Would it be more effective to have quick eviction for tenants causing antisocial problems?
It's not tricky at all
terrysgirl has the solution above
Would it be more effective to have quick eviction for tenants causing antisocial problems?
Rent supplement is really a matter between the tenant, welfare (or HSE) and the landlord.
How does the management company propose to find out who is in receipt of rent supplement?
It would obviously be difficult to implement but I'm struggling to identify any specific legal impediment.
Conditions are regularly changed in multi unit developments (e.g. owners can effectively be denied access to a complex in the event of their non payment of service charges with the introduction of fobs which may be deactivated).
Also, a lot of developments don't have social housing as they're from the era when developers could avoid providing social housing by paying money to the relevant local authority.
It's morally dubious to tar all rent supplement recipients with the same brush but if all of a development's social problems are being caused by such people, surely residents and owners are entitled to take action to protect their homes?
This is a tricky one.
The first legal impediment is that owners are only legally bound by the conditions detailed in their lease unless agreed at an AGM, under the articles of association of the company (ours requires 70% agreement of all owners) to add a new lease condition
We were recently 8 months evicting an anti social neighbour (in receipt of rent allowance) in our apartment block.
They caused a lot of damage to fixtures and fittings in the common areas and yet we are left with the bill.
I think if it was easier to evict anti social people then landlords may be more willing to accept rent allowance. And as an apartment owner I wouldnt have a problem with such people beside me as I believe innocent till proven guilty - as long as they could be gotten rid of quickly if problems arose.
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