Sunday Mirror

NO-FAULT EVICTION SCANDAL

- BY GERALDINE McKELVIE Investigat­ions Editor geraldine.mckelvie@mirror.co.uk

THOUSANDS are made homeless every year because of a loophole which allows landlords to evict tenants who do nothing wrong.

Many end up stuck in emergency accommodat­ion – like caravans and budget hotels – for months.

Campaigner­s say some are victims of so-called “revenge evictions” after complainin­g about dire conditions.

These occur when landlords decide it’s easier to evict tenants than carry out repairs. And faced by that reality, many more accept inhumane conditions for fear of being made homeless.

Among those facing the boot is mum Claire Wanless, 29, who was served with a notice to leave in November. She pays £600 a month to rent a three-bed house – but says it is riddled with damp and has the remains of a cannabis farm in the loft.

Worried Claire says: “We don’t have any family who can take us in, so we’ll have nowhere to go.”

As part of our Safe as Houses campaign, the Sunday Mirror demands the Government bans the practice – permitted under the Housing Act – once and for all.

Since the Tories promised to act in April 2019, more than 25,000 families have been turfed out despite having done nothing wrong.

The Government again promised to outlaw the practice as part of levelling up proposals announced on Wednesday. But it didn’t say when.

Claire and cinema worker partner Gary Dormer, 44, were served with a notice to quit after complainin­g about their Liverpool home.

They consulted a solicitor after a lack of action – then received the eviction notice. A day after that Claire went into labour three weeks early with baby Kimberley, now two months old. Claire, also mum to Bryony, three, and Francesca, one, says: “First thing I noticed was the kitchen sink leaking. There is black mould on the back. When you wash the dishes, it stinks. Then the loft was all covered in plastic bags, with heaps of soil. Police confirmed it had been a cannabis farm. Most of it is still up there to this day.

“One light in my daughter’s bedroom doesn’t work so we’ve been told just not to touch it. We reported it through the proper channels but after seven months of very little to no repairs, I’d had enough, so I consulted a solicitor. That’s when I found out about no-fault evictions. The landlady is within her rights to kick us out.”

Claire and Gary are challengin­g the date of the eviction notice and have even offered to sort some repairs themselves in a bid to stay. But they live in fear bailiffs might come any day.

The family’s landlord did not respond when asked for comment.

John Lowry, director and head of housing disrepair at CEL Solicitors, said there is little tenants can do. He added: “If you do bring a claim, you have to accept there is a risk you could be evicted on a section 21 notice. It’s why a lot of clients don’t bring claims. They’d rather have a property in disrepair than no property.”

Tenants are also moved on so owners can use property for holiday lets. Former Lib Dem leader Tim Farron – who represents Westmorlan­d and Lonsdale in the Lake District – raised the issue in parliament last month, saying: “Among the hundreds evicted, I think of the couple with two small children who struggled to pay £800 a month for their flat above a shop. They were evicted only to find the home they had lived in for years on Airbnb for £1,200 a week.”

Osama Bhutta of homeless charity Shelter said: “Renters have had a rotten deal for years. Our emergency helpline is flooded with calls from people terrified of losing their homes.” Labour’s shadow housing minister, Matthew Pennycook called for “emergency legislatio­n now – not more warm words”. A Communites Department spokesman said: “We’re reforming the rental sector to make it fairer, including banning ‘no-fault’ evictions. We will bring forward legislatio­n as soon as we are able.”

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