Renters’ Rights petition still waiting on government response

A parliamentary petition calling for changes to the Renters’ Rights Act has yet to receive a government response, 13 days after surpassing the 10,000 signatures required for an official reply.

Since reaching that milestone on 10 February, the petition has gained nearly 5,000 additional signatures, bringing the total close to 15,000. If it eventually reaches 100,000 signatures, it would be considered for debate in Parliament.

Launched in late January by landlord Craig Littlejohn, the petition urges the government to introduce a six-week fast-track court process for Mandatory Grounds under Sections 8 and 7A (covering arrears and anti-social behaviour), establish a registered landlord database of tenants evicted through the courts, and raise the deposit cap to cover substantial property damage.

The campaign notes that the abolition of Section 21 under the Renters’ Rights Act has left Section 8 as the main route for evicting problem tenants. Ministry of Justice data shows the average eviction now takes more than 27 weeks—over six months.

“We believe this delay [in the tenant eviction time] punishes law-abiding landlords via irrecoverable arrears and damage. We urgently need an expedited court process for mandatory grounds (ASB/arrears), a vetting database for repeat offenders, and a higher deposit cap to help sustain the rental market,” the petition stated.

You can view the petition here.

 

x

Email the story to a friend!



Leave a reply

If you want to create a user account so you can log in, click here

Thank you for signing up to our newsletter, we have sent you an email asking you to confirm your subscription. Additionally if you would like to create a free EYE account which allows you to comment on news stories and manage your email subscriptions please enter a password below.