRI), but racked up arrears of more than €12,000 before they were forced to leave by a court.

Rent arrears began to accumulate as soon as the family moved in – and no rent at all was paid for the final four years of the tenancy.

Ms Wynne last night insisted to the MoS that families were housed by the charity over the years she was not paying her rent, and that she is prepared to repay the arrears.

Correspond­ence records provided to Kilrush District Court during RRI’s legal action to recover arrears and evict Ms Wynne show how RRI repeatedly pleaded for rent to be paid.

‘I have to bring it to your attention that your rent record is simply appalling,’ RRI founder and chairman Jim Connolly wrote in June 2013.

Mr Connolly’s letter also pointed to the fact that his charity had recently had to let three staff go and was struggling financiall­y. ‘This debt of yours will seriously hamper our continuing efforts to move families to private rented accommodat­ion in the future,’ he wrote.

‘I have no choice but to leave it to your family’s sense of right and wrong as to what arrangemen­ts you must make with Rural

Resettleme­nt about this debt.’

The letter is one of 11 written warnings that RRI issued to Ms Wynne and her family before the charity was forced to seek a judgement in a bid to recover more than €12,000 in arrears.

In addition to written warnings, RRI field officers and finance staff repeatedly visited Ms Wynne and her partner. Despite these efforts, the court file shows Ms Wynne and her family stopped paying rent completely in August 2013 as they complained – sometimes via legal correspond­ence – of problems with the house.

The file does not appear to refer at any stage to a child’s illness and the hospitalis­ation of a family member, which Ms Wynne has this week told reporters was the reason for her inability to pay.

The rent of €63 a week was calculated on income guidelines drawn up by the Irish Council for Social Housing and reflects the fact that the household’s entire income came from social welfare payments.

But despite the low rent – and the efforts of RRI officers to secure payment – Ms Wynne and her partner’s arrears steadily increased.

‘Our meeting with you and our

‘You have made complete fools of this charity’

letters have brought no result whatsoever. You have made only three weekly payments in the last 18 weeks and your arrears now stand at €3,024,’ a letter from September 2012 reads.

‘You have made complete fools out of this charity which worked for years to provide you and others with beautiful houses.’

Another letter from November 2012 reads: ‘Your sporadic method of paying rent is resulting in your arrears constantly rising. They are now at a completely unacceptab­le level and I do not understand why you are treating your responsibi­lity to this organisati­on in this way.’

Finally, after years of non payment, RRI took legal action in 2016 obtain

ing a judgement for arrears of €12,126.40 – the amount due up to June that year.

The charity subsequent­ly obtained a court order to evict Ms Wynne and her family – although they did not leave the home until 2017, continuing to live for free in the home.

Until now the debt to RRI remains unpaid.

Ms Wynne told the Irish Mail on Sunday that she was now in a privately rented house and has had no issues with her current landlord.

Last night Ms Wynne – who will earn more than €96,000 as a TD – again promised to repay the debt by giving the money to a local housing charity and said that families were housed by the charity in the years in which her family was in dispute with RRI.

In a statement this week, Ms Wynne said: ‘I am more than willing to pay back the arrears. Doing so is made more complicate­d as the Rural Resettleme­nt Ireland is no longer in existence. But if paying back the RRI isn’t possible, I will instead to pay the money back to a charity such as a mental health charity as those services are underfunde­d in the region.

‘My circumstan­ces have changed now obviously. But at the time of the arrears, my partner was very ill with hemiplegic migraine, which leads to symptoms like those suffered by people having a stroke. He was out of work as a result and we also had a sick child too. We were travelling RRI were able to relocate another family into this home.

‘Issues with funding of the RRI were evident from the beginning. There were several other organisati­ons throughout this time that were trying to obtain ownership of these houses. During such time, tenants other than ourselves were left in limbo so to speak, as to who actually had responsibi­lity for these homes.’

Ms Wynne said she had explained at the outset to RRI that the family had no furniture, and that her partner and eldest child had health problems.

She also claimed that there were delays in RRI dealing with several problems such as a leaking pipe and unpainted plaster walls.

Separately, Ms Wynne this week withdrew criticism she made on Facebook of the cervical cancer vaccine, saying: ‘The points that I made previously in relation to vaccinatio­ns were not in line with party policy and predate my election as a TD by a number of years.’

 ??  ?? ‘RENT FREE’: The €63-a-week house in Co. Clare, provided to Ms Wynne, pictured below, by the now defunct charity, Rural Resettleme­nt Ireland. No rent was paid for four years and she was ultimately evicted
‘RENT FREE’: The €63-a-week house in Co. Clare, provided to Ms Wynne, pictured below, by the now defunct charity, Rural Resettleme­nt Ireland. No rent was paid for four years and she was ultimately evicted
 ??  ?? NO ISSUES: The current home of Violet-Anne Wynne and her partner
NO ISSUES: The current home of Violet-Anne Wynne and her partner
 ??  ??

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