The Herald

Two-thirds of tenants fear eviction after ban lifted, Living Rent survey finds

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ALMOST two-thirds of tenants fear they will be evicted now a Scottish Government ban has been lifted, a survey has found.

In a poll carried out by tenants’ union Living Rent between December and March, 62% of 903 tenants in the private rented sector questioned said they worry for their homes.

In response to the cost of living crisis, the government instituted a rent freeze and eviction ban in 2022, but the provision ended at the end of March.

The regulation­s were replaced by a strengthen­ed adjudicati­on process for rent increases, allowing rises of 6% or less, with an effective cap of 12%.

Ministers also published the long awaited Housing (Scotland) Bill last month, part of which allows for the creation of rent control areas where prices are judged to be too high.

In the same survey, 98% of respondent­s said worries over rent increases and eviction had impacted on their mental health, while 85% believe a price hike will have an impact on their quality of life, with 73% saying they will have to cut back on non-essentials.

Ruth Gilbert, national campaign officer at Living Rent, said the survey shows the “crisis” facing renters in Scotland. “Now that the rent cap and eviction ban have ended, tenants are faced with a tidal wave of evictions, rapid increases in homelessne­ss, and an overall rise in poverty,” she said.

“We know we cannot trust landlords to regulate themselves.

“Though the government has announced their Housing Bill, it will be years before tenants feel its protection­s.

“Current regulation is not strong enough. The rent adjudicati­on measures are complex and unworkable and landlords will continue to exploit every loophole possible to increase rents and displace tenants.”

John Blackwood, chief executive of the Scottish Associatio­n of Landlords, called for an end to “stop-gap measures” from the Scottish Government.

“We need to see an end to political rhetoric demonising private landlords and a co-ordinated solution which encourages investment,” he said.

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