Police and local authorities failing to tackle anti-social tenants

Fed-up landlords who have endured a number of bad experiences with non-paying and destructive tenants are calling for more to be done to deal with rogue renters.

The National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) says that communities across the UK are facing misery as new data shows that the police and local authorities are failing to take effective action to tackle anti-social behaviour.

NRLA research reveals that of those private landlords who have served a repossession notice at some point, half have done so because of a tenant’s anti-social or criminal behaviour.

The data reveals that that of this group, 84% have not received any assistance in tackling such behaviour from their local authority. Some 75% did not have any help from the police, while 67% of respondents had either always, or sometimes, faced problems gathering evidence or support from neighbours or fellow tenants to address the behaviour of anti-social tenants.

Outlining the typical problems they face, one landlord told the NRLA: “Sometimes (especially in a house of multiple occupancy) tenants fear to speak up about other tenants acting aggressively or drinking or on drugs, for fear of safety. My tenants have been assaulted by my other tenants and we can’t ask them to leave without evidence. Evidence takes time and, in our experience, all the other tenants moved out and we lost money waiting for the bad one to leave.”

Concerns about the lack of action to tackle problem behaviour are shared among the public more broadly. According to polling for the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, of those who experienced anti-social behaviour in the last year, just 26 per cent reported it to the police or local authorities, of which fewer than half (41 per cent) were satisfied with the response they received.

The NRLA is warning that efforts to tackle anti-social behaviour will be made harder when Section 21 repossessions are scrapped in the private rented sector. Under the Government’s plans, where tenants cause misery for fellow tenants and neighbours, landlords will only be able to repossess a property where the police or local authority have taken action against them.

The government has agreed to the NRLA’s calls for a roundtable meeting to discuss how to tackle the problem of anti-social behaviour in rented housing. Specifically, the NRLA is calling for a number of measures to ensure effective action against nightmare tenants. These include:

+ Implementing, in full, the recommendations of the Victims Commissioner’s 2019 report on anti-social behaviour

+ Anti-social behaviour hearings should be prioritised by the courts with possession orders enforced swiftly thereafter.

+ Where the police or local authorities take action in response to a tenant’s anti-social behaviour, it should be a legal requirement to inform the landlord.

Ben Beadle, chief executive of the NRLA, said: “The vast majority of tenants and landlords have a good relationship. However, the minority of renters committing anti-social behaviour cause misery for their fellow tenants and communities more widely. They leave many living in fear of giving evidence against them.

“The police and councils are failing to provide the support landlords desperately need to take swift and effective action against nightmare tenants. This needs to be addressed as a matter of urgency before Section 21 repossessions are ended.”

 

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2 Comments

  1. Woodentop

    Oh come on … its a civil matter, nothing to do with them …. so they keep telling us.

     

    I keep harking on about this, but landlords have been criminalised with rules and regulations. Time the rot was stopped and tenants were also brought into the frame. It would make a big difference in attitude and current policy with authorities to act …….. when they should be.

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  2. Will2

    It is all political rubbish. S21 evictions are rarely NO FAULT.  Tenants are a landlord’s customer, the people they derive their income from. The loss of s21 will result in more unnecessary evictions as landlords leave the market because they will no longer be able to manage their investments properly or efficiently, as we are seeing happening at the moment. It will stiffle investment into the PRS.  The NRLA do not fight for their members hard enough by educating ill-advised politicians of the realities of life whilst politicians are sitting in the ivory towers.

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