Bristol Post

No-fault evictions rising three times faster than in rest of UK, report shows

- Richard AULT & Tristan CORK bristolpos­tnews@localworld.co.uk

THE number of people being evicted from private rented property through no fault of their own in the Bristol area has more than doubled since before the Covid pandemic, new figures have revealed.

The controvers­ial ‘no-fault evictions,’ which leave people with just two months to find somewhere else to live, are now happening at the rate of one every day in Bristol, South Gloucester­shire and North Somerset.

The spike in Section 21 eviction orders have led to renewed calls from housing charity Shelter for the practice to be stopped and the Government to make good on its promise to end such evictions as part of new legislatio­n.

Section 21 of the Housing Act gives landlords the ability to evict their tenants without reason or cause. They have been increasing­ly happening as rents spiral, with letting agents in Bristol even writing to landlords advising them that they could hike rents by hundreds of pounds a month and still be able to find another tenant.

The figures, which have been released by the Government’s Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s, show a massive jump in the number of people and households getting evicted by their landlords – and also show just how much worse the issue is in Bristol than in other parts of the country.

When the pandemic hit in 2020, no-fault evictions were temporaril­y banned as part of lockdown rules.

From October 1 to December 31, 2019, there were 57 no-fault evictions across Bristol, South Gloucester­shire and North Somerset.

In the same period in 2021, that had more than doubled to 129, or more than one every day.

It’s only the tip of the iceberg for people in private rented accommodat­ion losing their homes at short notice – the figures reveal that 663 households lost their homes in Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucester­shire in the last three months of 2021.

The vast majority of those – some 558 – were in Bristol, where things are so bad that Shelter, local tenants union Acorn and other campaigner­s

came together to form a Bristol Fair Rents Campaign, backed by the Bristol Post.

Across the country, ‘no-fault’ evictions increased by 37 per cent between 2019 and 2021.

That means the number of evictions is increasing more than three times faster in Bristol than across the rest of England.

Now, Shelter is calling for the Government to make good on its promise to ban no-fault evictions by committing to a Renters’ Reform Bill in the Queen’s Speech.

Then housing minister James Brokenshir­e revealed in 2019 he had decided that Section 21 ‘nofault’ evictions should end, after visiting a newly opened homeless shelter in St Annes, Bristol.

Mr Brokenshir­e died last October, around the time the Queen announced in Parliament that her Government would introduce new legislatio­n that outlawed the practice.

But Shelter says that hasn’t happened yet, with little sign of the Government fulfilling its promises.

The charity fears the cost-of-living crisis means many renters will be unable to cover the unexpected costs of finding a new home, like putting down a deposit or paying rent in advance.

Polly Neate, chief executive of Shelter, said: “These are real people who’ve been chewed up and spat out by our broken private renting system, and now face an uphill battle to find somewhere to call home again.

“Our emergency helpline is inundated with calls from people whose lives have been thrown into chaos by unexpected and unfair evictions. As it stands, landlords can turf people out of their homes for no reason – and tenants are powerless to do anything about it.”

A separate poll carried out by YouGov with Shelter suggests that nearly 230,000 private renters have been served with formal no-fault eviction notices. That equates to one renter every seven minutes.

In total, Government data shows 33,800 households became homeless in England last winter. That includes 8,410 families with children – a rise of 18% in a year – and puts family homelessne­ss back at pre-pandemic levels.

A spokespers­on for the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s said: “The Homelessne­ss Reduction Act has prevented over 475,000 households from becoming homeless or supported them to settled accommodat­ion since 2018 and we’re building on that success with £316 million funding this year.

“The Government is providing a £22 billion package to help households with rising costs and we will bring forward reforms to support renters, including ending Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions.”

» Anyone who is facing homelessne­ss can get free and expert advice at shelter.org.uk/get_help.

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 ?? ?? Section 21 evictions mean landlords can ask tenants to move out with no reason
Section 21 evictions mean landlords can ask tenants to move out with no reason

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