| Dispatches
Renters in England Are Braced for Mass Evictions
A Ban on Evicting Private Tenants during Covid-19 Pandemic Ends this Weekend
The eviction ban in England expires this coming weekend and some
people in privately rented housing, who have been hit by the economic
downturn triggered by Covid-19 and fallen behind on their rent, are
waiting nervously to discover their fate.
Some families will face devastating consequences including eviction,
homelessness, and disruption to education, employment, and family life.
The UK government’s ban on evictions
for private tenants was implemented as the pandemic took hold in March,
and had been due to expire in June. But after an outcry from housing
rights groups, the government extended the moratorium to August 23.
Nichola McClean, a key healthcare worker, told ITV News that
she fell behind on her rent after she was briefly furloughed – her job
held open but at lower pay – during the pandemic, and served with an
eviction notice in June. Nicola is now back at work and paying rent plus
arrears, but she and her two daughters face eviction from their home of
10 years and potential homelessness if the ban is not extended. If the
family is offered temporary accommodation elsewhere, it is likely to be
many miles away and could disrupt her daughter’s education and lead her
to lose her job.
English law allows private landlords to evict tenants with a written notice, and while notices have been issued during the pandemic, they have, so far, not been enforced due to the ban.
Given the current financial crisis, with thousands
struggling to pay rent because of job losses or health issues, there is
a clear need to extend the ban and ensure the right to adequate housing
for everyone.
Allowing it to lapse now would activate evictions approved in March –
before the ban – and lead to an avalanche of new evictions due to
failure to pay rent. Extending the eviction ban, especially in cases of
financial hardship related to Covid-19, ensures that the most vulnerable
tenants – including single parents such as Nichola – are protected.
The government should be finding long-term solutions on housing. It
should expand existing financial initiatives to help renters hardest hit
by Covid-19 to overcome their rent arrears, and continue to provide
accommodation for people experiencing homelessness.
The UK government has taken some steps during the pandemic to end
homelessness. Allowing the evictions ban to lapse now would undermine
its efforts.
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