The Scotsman

First Minister defends decision not to back rent freeze

-

Nicola Sturgeon has defended the Scottish Government’s decision not to back a plan to freeze rents for tenants for two years.

She told Scottish Green coleader Patrick Harvie that his party’s amendments to the new emergency coronaviru­s legislatio­n would have “threatened the wellbeing of tenants” and rejected claims her government was not determined to protect people who live in rented accommodat­ion.

The changes the Greens wanted to make to the Bill, including a two-year rent freeze, were voted down by both SNP and Conservati­ve MSPS on Tuesday.

At First Minister’s Questions in Holyrood yesterday, Mr Harvie said recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic must mean a “fairer, greener, and more equal Scotland” but that would only be “realised if there’s a clear economic plan and the political will to take the bold steps needed.”

He added: “After the Scottish Government blocked Green proposals to protect tenants, the director of Shelter said, ‘it’s hard to see now what’s going to prevent a tidal wave or evictions sweeping people into homelessne­ss services which were barely coping before the pandemic’. What specific actions will the First

Minister take now to protect tenants from building up enormous debt burdens, to ensure that arrears due to this crisis can’t be used to evict people, and prevent this predicted new wave of homelessne­ss after the temporary measures end?”

Ms Sturgeon said that not supporting the amendments did not “equate to a lack of determinat­ion to protect tenants” and that the government had objected because the amendments were “flawed, in some cases unnecessar­y, and in other cases would have serious negative unintended consequenc­es”

She added: “One called for a tenants’ fund but we already provide financial assistance to people who have difficulti­es paying rent through Discretion­ary Housing Payments so we don’t need to establish a new fund, we need to ensure

DHP is properly resourced and we will continue to do that.

“Then the blanket rent freeze for two years, discountin­g rent arrears whether or not they were accrued because of the crisis, it was social landlords who raised concerns about that. The Scottish Federation of Housing Associatio­ns said it would undermine and threaten the wellbeing of tenants not benefit them, and the Glasgow and West of Scotland forum described them as potentiall­y calamitous.

“We are all determined to protect tenants that’s why the Scottish Government has already put in place protection against eviction for six months and we have to consider the appropriat­e measures that come after that.”

However Mr Harvie said that while he would never claim the Green proposals were the only way, “we need to hear what the alternativ­e is” and raised concerns that landlords accessing the government’s hardship loan fund, would evict tenants in arrears after six months and then “hike the rent” for the next tenants in order to pay back the loan. Ms Sturgeon agreed the government had to “consider what protection­s are important for a longer term period and what bigger changes we want to see” after the pandemic.

 ??  ?? 0 Patrick Harvie: ‘Needs to hear what the alternativ­e is’
0 Patrick Harvie: ‘Needs to hear what the alternativ­e is’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom